MaoistLandlord [he/him]

  • 36 Posts
  • 33 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: March 11th, 2021

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  • At one point, Puyi was taken to Harbin and Pingfang to see where the infamous Unit 731, the chemical and biological warfare unit in the Japanese Army, had conducted gruesome experiments on people. Puyi noted in shame and horror: “All the atrocities had been carried out in my name”.

    A lot of people may just be psychos and get off to it, but I personally think that during times of war and revolution, in order to rehabilitate someone they have to see the consequences of their actions. Germany still has some sort of national shame over its Nazi history and criminalize its ideology, officially speaking of course. But look at Japan. The emperor still reigns and the imperial era is not that big of a deal, or even a nostalgic period.

    Germans - soldiers and civilians - were forced to look upon their or their government’s work. Pictures, written accounts, and even real corpses and survivors (I didn’t even know that they forced the civilians to handle the corpses as well). m It does seem exploitative, but most people only hear about it and the damages can only be imagined. I don’t think the Japanese ever had to do this. I don’t know if it’d effective to beam footage of dead kids from mass shootings onto TV. But I think before any cleanup or investigation is done, politicians and their families need to be forced into the school building to look at the lifeless eyes of each kid they let die for no reason. That’s a start at least.

    Collective Physical/financial is wrong, in my opinion. But I think collective traumatization is powerful. In addition to the Germans, look at 9/11 and its effect on society. A few generations later and their offsprings won’t have images of corpses burned in their memories, but the zeitgeist might be strong enough to deter them from emulating the past


  • Monroe Doctrine and its consequences

    Various CIA operations and planned operations that involved US citizens/US soil (Northwoods, drug trafficking, MKULTRA, and human experimentation in general - it goes beyond LSD)

    Cuba’s MODERN literacy program and how it compares to western/capitalist programs (Cuba’s programs are being used by tens of millions of underserved people)

    Superimperialism - how the US got off the gold standard and dominated the world with less overt war

    Strategy of tension, GLADIO, blowback

    The history of industrialization and capitalism. You can probably sneak in a little about how it’s time to find an “alternative”

    Shock doctrine is post-communist states around the world

    The Warlord Era of china (this one is wild)









  • During the Cold War, socialism was spreading everywhere, including the Middle East. However, the US wanted to exploit the fact that socialism - on the surface - is an “atheistic” ideology. They tried pushing this aspect onto Muslim communities, making it seem like socialism is inherently incompatible with their beliefs, unlike capitalism which doesn’t care about what you believe. This meant the USSR was the biggest enemy because it was the largest socialist nation that was seeking to expand its influence

    It was not just about ideology. The Middle East also produces a ton of oil which meant that if the USSR had influence there, they would control the flow of oil thus have a major advantage in war and production. The US spoke to the monarchs and secured a deal: constant oil and globally sold in USD in exchange for American military presence and weapons sales to stop socialism and SA becomes a regional power.

    Various ME countries also disliked socialism and would help the US. But SA had the money and local influence to direct covert operations, and now they have every ounce of assistance available with the US.

    Basically, the US helps the monarchs stay in control by keeping them happy to side with the US. Their shift towards China and the yuan is interesting. It’s opportunistic and I suspect they’ll go back to the US once they get pressured enough to satisfy SA’s demands. But right now both countries are trying to please the monarch so they continue to be propped up. They’re not phased by China’s hammer and sickle because they know China doesn’t care about regime change in the modern day. They just want the goods. However, the US wants to go scorched earth on anyone who doesn’t agree with them, and SA is wary of that as seen with its refusal to sanction Russia and getting sanctions themselves (thus going to China).



  • An analysis by an American Marxist professor from 1995, after reviewing the Secret Soviet Archives:

    The worker - having been stripped of personal ambition and revolutionary fervor - is compelled to comfort the bourgeoisie at the expense of his home and dear mother. The bourgeoisie seeks to muddy the waters and create an identity full of illusions and fear, such that the worker conflates the happiness and goals of his boss as his own. Of course, the bourgeoisie is under no such illusion, for if the worker was happy - truly happy, that is, such that he is not starving and dreading over tomorrow’s rent - it would be the death blow to the exploitative and cruel ideology that supports his decadence and comfort.