• StalinForTime [comrade/them]
    ·
    4 months ago

    No figure better encapsulates Western liberal propaganda against Russia.

    Notice the complete absence of discussion of any other oppositions figures or forces (controlled or otherwise) within Russia, along with the attendant impression that he is supposed to be far more popular than he actually is.

    Note the conspiracy of silence regarding his past and actual political ideology.

    That being said, whatever the circumstances of his death, it's a nationalist government killing a fascist. Oh well.

    • Shrike502@lemmygrad.ml
      ·
      4 months ago

      it’s a nationalist government killing a fascist.

      If they wanted the idiot dead, he'd be dead long before.

      • StalinForTime [comrade/them]
        ·
        4 months ago

        I don't really think this is valid reasoning tbh. Governments can kill people at a whim, but frequently do not because they would rather they die over time through conditions such as prisons. There are other factors they consider apart from simply wanting him dead. They don't need to have killed his directly. It could simply be the result of mental and physical health issues due to his imprisonment. Life expectancy in prisons is markedly lower for a reason.

        I've seen takes that he was killed by the West to blame Putin, but I haven't really seen any actual hard evidence for this

        Western governments want Assange dead. So by that logic he'd be dead long before now. He's not, but I'm not about to conclude that the US gov doesn't want Assange in an anonymous ditch. There are plenty of revolutionaries being let to rot in US prisons from the previous decades. It's just killing them in slow motion.

        At the end of the day we don't have objective info to allow us to conclude one way or another as to exactly why he's dead, and both the West and Russia are obviously deeply biased sources.

    • SoyViking [he/him]
      ·
      4 months ago

      Western media are really bad at this. Whenever they are dealing with political struggles in countries outside their Aryan garden, they immediately reduce everything down to a simple binary of pro-western/pro-democracy/anti-corruption Vs. pro-BadCountry/authoritarian/corrupt.

      • StalinForTime [comrade/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        4 months ago

        Yeah it's also crazy when you realize how instinctual it is. Like I don't think all the dolts at the Guardian pumping out ink for the ink god really reflectively think 'we have to craft this Manichean narrative for the sake of liberalism' given that's not actually how ideology generally works. I have no doubt (actually, I know from personal experience) that it you push narrative which don't conform you will sometimes get responses which straight-up make no reference to the truth of the matter but explicitly reject what you're saying because it's politically inconvenient. That being said, it is fascinating and disturbing how reflexive and instinctual these kinds of responses are in general liberal culture, and how little most people in liberal societies are either unwilling or incapable of critically analyzing and evaluating this kind of stuff. Like they could just read what Putin says to get a more accurate account of the Russian state's motivations for their actions.