i wish no harm to american ruling class, my enemy is the american people
one person say that barbarism critic is "the brianna wu of 2025. Remember kids I called it"
i guess there is some very real perceived material interests of americans to continue the genocide in palestine, like the christian zionists, or the liberals who want to continue the american dominance via global hegemony, and the labor aristocrats in america who want the treats.
i was listening to rev left radio "The Long Transition Towards Socialism and the End of Capitalism" with Torkil Lauesen and, probably gonna butcher it - but my understanding is that as we enter a multipolar world, the americans will not be able to blatantly exploit the over-exploited nations (global south) leading to increasingly deteriorating conditions in the imperial core, which will set the grounds very clearly between socialism and barbarism?
and we are to organize and help alleviate the woes of the people which also serve as a way of building relations that lead to building power via organizations.
(iirc the bolsheviks has above ground orgs and underground orgs for the law breaking stuff)
eh i dunno just over analyzing what do you peeps think.
Yeah, I edited my comment to mention that fact about 34 seconds before you replied (sorry!), because really that is a huge part of the issue that should not be omitted or forgotten. I like to call that the "Spiderman point strat". You also see this with people in the USA talking about Japan discriminating against Zainichi Koreans, or with Zionist settlers suddenly caring a whole awful lot about the plight of the West Papuans and Iroquois. Everybody in the imperial core just loves to distract from their own atrocities by pointing to others', it seems.
One other thought I've kept coming back to when it comes to Europe's relationship to the USA, though, both in terms of that "Eurolib" anti-Americanism as well as paradoxically Europeans' fetish for all things American, is that this relationship at least partly serves to reproduce settlerism and US hegemony, by basically making it harder for people to move from the USA to Europe and stay there. I could go on about this but I don't want to ramble.
100% agree, all very good points and wrt Europe/USA that is definitely a very interesting perspective on the interplay and I think it has legs
It's a perspective informed by lived experience, so I would certainly hope it has legs.