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s0ykaf [he/him]
s0ykaf [he/him] @ s0ykaf @hexbear.net
Posts
3
Comments
93
Joined
5 yr. ago

  • tbf that one has been cancelled by commies since the 90s or even the 80s, he's never really liked us and we've never liked him

    still better than bolsonaro obviously... i'd much rather have my university falling into pieces than outright closing its doors

  • most federal universities in brazil are currently striking against lula's neoliberal government, and more have been joining every month (my campus is deciding today)

    but the biggest demand from professors is a wage raise... when they already earn more than like 95% of the population and universities are seriously lacking in stuff like capital for infrastructure, scholarships, etc. i mean, salaries already account for 90% (not a typo; it really is 90%) of federal university expenses

    always sad to see how capitalism can turn unions into selfish orgs

  • It's practically a miracle that he was elected president when everything and everyone was against him

    he was just the figurehead of the liberal side of the bourgeoisie, which at that time was fighting the more openly fash wing for hegemony

    i'm ok with it, i'm just saying... the fascists were against him. the liberals were not, and were, in fact, in their majority, helping him out

    i think sometimes we equate liberals to fascists too easily. liberals don't like fascism. it's disorganized, unpredictable, it has a distorted "popular movement" tinge to it that makes it way too volatile. it's a weapon they might use, and usually do use, but when facing serious threats. but lula was an open ally, not a threat, and proved to be the only electoral option for the bourgeoisie (which they happily used, or the fascists would eat them up)

    edit: it's funny, but lula had always tried to be accepted by brazilian capitalists, and yet they were always going after him, to the point of putting the guy in jail and shit. then it took bolsonaro for lula to get the embrace that he'd always wanted

  • i hate everything here, from the ridiculous price to the guy treating a degree like a simple matter of value exchange

    it's like even the pursuit of knowledge has become just a tool to help or hinder your survival under capitalism and i really fucking hate it

    "a degree is like a car" no it fucking isn't??

  • i love how that dude makes an absolutely ridiculous assumption, as i've never seen a "tankie" deny that current russia is reactionary as fuck, but since he's saying Bad Thing about The Tankies everyone just goes "hmm yea those tankies amirite? smh"

    liberals are fucking idiots, they never have any idea what they're actually talking about and just throw around concepts and categories with the level of understanding of a monkey playing with a power tool

  • he represents the overly online debate lord liberal loser demographic, so of course he's gonna have a lot of fans - people like him, who will defend their avatar at all costs

    it's like taylor swift with the utterly mediocre

  • i think it's a matter of degree, russia's smo definitely did accelerate things in europe for instance (which, in turn, makes things worse for america)

    it definitely feels like america is stretched thin right now (at least politically, if not yet economically), and that is weird because they've been involved in more concurrent conflicts in the past and it didn't feel that way then

  • the rise in fascism and nafo maniacs is precisely a consequence of that weakening, the imperial core and its "peripheral" thugs should get worse and worse as time goes by

  • So not only can you save lots of budget in the military, but it also reduces the harm that a well-funded and organised military can be to the "internal enemy", which is usually poor, indigenous, black or otherwise marginalised people. (Usually with the cover of "combatting drug trafficking")

    while that's true, the military is also the only institution that, if co-opted, could be used in a theoretical situation against local police, which is usually armed to the teeth in countries where drug trafficking is serious enough

    when bolsonaro had his pathetic military parade, with tanks fuming like old chevettes (to the point where it became a meme), i was only happy until i remembered how our local police are pretty much brownshirts bearing automatic rifles

  • but i'm not expecting them to intervene, that would be insane

    i was expecting lula's rhetoric and they came up with something way better, by basically saying hamas is not doing terrorism

  • every time i think china is being disappointing they kind of do more than i was expecting

  • For me the dividing line would be recognizing the Al Aqsa Flood as genuine expression of colonized people under military dictatorship fighting for liberation, rather than an act of "terrorism" against "innocent civillians"

    at that point we were trying to rescue brazilians from gaza and needed help from the colonizers, after we brought them back his discourse started changing

  • lula recalling his ambassador from israel is the happiest i've been with his 3rd term since the scholarship raises

    if this escalates to cutting relations with the zionist occupiers i'm not even criticizing his domestic policies anymore, just full, uncritical support to his government. i genuinely believe palestine is the dividing line, where all contradictions come to meet

    and not only are decisions being made right now gonna tell me whose side each group will be on in the future, but whatever comes out of this war has the potential to heavily impact capitalism long term

  • vote in favor of Lula's reforms, as they are usually from the same region as Lula and adopt this pragmatic stance with the left-wing parties in order to get elected and gain support.

    they also vote in favor of those reforms because said reforms are mostly neoliberal in nature

  • i think they're just losing market share... germany has been getting screwed for years now, starting way before the energy issues

    aside from the possible instances of relief (eg random years of a slight recovery within a long term trend of decline), this economic shift feels almost unavoidable

    unless the west goes to war or some shit

  • I don't know why I still bother. That site achieves the unthinkable: it is way fucking worse than Twitter.

    i'm pretty sure half of reddit users aren't even real people, or at least not real people expressing real opinions

    if you go out in the streets there's no way you'd find that level or frequency of anti-palestine rhetoric. i mean, fuck, how many pro-israel protests have you seen and how many people were in those compared to pro-palestine ones?

  • "everything was so great in the 90s" says the guy who never paid attention to a 90s hip hop song in his life

  • i wonder if that keeps researchers from developing economies from becoming impactful, because $3k is like 15 months of a minimum wage in brazilian reais, and more than entire month's wages for 99.9% of our professors

    edit: for the humanities this seems especially bad, it kind of makes it sure that western social thought remains dominant since only you guys can actually pay for it

  • The multi millionaire friedrich engels is a communist?

    Hahaha..