this post was submitted on 26 Feb 2024
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[–] [email protected] 0 points 8 months ago (2 children)

If you come into any thread on this topic flailing quips about how this dude was a scumbag and deserved it, this genocide has drained you of your morale and your conscience and you need to take a step back and re-examine the words coming out of your mouth. His action was idealistic yes but it was also a horrible fucking tragedy. He saw the genocide just like us and he was lost and confused of what to do about it. He did the only thing he thought would make people look and gave his life to do it and people still shit on his corpse. Have some fucking respect. He saw what we all saw, this horrific fucking genocide and was overwhelmed by the terror and did the only thing he thought made sense.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Yep, he literally did more than the entirety of the Gulf states combined.

Also, so what he was a troop. He saw the right side, I am the last person for troop worship, but he saw something wrong and acted. He was also only 25. There are people who will tolerate the most racist xenophobic warmonger friends and relatives twice or three times this guy's age because they PERSONALLY know them and then will shit on this guy.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

Yes idealistic is the way to appraise this.

He was born to certain material circumstances, was in a situation as part of something oppressive. Became conscious but lacked the materialist analysis (intentionally denied to him via propaganda) to really evaluate and understand. He acted with heart, with courage, but the effect of such actions while showing great personal moral fortitude and resolve is a sad reminder of how far we have to go in educating the proletariat of the west. He found himself awake in a nightmarish system with no escape, no real understanding of its basis, his world, the lies told to him as a child (and adult) crumbling down around him as he watched untold horrors unfold with no way to stop or slow them. He felt the pain as many of us feel the pain seeing people slaughtered in a genocide that his government was enabling. It doesn't matter that he didn't see through other acts of the US military, it matters he saw through this one and wasn't silent and felt strongly enough to be more than passive.

He's a martyr the same way someone who died protesting lack of medical care on a sidewalk is. He may not be worthy of a place in some future hall of peoples heroes, of comrades, cadres who died in the revolution, in educating others, in state anti-com action, but he's worthy of acknowledging now as someone on the right side of history. As someone braver and better than every scumbag journalist on television who reports on the genocide in a "balanced and neutral" (read: pro-genocide, zionist propagandist mouthpiece) manner. Braver and better than every liberal who tries to make excuses for Biden, who tries to both-sides the genocide, who demands people vote blue and claim he is the lesser evil. This was an unremarkable man undertaking an action that likely won't result in any real material change, and yet he did more, tried harder, was truer to the ideal of being against genocide than every simpering, disgusting liberal excuse-maker.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 8 months ago

Can think of a couple people in this thread whose comments on this matter warrant discipline.

Already banned one from the comm I moderate on hexbear.

Fucking calling this "performative liberal virtue signaling" is so fucking disgusting coming from a supposed comrade.