I’ve been seeing a worrying number of these people on Lemmy lately, sharing enlightened takes including but not limited to “voting for Biden is tantamount to fascism” and “the concept of an assigned gender, or even an assigned name, at birth is transphobic” and none of them seem to be interested in reading more than the first sentence of any of my comments before writing a reply.

More often than not they reply with a concern I addressed in the comment they’re replying to, without any explanation of why my argument was invalid. Some of them cannot even state their own position, instead simply repeatedly calling mine oppressive in some way.

It occurred to me just now that these interactions reminded me of nothing so much as an evangelical Christian I got into an argument with on Matrix a while ago, in which I met him 95% of the way, conceded that God might well be real and that being trans was sinful and tried to convince him not to tell that to every trans person he passed, and failed. I am 100% convinced he was trolling – in retrospect I’m pretty sure I could’ve built a municipal transport system by letting people ride on top of his goalposts (that’s what I get for picking a fight with a Christian at 2AM) – and the only reason I’m not convinced these leftists on Lemmy are trolls is the sheer fucking number of them.

I made this post and what felt like half the responses fell into this category. Am I going insane?

  • Silverseren@kbin.social
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    6 months ago

    Generally true, yes. In most cases, the leftists using that sort of terminology are tankies, meaning they are explicitly pro-authoritarian. They just want the dictators to be communists (or claimed communists) rather than capitalists (despite said dictatorial communism usually being about seizing all the money for themselves anyways and often results in full on capitalism regardless, China is a great example).

    So you don’t even need the word replacement thought experiment. Tankies are openly authoritarian.

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      People really don’t want to acknowledge that politics is more than one axis.

      Like communism is the opposite of capitalism, not democracy. The opposite of democracy is a dictatorship.

      And when a dictator calls their government Communist, it’s pretty much a guarantee it’s not even a communist economy anymore than when North Korea or Russia claim to be democracies.

      • Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Very true. Reading a lot of Socialist lit has made me very critical about the regular framework I see regularly posited as Socialism being a direct opposite of capitalism and being some kind of inevitable slippery slope toward Communism.

        Like as a system it is very distinct from Communist ideologically speaking and represents a sliding scale of public ownership versus private ownership but never fully occludes private ownership, currency or the very basics of capitalism systemically and any one person’s veiw of where that balance should rest is itself an end point and fully formed political belief. You can believe a mix of liberal / capitalist and socialist things that are not strictly contradictory. Capitalism is a sliding scale we are just currently dealing with it’s deep unstable and predatory end. Admitting some capitalism is okay and can be made more ethical doesn’t disqualify you from the left nor does it nessisarily make you “centrist”. It also doesn’t make you automatically a fan of everything capitalist or the status quo.

        The number of “That’s not Socialism! Socialism means only (posit one potential facet out of the massive cloud of policies/stances of the ideology) or " That is only the secret aim of Communists to tip the teeter-totter towards our/their goals!” is a very paternalistic view. Socialism is DEEP and diverse. There’s not a central author or even a neat handful of authors one can point to. The more you read the more internal variations you find.

        People generally seem to just want an enemy to point and hiss at, they don’t want to look at things as a potential series of sliding scales or people of mixed ideological stances as valid in their own right.

        • areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          Socialism requires that the workers own the means of production. So no it’s not on a sliding scale with capitalism. Those are called hybrid economies and are a concept in their own right. In fact basically all modern economies are hybrid economies.

          Socialism does include many systems, but none of them are capitalist, they are mutually exclusive. They can have markets, currency, and other things, or they might not. Communism is just a subcategory of socialist society. The reason people think socialism leads to communism is because of the marxists who use one as a platform to achieve the other.

          • Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Socialism requires no such thing - most of the rhetoric which treats worker owned production as the only definition of Socialism stems from Marxist frameworks and leaves any writing done on the subject since which has fleshed out the philosophic roots untouched. There has been a lot of writing on the subject in the 200 years since . Ownership of the means of production is by no means the only form of public or social property.

