i live in a country run by landlords and honestly the old /r/cth sub opened my eyes to a lot of the wild contradictions around rent, etc. and made me see that a situation like this can't be fixed by liberal reforms. Since then I personally have come to think that making people see the hypocrisies, contradictions, and the true evils of liberalism, dispelling people's misconceptions that it's somehow the default, good option and making them lose all faith in the dominant ideology is crucial and it's ideal to radicalise people early along these lines. from there, for young people especially, unless their vision is clouded by something like generational wealth, they likely know the struggle to some extent and the path to the immortal science should start to become relatively clear.
i live in a country run by landlords and honestly the old /r/cth sub opened my eyes to a lot of the wild contradictions around rent, etc. and made me see that a situation like this can't be fixed by liberal reforms. Since then I personally have come to think that making people see the hypocrisies, contradictions, and the true evils of liberalism, dispelling people's misconceptions that it's somehow the default, good option and making them lose all faith in the dominant ideology is crucial and it's ideal to radicalise people early along these lines. from there, for young people especially, unless their vision is clouded by something like generational wealth, they likely know the struggle to some extent and the path to the immortal science should start to become relatively clear.
Canada?
thankfully i do not live in canada