this post was submitted on 11 Jun 2025
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Political Memes

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[–] LostWon 23 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

Although it's a nice artistic rendering, I think the focus was poorly chosen here. The resurgence of fascism is not originating with poor or "hillbilly"-stereotyped folks (even if it's certainly true they're targeted for recruitment by the folks who are directly promoting those beliefs). Since fascism directly benefits the kind of people you'd see attending MAGA billionaire events more than it benefits the misguided grandkids of WWII soldiers, I have trouble seeing a point in focusing on the bottom of their power hierarchy. Among the most dangerous folks embracing fascism are tech billionaires (not just from the US, but globally) who buy into the whole Dark Enlightenment brand of right wing accelerationism, for example, but obviously they're not the only ones.

The only meaningful, constructive reasons I can think of to turn attention towards less powerful people in the pro-authoritarian hierarchy is to either directly stand in the way of any harms they're committing or-- ideally-- for someone they think of as close to them to try to reach them-- to help them see reason.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I read the comic as metaphorical for the state of the world in general, not a literal attack on low-income, undereducated individuals.

We fought the nazis less than 100 years ago. We lost loved ones in the fight against tyranny. We brought that victory, and that trauma, home with us. But in the decades since, the number of people who lived and fought in those times is dwindling. All that we are left with today are the symbols of that time. Yes, there are plenty of us that know the history, that have heard the stories. But there are also plenty of us that have only seen the sleek, manicured projection of the ‘bad guys from Indiana Jones’ through the Hollywood lens. And some of that trauma has been passed down too.

I feel like this comic is more about forgetting our own history.

[–] LostWon 3 points 4 days ago

Sure, I agree it's not likely an intentional attack on such people. I do think for what it is, it's nicely done (as I tried to acknowledge earlier). :) Maybe there are more political cartoons/caricatures out there that go after the most powerful people involved. I can't see those running in most major newspapers these days, though.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 4 days ago

My co-worker found a confederate flag in is Asian-American mom's garage. She thought it was an old American flag.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 days ago

This post is meta. Just like real life, instead of debating the substance of the post we have people in the weeds discussing the minutiae of subjective inaccuracies. Things that cannot really be communicated in such a limited format based on the given theme. Like the democrats discussing what brand boot should be placed on your neck instead of the fact there should be no boot at all.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

It's basically the same tribe, with the same vacuum of ideology, the same selfish materialistic desires and a strong belief in moral relativism. Any kindness and self-sacrificial attitude (instead of cruelty and selfishness to the point of colonialism and slavery) seems to be nothing but an accident, or a spark of humanity that's quickly extinguished. From the hippies to Greta, I thank them all but I have no hope that their tribes will back them up as they never have, these are rare instances of kindness in a group of people that historically don't have much of it. And the US only joined WW2 when it was deemed a profitable venture, y'all gotta stop with this "we're heroes" bs, lol. No, your grandfather might have been brave (maybe he was just bloodthirsty? Or only a reluctant victim of circumstance?), but it doesn't make him a 'hero'. But what's an empire without military worship, right? 🙄