            Dismissing mixed and hybrid economic theory as “not Socialist enough” is more or less what I am talking about with the nature of false dichotomies. So often socialists are dismissed on this platform directly because they don’t buy into every binary maxim of all Socialism through the lens of Communist philosophy. Socialism works in mixed systems because it is kind of the political overlap of a lot of things. Where it can and does integrate into “hybrid” economies because it is not fully “anti capitalist”. It is it’s own sphere of political thought and buying in to one specific “hybrid” branch still makes one socialist. While Socialism certainly isn’t capitalist in itself and does curtail capitalism somewhat by existing in the same space it’s no more “anti” than two roomates sharing an apartment and divvying up responsibilities and resources mutually would be considered “anti-roommate”.

            I am quite frankly tired of Marxists or even other Socialists trying to impose their own overly narrow definition to what amounts to a range of different socialism factions or treating hybrid socialist ideologies like liberal socialism or ethical socialism like they aren’t socialism.

            Communism is also not strictly socialism. The two ideologies may be related but the definition of Communism leaves no real space for hybrid systems hence the ideological distain for “hybrids” ane why calling Communism “just a subsection” of Socialism is misguided. Marx may have coined and popularized the term but early writers who adopted the label socialist very quickly became something unique and the term essentially became the safe space of at least partial criticism of Marxist/Leninist revolutionary anti-capitalist ideology. The difference between the two that eventually emerged as literally one having a tolerance for mixed systems and one not. Only one of them is strictly anti-capitalist.

            • areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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              5 months ago

              Anarchists are anti-capitalist and have little to do with Marx.

              Why would you want any form of a destructive and exploitative system like capitalism to remain? I think you just aren’t happy people are calling out your pro-capitalist and reformist bullshit.

              • Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                Capitalism isn’t always a destructive system, we are just living the deep end of unfettered capitalism which is. At its absolute basic having a business owner who forks over the initial investment and pays for both materials and labourers while profiting a modest amount isn’t automatically exploitation. Investment capital isn’t just big hedgefunds and megacorps. It’s literally just having any form of private ownership of a business regardless of size.

                What makes capitalism exploitative and terrible is not combatting its worst aspects. Things like people being incentivized or at very least not being punished for allowing profit to be king instead of looking at business success as a many spoked wheel including a duty to worker welfare, a responsibility to the community, ethical sourcing and so on. When you have a culture of milking everything dry to appease shareholders being normalized and routine grabbing of public resources for pennies considered legitimate then yes Capitalism is exploitative but there’s plenty that can be done to literally disincentivize that system. The way the stock market works is not on its own an integral part of capitalism. It’s an option. Laws and oversight can do a lot to bring the system of exploitation into check. Inventivizing co-op and worker owned labor is great but so is expanding tax structures, government public services and safety nets and strengthening environment protections or increasing indigenous repatriation and sovereignty. A lot of that is making Government more airtight against private sector tampering.

                End of the day if a business is playing by the rules and doing their bit to what they owe society then who owns it becomes much less relevant.

                • areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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                  5 months ago

                  People love to talk about protections and safety nets enforced by governments and committees but you find in most countries with capitalism the government is corrupt including in the US and UK. They essentially do what businesses tell them to do because they spend money on lobbying and line politicians pockets. There isn’t really a way to fix this under capitalism to my knowledge.

                  The media too is bought and paid for by the big business players. That’s the nature of capitalism as a system. It corrupts everything.

  • SolNine@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    I have a friend who has come to reflect this exact behavior to an extraordinary degree of accuracy.

    It’s interesting because the near puritanical nature of their responses to nearly anything has become more extreme than even the most devoutly religions individuals. Obviously the focus of their evangelizing is very different, but it has become difficult to even have a conversation.

    I’ll give you an example: I saw a new game called Pal World, which looked absurd, mentioned and was instantly met with the fact that the game was unacceptable because it supports forced labor.

    Additionally, there seems to be an immense amount of hypocrisy in regards to what is good and what is bad, largely driven by what best I can refer to as their “leftist Zeitgeist.” As bad as I can tell now, according to them, I am a liberal, and apparently liberals are bad, and the only true salvation is being a leftist?

    Of course, I have a much more varied and complex set of moral and political values that likely don’t fall under a singular label… But what do I know about anything.

