TheSeriousGal

joined 3 years ago
[–] TheSeriousGal@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 2 years ago

I have once talked to a libertarian that equated Minimum Wage to the Holocaust. Most libertarians are either teenage boys or mentally very unwell people who are completely detached from reality.

[–] TheSeriousGal@lemmygrad.ml 14 points 2 years ago

I once talked to some petite that claimed that most people in Germany live great and that most own property, it's just a small minority that doesn't while in those evil communist countries nobody has anything - that asshole couldn't provide me a comprehensive answer when I showed him that not even half the population in this country owns their home while most people in AES do own their homes.

[–] TheSeriousGal@lemmygrad.ml 25 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I have no respect for any person that chooses to waste their time crying about "censorship" in far-away countries while living in a shithole like the US - a place where tons of people either slave away for less than a living wage, where police regularly shoot people and where lots of people have to live on the streets. Even if China would do every bad thing libs accuse it of - it would still be a concerning sign of weird priorities to focus so much on this other country while your own is basically a sinking ship with nukes.

 

Good day comrades. Those of you who watched news recently surely heard about a "coup" in the Republic of Niger. Apparently Westerners are very mad because I am hearing of the west cutting diplomatic ties and thinking of imposing sanctions.

Now, as you know, Western news sources are not reliable when it comes to the happenings in other countries - especially in those that are either not west-friendly or part of the Global South. My question is, can anybody here explain to me what exactly happened in the Republic of Niger and if possible, provide a Marxist estimate of the situation? Is the "coup" (I'll use the term for now because of a lack of better knowledge about the situation) good or bad for the working class of the Republic of Niger? Is it good for the global working class movement? I have seen pictures of protestors waving the Russian flag and some Western media is already claiming this somehow benefits Russia. What is going on?

Thanks in advance.

[–] TheSeriousGal@lemmygrad.ml 8 points 2 years ago

Personally I have the theory that the US will turn into an open fascist dictatorship somewhere within the next 20 years

[–] TheSeriousGal@lemmygrad.ml 14 points 2 years ago

Thanks for clarifying it and intervening. I can absolutely understand why some comrades may have a generally very negative attitude to "white people" but some of the stuff I saw in some threads was really off the charts, and I've seen at least one claim that was pretty much akin to the demand of ethnic cleansings. I'm glad that I am organized in real-life and that my ML bubble is not limited to internet discourse.

[–] TheSeriousGal@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I would call Die Linke neither Marxist nor attribute their fall to Wagenknecht. Die Linke is more or less just a melting pot of various vaguely "leftist" positions, but it is not clearly marxist. I have never seen them advocate or employing Marxist analysis. There are Marxsists in Die Linke, but from my personal experiences, most of them are pretty unhappy with the party.

As for Wagenknecht, isn't she one of the most popular politicians according to polls at the moment? The downfall of Die Linke has been going on for quite some time now, and I don't think it started with Wagenknecht, nor do I really think Wagenknecht is responsible for losing votes. Die Linke has had issues gathering Working Class votes for a long time now, and I think that comes mainly from their inability to provide the working class with a proper alternative vision for the future (Socialism) as well as their constant, open infighting.