This was an attempt to encourage Italians to eat more rice and decrease reliance on food imports by no-fash and wheat was imported while rice was more easily grown in Italy, and no they did not think of making rice noodles to replace pasta

  • grendahlgrendahlgen [he/him, any]
    ·
    edit-2
    7 days ago

    "Move fast and break things" leads to "Progress is our birthright", which leads to "What undesirable people in our society are holding us back from our birthright?" (i.e. quintessential fascist thought).

    The repeated failures (still ongoing) of Futurism highlight the need for a different method of conceptualizing 'progress'.

    • TraschcanOfIdeology [they/them, comrade/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      7 days ago

      I sort of agree, but at the same time the USSR and many communist projects in the early 20th century had a very similar perspective, to break the past so thoroughly that the future could be built in the name of progress. Even Gramsci, the most leftist Italian* to ever AyyyyyOC-big had a very similar view. So, iconoclasm and disregard for the sacred cows of society doesn't always lead to "purge all undesirables".

      It's all Hegel's fault for making such a good argument for the concept of historical progress as something that could and had to be driven forward.

      * (he was actually Sardinian, and back then that mattered a lot)

      • grendahlgrendahlgen [he/him, any]
        ·
        7 days ago

        Agreed. I think that's what I meant by the "methodology" of futurism. The idea of breaking the past isn't the issue. It's the means and systems used to do so that matters, and therefore the ideology of the futurists in question.

        DO NOT give melon-musk the big past-breaking hammer.