• BashfulBob [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    26 days ago

    Georgia: We’re holding a referendum on joining the EU. Please select from the following options

    • President Olaf Scholtz, my country yearns for freedom. Please send in the ECB to liberate my people.

    • I am a Russian apparatchik. My vote doesn’t count.

    Oh my goodness, the election has been rigged by Russian interference. Time to send in the tanks and defeat the Tankies.

      • barrbaric [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        25 days ago

        Hey they weren’t nazis, they only added the swastika at the suggestion of Hermann Goering’s brother-in-law! It’s entirely unrelated!

      • This is also still framed as not the swastika: I and everyone I know have asked the serious adults when we were kids: “Why is there a swastika in the air force flag?”

        And we have all gotten the same splain about how it: “AcHuAlly is not the swastika at all, because it is the other way around and has been used here far longer and for other reasons than the nazis used it, so it’s different.”

        This is even taught this way in schools. Whatever it takes to keep history buried.

        I sometimes struggle to communicate how thoroughly history and all actual events have been disappeared from consciousness here, but this is a good example.

        • ShimmeringKoi [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          24 days ago

          I hate living in America but everything I hear about Finland makes me think I would have lost my mind if I had to grow up there. It’s self-image just seems like such a complete fantasy built on top of such a huge obvious historical bedrock of evil, but you’re considered the childish naive dumbass for refusing to play pretend atop the bones.

          • It’s deflating. I remember growing up and the first time I read Marx as a teen, I went: “This makes so much sense.” Said it to the serious adults who all called me utopian and idealist.

            The 90s depression is when my own family lost everything. I watched neoliberalism roll in and could not for the life of me understand why people just took the austerity and misery onto their personal selves, how Jaska from the corner bar thought he needs to now suffer because common good and national debt. No riots, no protests, nothing.

            Then there is the rise of nationalism and rewriting of history. The great project of national homegenousness that rolled over workers, minorities. The forgotten divide which I at least still remember very well because I crew up in a family of half Reds and half Whites. The othering and shittalk the White section did was so disgusting. I remember it, why nobody else does?

            And turns out none of the history I was given in school, from family, is true. I mean true in the framing sense. From the civil war to winter war to finladization it’s all just bs from start to finish.

            It’s a shit country with mostly Reddit type lib people in it now in positions of power. Debatelords and oh so civilized rational trolley problem people who just want to belong to the west. Yet they don’t. Our bourge are currently selling us for parts to Google, mining companies and military operators, just as it has always gone. And nobody bats an eye because they believe everything they are told. Or it seems like that at least.

  • jackmarxist [any]@hexbear.net
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    26 days ago

    Well these new color revolutions are the last tools for the dying empire aside from total war. If BRICS manages to counter these then they would move another step towards victory.

  • Kieselguhr [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    25 days ago

    Friendly reminder when talking to libs about Georgia:

    even the EU thinks Georgia started the war against Russia

    “In the Mission’s view, it was Georgia which triggered off the war when it attacked Tskhinvali (in South Ossetia) with heavy artillery on the night of 7 to 8 August 2008,” said Swiss diplomat Heidi Tagliavini, who led the investigation.
    The report said the war followed tensions and provocations by Russia, but Tagliavini said: “None of the explanations given by the Georgian authorities in order to provide some form of legal justification for the attack lend it a valid explanation.”
    Saakashvili had said Georgia was responding to an invasion by Russian forces when it attacked breakaway South Ossetia, but the report found no evidence of this. It said Russia’s counter-strike was initially legal, but its military response violated international law when Russian forces pushed into Georgia proper. “Although it should be admitted that it is not easy to decide where the line must be drawn, it seems, however, that much of the Russian military action went far beyond the reasonable limits of defense,” the report said.

  • RomCom1989 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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    26 days ago

    I don’t dispute it being one,but you have to understand there are young people that are that europilled

    You don’t understand until you live in a post Warsaw Pact country,but the youth has a sizeable Atlanticist contingent

    • Kieselguhr [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      25 days ago

      This is 100% right.

      The CIA greases and amplifies, sometimes organizes, but there are many people who honestly believe that the west is a force for capital G Good. They unironically believe that there is a rules based international order led by Western Europe and Washington.

