traxanh [ze/zir, xey/xem]
Rooted in revolution. Adaptive in strategy. The bamboo survives the storm not by refusing to bend, but by knowing how to bend without breaking.
- 3 Posts
- 7 Comments
traxanh [ze/zir, xey/xem]@hexbear.netOPto
GenZedong@lemmygrad.ml•Hanoi Convention: Vietnam’s Middle Power MomentEnglish
2·5 months agoThe signatory list for the Hanoi Convention has been disclosed. As expected, the key states leading the charge for a multipolar world and digital sovereignty have signed: Russia, China, DPRK, Cuba, Belarus, and Iran.
And, in a move that should surprise no one, the United States is conspicuously absent.
traxanh [ze/zir, xey/xem]@hexbear.nettomutual_aid@hexbear.net•[$15/800] Still needed for food and essential stuff, urgentEnglish
1·5 months agobuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuump amber whataboutism volcel police
traxanh [ze/zir, xey/xem]@hexbear.netOPto
Ask Lemmygrad@lemmygrad.ml•Are Lemmygrad and Hexbear safe for AES (Already Existing Socialism) comrades?English
3·6 months agoYou can read the Vietnam-China Joint Statement here. Statement #10 explicitly commits both sides to ‘persevere in friendly consultation…’ and to ‘take no action that can complicate the situation or extend disputes.’
This is not the first joint statement to address the East Sea issue. The consistency across them shows this isn’t just diplomatic boilerplate; it reveals a shared, strategic priority: to manage and contain the dispute rather than let it define the entire relationship. Economic ties, party-to-party solidarity, and regional stability are simply more important to both sides than escalating a maritime quarrel. The repeated commitment to this framework is evidence of that calculated choice
traxanh [ze/zir, xey/xem]@hexbear.netOPto
Ask Lemmygrad@lemmygrad.ml•Are Lemmygrad and Hexbear safe for AES (Already Existing Socialism) comrades?English
9·6 months agoWell, I’d say the relationship has been improving gradually for years, and even more since our new General Secretary was appointed. The tariff things gave it another big boost. We’re seeing more state visits and high-level meetings now than ever before. They’ve also become much more open to doing business across many new sectors
traxanh [ze/zir, xey/xem]@hexbear.netOPto
Ask Lemmygrad@lemmygrad.ml•Are Lemmygrad and Hexbear safe for AES (Already Existing Socialism) comrades?English
16·6 months agoI’ve seen a lot of AES slander on removed, and as so the ‘đu càng’ in Vietnam. The criticism from both sides feels like an automatic response, you know? I don’t even pay much mind to it, it’s often the corrupt actions of some officials that cloud people’s view of the party’s actual work. And don’t even get me started on the infighting between Chinese and Vietnamese netizens on TikTok and Xiaohongshu, gosh, those people are insufferable. 'Oh the leaders in Vietnam did something good? ‘Ah! They did their homework.’

traxanh [ze/zir, xey/xem]@hexbear.netOPto
Ask Lemmygrad@lemmygrad.ml•Are Lemmygrad and Hexbear safe for AES (Already Existing Socialism) comrades?English
18·6 months agoObviously there are millions of communists where I live anyway, maybe I’m being paranoid
Tbh I don’t use Facebook and don’t know this group. But on the homophobia part the Burkina Faso case is interesting. They banned homosexuality as a ‘colonial product.’ Here it’s different. Cultural imports made LGBTQ+ people more visible. Old homophobia didn’t disappear. So now there’s conflict. That conflict is how change happens. There’s this guy I heard about who brought a knife to threaten his siblings for having same-sex partners. Now he’s slowly accepting them. That’s exactly how it works. More visibility forces confrontation. Confrontation forces change.
As for the nationalist part, the “patsoc” stuff (honestly, I don’t even know what that word means) serves the party’s interest, channels popular energy into supporting the system. The homophobia in pages like Tifosi is organic backlash to visibility. The party doesn’t encourage it but doesn’t seriously challenge it either. They tolerate advocacy within limits and restrict it when it conflicts with political stability.