    • body_by_make@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      This is kind of like saying Helldivers 2 is bad because it’s about forcefully spreading “democracy” (pretty obviously it means capitalism) to other planets.

      Yeah, it is, but it’s hugely satirical and makes blatant political statements through satire.

      Pal World isn’t that deep, I don’t think there’s much depth to their forced labor system other than parodying Pokémon and slightly highlighting how the Pokémon universe is full of forced labor and isn’t that kind of funny

    • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      was instantly met with the fact that the game was unacceptable because it supports forced labor.

      If this is true, it should be constantly called out. You’re shrugging at slavery?

      Edit: I don’t play or care about this game. Obviously I don’t give two shits if creatures are slaves in video games as long as there’s nothing about it that makes it seem like a good idea for sentient creatures

      • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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        6 months ago

        If you consider the game slavery to make monsters work for you, then I guess. Problem is that covers a huge amount of games beyond palworld.

      • Hazzard@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        Fiction is fiction. This is the same kind of logic that adults used when I was a kid because Harry Potter promoted witchcraft, or when the country had a moral panic because Call of Duty had their children killing people. Nothing in the game literally advocates for or glorifies IRL slavery, that would be absurd.

        If you can’t parse fiction from reality, then you aren’t fit for just about anything. Movies, music, video games, books, etc. Every medium frequently depicts things you shouldn’t emulate. Even the literal Bible has depictions of slavery, rape, incest, and murder.

        • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          I guess i fucked up assuming that if someone protested slavery, it was real, not imaginary 🤦‍♂️

  • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    Marxism and Christianity only share the fact that they contain frameworks for analyzing material reality(Marxism through Materialism and Christianity through representing reality as though it is divine, and thus explainable via the divine), and this post seems to not be willing to honestly engage with Marxism as a concept.

    1. Marxists do not oppose incremental change. Marxists believe that minor concessions under Capitalism are insufficient to actually fix the underlying problems, and this point of view is built on a thorough understanding of the Marxist critique of Capitalism.

    2. Marxists do not oppose reform, they just believe it is impossible to do successfully without sliding backward, because the state is built in a manner that supports Capitalism and resists change.

    3. Marxism is an economic critique of Capitalism, a philosophical framework, and a call to action. It is a complete set of tools to look at the world, analyze it, and how to fix it. In this manner, it can be superficially compared to Christianity, but only on the surface.

    That’s really it.

    • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      So Marxists are not opposed to incremental change, except they actually are. And Marxists are not opposed to reform except they consider it impossible.

      What in the Ministry of Truth?

      • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        Marxists are not opposed to incremental change. They do not believe incremental change is a bad thing, and do not move against it. Incremental change is a nice-to-have, when revolutionary change is seen as necessary.

        Marxists are not opposed to reform. If it is shown to be legitimately possible to reform a dictatorship of the bourgeoisie, ie a Capitalist State, into a Socialist one, Marxists would be first in line. However, history has shown this to be extraordinarily difficult to outright impossible, akin to politely asking a bear to stop mauling you, so Marxists seek other methods. Marxists are Materialists, not Idealists.

        Hope that helps!

        • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          However, history has shown this to be extraordinarily difficult to outright impossible

          Successful reform of capitalist countries to socialist: 3 - 10 ish depending on how you define it

          Successful communist revolutions: ZERO

          Curious how Marxists have not adjusted their beliefs when confronted with these statistics

          • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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            5 months ago

            Wrong, actually.

            Successful reform of Capitalist countries to Socialist: 0.

            Successful Communist Revolutions: 5-10.

            Curious how Cryophilia thinks they are making coherent points when they just redefine established terms until it looks like they have a point.

              • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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                5 months ago

                The USSR disbanded, same with Anarchist Catalonia and Burkina Faso, but China, Cuba, Chiapas, Vietnam, Laos, and North Korea are all examples of states that all managed to establish a Socialist government via revolutionary means. I don’t consider the Paris Commune to be successful either, it was extremely short lived.

                The overall success of these states is definitely arguable, obviously, but it is inarguable that they managed to establish a Socialist state via revolution.