      US cultural hegemony is just that strong.

      That’s why any sane country would fight NED just as much as the actual CIA.

      It’s ridiculous how normalized it is among Eastern European liberals that liberal journalists get invited to US State Department programs. These same people would concoct the wildest kompromat conspiracy theories if a West-critical journo ever visited the Hermitage or the Great Wall on a vacation.

      And that’s why there was a ruckus about NGOs in Georgia.

      • GeorgeZBush [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        25 days ago

        it really is starting to feel like they’re just going all in with all their proxy projects in a gamble to contain China or any sort of alternative hegemony in the world.

    • darkcalling [comrade/them, she/her]@hexbear.net
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      25 days ago

      Clearly yes. Palestine is a long-running project. All they have to do there is run diplomatic interference. Even if they run out of weapons to send the zionists they can just declare a cease-fire and peace and come back to continuing the genocide in a year or three. Syria has matured proxy forces of islamist pawns so that’s not an issue and Georgia is CIA leading indoctrinated liberals to destroy their country.

      As to people claiming they’re going all in. This isn’t anything special, it’s just a lot of things burning at once. Yes they probably pushed the Georgia thing a bit earlier than was ideal but they need to distract Russia and create more trouble there so in it goes. And if they succeed in Georgia and Russia intervenes, you can bet the west will use that as justification for sending their own troops into Ukraine to enforce an armistice. If the color revolution fails (hope it does) they’ll have some other reason.

      The west is still extremely dangerous and strong. The world is full of both delusional liberal who will throw themselves and their country on a pyre for “western liberal values” as well as extremist alienated saps who can be sucked into religious/ethnic terrorist movements. And with dominance of the media landscape, dominance of online spaces and major online companies as well as a mature international communications spying and infiltration apparatus in the eyes agreements they have a lot of abilities.

      China’s made a lot of smart moves but their best one by far I think was the great firewall.

      • thetaT [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        25 days ago

        it is so very clearly a western-backed attempt at counterrevolution. no other way to put it. the west used their NGOs and people with influence that they installed to organize these protests and to coerce university students to go to the protests.

      • thetaT [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        25 days ago

        i’m not a transphobe and i support the existence of trans people and that they have full rights.

        i don’t know what you mean by “newly elected”, this government has been in power for a while. anyways, i disagree with their very regressive stance on LGBT issues, but i don’t think a different government will reverse course on this. i support this government for now because they’re taking a somewhat anti-imperialist stance, something Georgia hasn’t seen in decades.

          • thetaT [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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            25 days ago

            our conditions are different from the conditions in America. in America, both bourgeois parties are on the same side and the same platform. in Georgia, the two sides are the national bourgeoisie, whose interests align with anti imperialism, and the comprador bourgeoisie, whose interests align with the west and who are now staging these protests. it is within the interest of our cause that the national bourgeoisie advance their cause as it is anti-imperialist, and therefore I critically support them. this is not too dissimilar to the critical support for Russia. it is quite dogmatic of you to assume that the conditions everywhere are the same as the United States, and therefore, communists globally must take the same approach everywhere. you have the wrong stance and the wrong approach.

            • newerAccountWhoDis [they/them]@hexbear.net
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              25 days ago

              Well since the US and Russia both follow the exact same ideology, you choose to support the neoliberal bourgeoisie over the other neoliberal bourgeoisie, the one that’s openly homo- and transphobic and totalitarian in a sense that even the apparent liberties that one adorns themselves with are abolished. Great critical support and very right stance my dude

              • Babs [she/her]@hexbear.net
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                24 days ago

                The US and Russia are exactly the same? One is openly hostile to proletarian and resistance movements around the world while the other keeps aligning itself with them out of self-interest. Seems pretty different in the context of imperialism.

  • grandepequeno [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    26 days ago

    Or the fact that a democratically elected neutralist government (by the procedural standards of what “the rules based order” deems democratic) is being violently overthrown by goons

  • sgtlion [any]@hexbear.net
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    26 days ago

    Putin’s vicious anti democratic genocidal land grab given to oligarchs Our glorious not-quite-elected Nazi-supporting coup acceding to western ownership and bought by major investors