I forgot all of the details but libs keep smugly referencing it and now I'm curious.

    • A_Serbian_Milf [they/them]
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      2 years ago

      It’s just a blog posted by a hardline German communist and anti-imperialist with prior military experience named “b”. It’s amassed quite a following over the years and has an interesting comment section.

      Imagine if SeventyTwoTrillion had a blog and we were just commenting on it instead of this news thread. Now imagine SeventyTwoTrillion has a ton of experience with NATO artillery and anti-aircraft but now hates NATO

        • A_Serbian_Milf [they/them]
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          2 years ago

          The about section explains it. There used to be a forum called the Whiskey Bar where geopolitics was discussed. The forum’s admin gave up and closed down, but many of the users followed ‘b’ over to his new blog.

          It’s an old song they are quoting, Bertolt Brecht’s ‘Alabama Song’.

          The name of the original Whiskey Bar was taken from Bertolt Brecht's Alabama Song where the first line goes:

          "Show me the way to the next whiskey bar".

          The name Moon of Alabama was taken from the first line of the chorus of that song:

          "Oh, moon of Alabama ...".

          The design of this site has been directly stolen or re-engineered from the Whiskey Bar site.

          https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertolt_Brecht

          Bertolt Brecht was a Marxist playwright and songwriter from the GDR, which explains the German communist connection.

          In addition, Soviet states also had a sort of fascination and admiration with American natives, they even created a genre of western films called Osterns that inverted the Cowboy-Indian dichotomy and glorified Native Americans above the settlers.

          https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ostern

          • LeninsBeard [he/him]
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            2 years ago

            Soviet states also had a sort of fascination and admiration with American natives, they even created a genre of western films called Osterns that inverted the Cowboy-Indian dichotomy and glorified Native Americans above the settlers.

            :CommiePOGGERS:

            • A_Serbian_Milf [they/them]
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              2 years ago

              And before anyone accuses them of Noble Savage tropes - the more defensible examples of these films depict Native Americans as civilized and complex, and depict the Cowboy/settlers as the savages. They may be slightly guilty of orientalism or something similar, but this predates western noble savage ideology which is mostly just a way for whites to assuage their own guilt while the Soviets quite explicitly showed the massacres and genocides of the whites and often imagined a world where history went differently and was more optimistic - whereas I feel white noble savage tropes are meant to make the native genocide feel inevitable