                It’s also worth mentioning that I am not endorsing these countries, just pointing out some examples of revolutions successfully changing economic systems.

                • areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
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                  5 months ago

                  I am sorry but China and North Korea are not socialist states. You are going to have to try harder than that.

  • BaumGeist@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    I met him 95% of the way… and failed.

    That’s because the people you’re picking fights with only care about being right. It’s why the American government undergoes a political ratchet toward the right: the people pushing for radical change at all costs and the people seeking compromise are not evenly distributed.


    There’s this half baked idea that keeps bouncing around in my mind, let’s give it a engagement friendly name: Scam Theory.

    Scam Theory, stated simply, is the idea that most of society is composed of scams. Scams, in this case, are any relationship where a large group of people come to believe lies that harm them and others, told by a small group of people who peddle those lies because they benefit from that harm.

    It’s like Category Theory, where you start to see the commonality across many disparate domains of math; except in this case it’s commonality across many different social groups, and the commonality is the cycle of abuse.

    Under Scam Theory, there are only minor implementation details that differentiate political zealots and religious zealots. Given some time, I could probably think of dozen more commonalities between leftist revolutionaries and christian doomsdayers. Or any other religion’s extremists for that matter. Or people that buy into get rich quick schemes. Or capitalism. Or any other type of scam.

    One of the main aspects of commonality amongst all scams is that there are the in-group, who participate and get to go to heaven/live in utopia/become fabulously wealthy/find happiness/stay young forever/etc, and the out-group, who didn’t participate get to burn in hell/get walled for being counterrevolutionary/stay poor/be miserable/grow old and die alone/etc.

    All you have to do to support Scam Theory is be vigilant of scams, spread this info, and don’t be like one of the easy targets who will suffer (scams) for not buying into Scam Theory

    • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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      5 months ago

      If you’re fighting against reform and shill for China and Russia then you’re acting against all of our own best interests, don’t get mad when people retaliate over your bullshit.

    • AVincentInSpace@pawb.socialOP
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      5 months ago

      I am being called a fascist for voting for a left of center politician who is not far enough left of center, and I am the one dividing the working class?

  • ComradeSharkfucker@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    Wild to me that people actually think liberal democracy isn’t authoritarian, it is literally the dictatorship of the bourgiosie

    • FozzyOsbourne@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      This has got to be a troll, right? A liberal democracy is by definition not authoritarian, what do you even think it means?

      • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        6 months ago

        Nah, I agree with the original point. Liberal Democracy is only one form of Democracy, and is particularly good at resisting popular change and supporting whoever has the money to lobby. You can see in the US, for example, even presidents who win the popular vote, lose!

        More direct democratic forms, whether that be direct democracy, participatory economics, parlimentary democracy, industrial democracy, and so forth are all more accountable to the people and capable of positive change that the public desires.

        Despite being overwhelmingly popular, the US does not have: Legalized Marijuana, Medicare for All, Student Loan Forgiveness (outside loophole forgiveness), Enshrined Abortion Protection, and more.

        Read up on the types of democracy here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_democracy

        • FozzyOsbourne@lemm.ee
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          6 months ago

          A liberal democracy is a representative democracy with rule of law, protection for individual liberties and rights, and limitations on the power of the elected representatives.

          From your link, sounds like the exact opposite of authoritarian to me. Just because authoritarian “neo-liberal” places like the USA choose to call themselves liberal democracies doesn’t make them correct.

          • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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            6 months ago

            What is “authoritarian” if not a method to suppress popular opinion and exert the will of the minority? Those are the stated goals of liberal democracy, but not the function.

            • FozzyOsbourne@lemm.ee
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              6 months ago

              Where are you getting these “stated goals”? Who is the minority, elected officials? What am I missing here?

              • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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                6 months ago

                The stated goal of liberal democracy is to “enshrine personal liberties, the rule of law, Private Property, and political freedom” via a representative government in a Capitalist state. In another phrase, it is a Capitalist state with representatives.

                In practice, the purpose of a representative, rather than more direct forms of democracy, is to provide the wider public with a set of predetermined choices, not to represent the views of the public. This results in political parties that are good at fundraising being the only viable parties.

