• PugJesus@lemmy.worldOP
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    2 days ago

    “Things getting worse will make people swap to MY side!” has a terrible track record.

    • balderdash@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      Sure, but this doesn’t address the problem I’m noting above. We fought hard for worker’s rights, so they granted them and then dismantled/neutered the unions. Public outcry forced the fracture of Standard Oil and now the monopolies are worse than ever. It’s one step forward and two steps back.

      • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        Because you have to keep taking steps forward. The fight against greed and corruption will never end, the other side is going to keep swinging forever. We don’t get to rest on past achievements, we constantly have to defend them and push for more.

        And the thing is, if you can’t rally the people to vote for incremental change, revolution is a non-starter.

        • balderdash@lemmy.zip
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          2 days ago

          I agree with everything in the first paragraph. However, every time we fight against the oligarchs they learn better strategies to divide and conquer us. We are a much more isolated people than we were 50 or 100 years ago. Individualism and consumerism are ubiquitous while our sense of community is virtually non-existent. So people feel powerless to confront fascism because no one can do it alone. This isolation is arguably by design.

          And the thing is, if you can’t rally the people to vote for incremental change, revolution is a non-starter.

          Time will tell. But there are historical examples, in other countries, of the corruption and hypocrisy being flaunted so blatantly that the people rise up and demand sweeping systemic changes.

          In the U.S., we have forgotten our collective power. Our peaceful protests are ignored and even destruction of property is consider taboo. We haven’t seen wide-spread violent dissent since the Civil Rights / Anti-Vietnam movements. Conditions were ripe then, but the government deployed a combination of modest concessions and state enacted violence: carrot and stick. The way this Trump term is going, they might not give us the carrot next time.

          • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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            2 days ago

            Individualism and consumerism are ubiquitous while our sense of community is virtually non-existent.

            It’s never been a better time to make it virtually existent. Look at us, here, now, puzzling out the best course of action. The information Age is the perfect opportunity to build robust social networks that transcend borders. But until we can cooperate and coordinate here in the most casual and forgiving circumstances, how are we going to coordinate collective power any other way?

            the corruption and hypocrisy being flaunted so blatantly that the people rise up and demand sweeping systemic changes.

            Accelerationism is a dangerous game of chicken with lots of collateral damage. I do not desire a pathway that rolls the dice on totalitarianism, even if you succeed countless of people will be chewed up by the acceleration. It’s the ideology of the privileged, who are betting they won’t be one of the ones chewed up.

            In the U.S., we have forgotten our collective power.

            We do still have the ballot box, we just have to use it in a coordinated way. We also have our workplace, which we can take steps to unionize and socialize. We should be arming ourselves, this administration actually changed my mind on the second amendment.

            • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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              1 day ago

              Accelerationism is a dangerous game of chicken with lots of collateral damage. I do not desire a pathway that rolls the dice on totalitarianism, even if you succeed countless of people will be chewed up by the acceleration. It’s the ideology of the privileged, who are betting they won’t be one of the ones chewed up.

              Is it not the ideology of the privileged to maintain the status quo? Every second it is allowed to exist people are dying from easily preventable causes. You play chicken with their lives as you gamble on the chance to make 1 million small changes vs 1 big change.

              • Jason2357@lemmy.ca
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                17 hours ago

                Is it not the ideology of the privileged to maintain the status quo?

                That doesn’t seem to be what is happening. It is the richest, most powerful people who are fanning the flames of accelerationism in the form of owning or funding radical/divisive/violent propaganda like is seen on Fox News (and worse), or online on X or Facebook (and worse). Besides the divisive rhetoric intended to make people crave violence against their slightly different skin colored neighbor, climate change denialism could also be argued to be accelerationist as well.

                They all assume their power will let them come out on top -which has been mostly true historically. The World Wars both made a lot of rich people very rich, as did both the formation AND the collapse of the Soviet Union. Plenty of small-scale examples too of despots making people very rich.

              • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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                1 day ago

                I didn’t say anything about maintaining the status quo, my statements were about Accelerationism. How many seconds is it going to take to coordinate the revolution? How many small changes can be made in the time it takes to reverse a century of anti-left propaganda, inspire a population to abandon the system they currently rely on, and coordinate the action necessary to replace it? More than a million, I’d say.