I mean I think there's a lot of merit to say the Nazis were a result of the October Revolution. Historians like Enzo Traverso and Domenico Losurdo would argue that WWI and WWII are part of the same thirty years war, and that the fascists were the direct result of the communist challenge to capitalist supremacy. There was no other method aside from fascism to restore the Capital order in a place like Italy.
I'm not saying his entire post is wrong. I agree that often the liquidation of low level functionaries of something isn't akin to an actual revolutionary strategy and often backfires, that's not what I'm arguing. I'm strictly pushing back on his statement that killing unarmed civilians is always immoral. Something can be both moral and still stupid/ineffective in the long run.
Nah I'm going to push back on that, killing unarmed civilians actively contributing to genocide is not "immoral." This is the same argument for like why the Rebels shouldn't have blown up the Death Star, because they killed thousands upon thousands of "innocent civilians" doing plumbing or electrical maintenance or cooking on the Planet Exploding Death Ray Genocide Machine. Obviously "morality" here isn't relevant one way or another, these kinds of violent acts are the natural consequence of genocide, but there comes a point when unarmed civilians are no longer "innocent."
I mean the entire world that we live in is designed for human bodies. It makes sense to have humanoid robots because they slot in with the world we've created the easiest.
It's far more than cringe comedy. Nathan Fielder is perhaps the funniest person working in entertainment right now. The Rehearsal is a masterpiece that posits its impossible for any human to ever truly "understand" another, and demonstrates this in very funny ways. It skirts this insane line between total farce and genuinely insightful and sincere.
A really great followup to this is The Capital Order by Clara Mattei. She details the broad response to this in the aftermath of WWI, where fear of the Bolshevik revolution alongside vast nationalization of economies opened up tremendous breathing room for experiments and worker's rights. Mainly, the capitalists cooked up "austerity" in order to crush the power of the workers, and needed fascism in Italy to do this.
I'll add a second recommendation for Kagi. Being able to block sites (like Pinterest) is a game changer too. Their search, though ridiculous at first to bring yourself to pay for what was once free, is more than worth it.
Agent Hitler, FBI is such a legendary screencap too. Some of the best comedy I've ever seen honestly, a legendary series.
Nothing will ever match the hilarity of Danger 5 season 2. The Soviet Union's "America house of horrors" and the entire arc in the Vatican are some of the funniest shit I've ever seen.
The first five words of the ลกahฤda obviously, ูุง ุฅูู ุฅูุง
Protests are more of a ritual than a tactic these days. Protest is a tool, one of the tools in a toolbox to get what you want. They are not an end in themselves. If the protests aren't disrupting anything, if they aren't organized towards obtaining something or making somebody do something, they're not any better than a block party or an online petition.
Ah got it, agreed.