                Furthering this logical chain, those who appeal to those with the most ability and interest in shaping the state will be the representatives the public can vote on. Ie, those who can convince large corporations and the ultra-wealthy to make significant donations, are the ones who retain power.

                The reality is that in Capitalism, a minority controls the majority of the wealth, and this minority is the Capitalist, owner class. Capitalists lobby and advertise for candidates that do not fundamentally challenge their profits or positions, which leads us to presidential elections that appear to be a constant “lesser evil” voting process. The evil is the point! We just choose which flavor is easier to suck down, which is normally the side willing to make more concessions.

                More direct forms of democracy remove this barrier.

                • FozzyOsbourne@lemm.ee
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                  5 months ago

                  I think I get your point, but it seems to ignore that plenty of places have successful labour parties that have the backing of unions rather than wealthy capitalists.

                  presidential elections that appear to be a constant “lesser evil” voting process

                  Sounds like you’re basing all your arguments on one particular county!

  • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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    6 months ago

    It’s of course possible to just be opposed to the meat grinder that is modern society without requiring me to be some kind of revolutionary?

    And I would raise the argument that the vast majority of “leftists” are like that and are not actually revolutionary because most people can’t be bothered to be revolutionary. It’s hard work and even if you succeed, then you have to do more work.

    I’m quite happy for a government to exist, I just want it to be a good one. I’m not even asking for a Star Trek utopia, just not actively evil. That’ll do for now.

    • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      It’s of course possible to just be opposed to the meat grinder that is modern society without requiring me to be some kind of revolutionary?

      Sure. But people who support the meat grinder will call you one anyway.

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        6 months ago

        Yeah sure but this comment seems to be from the opinion of other "leftists. Although it is actually probably from the perspective of someone who is actually centralist and have just have convinced themselves that they have a political opinion. That way they can look down on everyone and feel smug.

        The right are evil, and the left are apparently religious nut jobs. Yay balance.

        • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Centrists will always have some rationale for dismissing anyone to their left. In this case, they have decided to use the idea that pining after instant and poorly considered revolution is common to all leftists, and have used that stereotype to construct this “authoritarian religious nut” narrative, via which they can dismiss anyone who is less than content with the Democratic Party’s open hostility to the left.

          Hell, just read this thread. It’s a veritable bingo card of dismissal excuses.

          • Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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            What I’m after is some consistency. Every time I say “hey I’m a leftist, but I don’t think revolution or temporary autocracy would be an improvement over the current system” all I get is ideological gatekeeping, litmus tests and accusations of left punching.

            You have to admit, that internet leftism, and Lemmy in particular is heavily biased towards ML philosophy, and they really do not like 20th century revisionism. I just think the world deserves a better class of communist, but apparently that’s regarded as wrong think.

  • Ledivin@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Outside of the word “capitalist,” literally nothing presented in the top half of the image is even political, let alone authoritarian 🙄 it kinda seems like you’re just using popular negative words against things you dislike.

    • AVincentInSpace@pawb.socialOP
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      “Any attempt at actual progress makes you a liberal” isn’t political? “I have a right to tell you what media you should watch” isn’t political?

      What are you talking about?

      • ZombiFrancis@sh.itjust.works
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        You know, “Any attempt to make actual progress makes you a lukewarm Christian” is kind of a weird and ambiguous statement and seems like someone was working backwards from the starting point of being anti-leftist.

        Related: one glaring thing of note is anti-leftist sentiment routinely conflates liberal and leftist together.

        • AVincentInSpace@pawb.socialOP
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          I’m still confused. The Tumblr OP explicitly did not do that, and neither did I. I acknowledge the difference so that I can be left of center without having to associate myself with people who think that voting for Joe Biden instead of <insert third party candidate here> makes me a fascist.

            • AVincentInSpace@pawb.socialOP
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              The original post states that any attempt at real progress makes you a liberal, as opposed to a pure leftist for whom nothing short of a perfect solution on the first go is worth fighting for.

              There are several such leftists in this very thread.

  • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    way to present a big strawman, but what can we expect from liberals still clinging to american exceptionalism.