Daily reminder that ALL atrocities are bad. Yes, even of your favorite polity
Daily reminder that ALL atrocities are bad. Yes, even of your favorite polity
Historians looking for genocide in history:
Tankies: White people bad.
Historians: Everything always bad.
Right but if you follow that power dynamic up the chain the cause would still be the group that picked the " favorite".
This doesn’t resolve the “favorite” group from their role, but rather distributes blame to all involved
Only insofar as one is willing to subsume multiple economic systems without even marginal ideological similarities between them as a single system that bears the guilt for the actions of the polity.
I wouldn’t say central planning has caused most deaths attributed to ML countries, and I wouldn’t say capitalism has caused most deaths attributed to non-ML countries. Both have caused more deaths than they have any right to, but the fundamental problem lays in political and military power more than the exact structure of economic hierarchies. They can feed each other, but then we must get into questions of how much guilt and in what proportion - especially since ideological application in the real world is rarely ‘pure’ - each piece holds.
Not only that, but these two economic systems have dominated an age where an order of magnitude more people live on the planet than previously. It may be technically true, for example, to say that capitalism or central planning has killed more people than feudal economic systems, but that does not really capture the actual moral value of each of the three.
Capitalism is shit. We need to get rid of it. But that’s not the same as saying it’s responsible for more suffering and death than any other.
With all due respect, this smacks of rationalizing. I’m not talking about ideology, I’m talking about outcomes. You and I both know that everyone who dies or suffers from a lack of healthcare, food or shelter, just as an absolute fundamental starting point, is a victim of our system of resource distribution. We have enough food and housing for everyone, but it isn’t profitable to provide it to those who need it.
It is a disgusting system and I agree with you, it has to go. And to get rid of it, we need to talk about how evil it is. Tankies are wrong because they want the system to persist but be controlled by the working class. But the system is the problem.
Are you ever going to read theory? Communism literally cannot exist without a dictatorship of the Proletariat….
I can’t tell if this is meant to be a joke or not.
The dictatorship of the proletariat, as outlined by Marx, is not a literal dictatorship. Bourgeois parliamentary democracies were considered the dictatorship of the bourgeois.
I had a tankie tell my that same line of bullshit when I said that the only way to run a dictatorship of the proletariat was through a literal Lenin style dictatorship, and not any form of democracy.
Which is just insane.
Read more theory, and you come across the Levelers, and more pointedly, the Diggers.
The Diggers were completely in favor of abolishing basically everything, money, government, kings and lords, property ownership. All of it in favor of an extreme Christian communism, They also advocated for forced labor for lazy malcontents, who they did not define as the poor or the destitute.
The English civil war was wild. It laid the groundwork for Marx, and the American and French revolutions. Sadly, the English never could get it together and ditch the monarchy completely.
I have yet to encounter this explicitly where someone would say that Native Americans were “purely victims”. At best, they aggregate and dehistoricize all tribes into a conglomerate term, “Native Americans”. I’m sure there are some who cling to the “n{now savage” trope, but I don’t see it these days.
What ever intertribal conflicts happened, they never reached the level of disease spread, displacement, and systematic violence aimed at cultural erasure. The unprecedented scale of violence unleashed by colonialism, which led to devastating consequences for these communities is important and to flatten the intertribal violence along side the colonial conquest is narrow minded. They may have sucked, but some far more than others.
What ever intertribal conflicts happened, they never reached the level of disease spread, displacement, and systematic violence aimed at cultural erasure
Not because they were noble savages though, just because they lacked the ability to do that to their enemies.
“I’ve never seen someone cling to the noble savage trope.”
“Intertribal conflicts between Native American polities were less brutal because of material constraints, not any fundamental cultural restraint on the behavior of human beings, which is largely consistent across recorded history regardless of region and culture.”
“I don’t accept that.”
?????
Do you legitimately not understand how that is the noble savage trope?
The frame I’m rejecting is the idea that, given the same material conditions, all people and cultures throughout history would react in the same way. This view oversimplifies and dehistoricizes the diverse experiences of Native Americans, as I mentioned in my first comment.
Culture and material conditions are interconnected; they shape and influence one another. If culture only emerged from material conditions, then people would merely be reacting mechanistically to their environments, lacking the richness of creativity, belief systems, and individual agency that shape societies in diverse and meaningful ways. Recognizing this complexity does not mean I’m relying on the noble savage trope.
The way you dismissed my response was uncalled for. I’ve take time and care to craft my response to be honest and considerate. I’m not interested in a discussion that is otherwise.
The frame I’m rejecting is the idea that, given the same material conditions, all people and cultures throughout history would react in the same way.
Broadly speaking, they do. People are people. I didn’t realize we were entering into an argument where cultural chauvinism is the very foundation.
This view oversimplifies and dehistoricizes the diverse experiences of Native Americans, as I mentioned in my first comment.
How the fuck so? When Native Americans have, even just during the time period of European record-keeping, have been observed engaging in displacement and systemic violence aimed at cultural erasure?
Or are we laying it all on some strange notion of an especial-but-unproven cultural immunity to the development of novel diseases?
Culture and material conditions are interconnected; they shape and influence one another. If culture only emerged from material conditions, then people would merely be reacting mechanistically to their environments, lacking the richness of creativity, belief systems, and individual agency that shape societies in diverse and meaningful ways.
No culture yet seen has been observed to prevent human beings from acting in according with their own interests; our interests are determined overwhelmingly by material conditions.
The way you dismissed my response was uncalled for. I’ve take time and care to craft my response to be honest and considerate. I’m not interested in a discussion that is otherwise.
The entire point of the Noble Savage trope is exactly the line of argument you laid down. I’m sorry that you feel being called out is being ‘dismissed’, but perhaps before denying using a trope you should at least check what it means first?
This conversation has become repetitive, and it feels like my arguments are being mischaracterized as arguments I am not making. I reject the notion that people act solely based on material conditions, and I’ve articulated my view in full. Your insistence on framing my position as cultural chauvinism or invoking the noble savage trope is not only unproductive but also dismissive of the complexity I’m trying to convey.
You’ve called out a strawman and I am not interested in continuing this discussion.
I don’t think there’s any evidence for genocide,
Back up, there may not be evidence for a single, concerted policy of genocide, but there are many verifiable genocides of Native American peoples by colonial polities and societies.
Historians? Who and what are they?
Do they keep the secrets, or do we?