Many people say the CTH subreddit was full of libs before it was banned. This isn't really false, there was a bunch of them. My dialogue experience with said libs was obviously bad ; but not because they are goofy and can only quote Harry Potter. These were the kind of people to use the R-word left and right, and to attack me when I told them not to use it. They were the kind of people to fat-shame women and employing horrible sexist insults in a post about redditors bullying the shit out of some girls for saying she didn't like tall men.

This example isn't completely related to the rest of this post, but it helps set the tone a little bit. Reddit is full of libs, unironically (and unlike this place, let's be not sarcastic for a moment). If you ask the average Redditor, they'll probably tell you they don't like violence... Unless it's used against criminals. Ask them to define "criminals"? Someone who breaks the law. What if the law is unfair? Obviously they don't often ask themselves this sort of questions. There are countless en masse upvoted posts on Reddit that are basically on or off duty cops (sometimes just civilians) using violence against said criminals ; I will always remember that video of an off duty Brazilian cop shooting a store robber in the temple at point blank, and all the comments were people jerking off in circles, some trying to be quirky, bragging about their knowledge of guns (bullet to the head kills, thanks, dickhead), some just outright praising this kind of violence.

Obviously Reddit isn't a place made to help people think, so it would probably not be easy to get these folks to think about whether or not robbing a store means you deserve to die, let alone why would someone rob a store in the first place. But let's give "Reddit" the benefit of the doubt for this time. Maybe the average Redditor just believes that the police is legitimized in having the monopoly over violence. That is debatable, and many, if not most people here, including me, think this is false. But this is not exactly the subject of my post.

So, okay, maybe cops are the good guys (no), and maybe we should allow them to do whatever (no) ; even if this naive point of view was true, gun control peaceful protesting (or just peaceful) liberals would still not be non violent. And that is because violence is not just throwing rocks at glass and burning trash bins; that is physical violence, it is not the only type of violence.

When you are forced to leave your apartment after your landlord evicts you because you couldn't pay rent, that's violence. When you're forced to sleep on the streets because you can't afford a place and lost your job, that's violence. When your manager pressures you and starts harassing you for some or no reason at all, that's also violence. The fact that some get to live in million dollar mansions while not doing shit while someone who works at MacDonalds can barely eat everyday is fucked up, and violent as fuck ; and the very fact that in so many minds "Macdonald's worker" sounds like a trashy job that deserves nothing but contempt is but the product of this violence. Class violence.

Liberals and moderates are opposed to physical and verbal violence directed at the institutions that enforce this class violence. They are everything but non-violent. And by supporting police's right to pseudo-legitimated violence, they even support the physically-violent protection of an inherently violent society. Moderates are only moderates in the sense that they do not wish for changes in the Status Quo. Spoiler, the Status Quo fucking sucks, and defending it, or even not violently criticizing, is criminal. If you consider yourself a liberal or a moderate, please think about all the things you're not speaking out or taking action against. Having basic empathy skills somewhat helps.

  • a_jug_of_marx_piss [he/him]
    hexbear
    28
    4 years ago

    Society can't be changed, nor can it be kept the same without violence.

    I have a hard time actually communicating any of this to libs though. The divide of violence into Violence and technically-violence seems extremely strong in most people's minds, and I just end up feeling like I'm trying to convince people that tomatoes are fruits. Does anyone here have any tips on how to do this? Or is it futile, should I just try to downplay the need for violence even if it feels dishonest?

    • MarxGuns [comrade/them]
      hexbear
      11
      4 years ago

      But tomatoes are fruits, they come from the flower. 😉

      I've recently argued with a lib about the violence of the BLM protest. It's tough with them.

    • FUCKTHEPAINTUP [any]
      hexbear
      9
      edit-2
      4 years ago

      Trying to move average libs towards a Robespierre-inspired viewpoint on structural violence doesn’t lead anywhere. Maybe they’ll eventually agree with you. They won’t do anything violent though, until you bring the revolution to their streets.

      The people who need to know that far-left violence is revolutionary justice are our agitators and revolutionaries. They (mostly) already know it.

      If you want to have conversations about revolutionary justice, have them with people who are already nominally left. If they radicalize further, maybe they’ll do something with it. Maybe you’ll convince each other to do something radical.

      Don’t bother with libs, you can sell them on socialism, but revolutionary violence is way further down the pipeline.

      • a_jug_of_marx_piss [he/him]
        hexbear
        5
        4 years ago

        Of course violence isn't a good starting point, but it often comes up in conversation. If I manage to convince someone that a change in society would be good, the natural next step is asking how can we achieve that change. Should I at that point say that we can vote it into existence, even if I don't believe it?

        I recognize that radicalization happen through many stages, but trying to sell someone on just the next stage feels like I'm betraying the spirit of honest dialogue.

        • FUCKTHEPAINTUP [any]
          hexbear
          6
          4 years ago

          It depends on how radicalized you yourself are already. Be honest with them. Tell them what you think.

          But if you yourself are already accepting revolutionary justice, maybe you have to re-evaluate how far away from the liberal mindset you already are.

          Work with sympathy, and try to show them that the pain they’ve felt in life is felt by everyone else, too, and that this pain is what underlies all violence, which is just a reflection of it. The violence wasn’t by choice, it’s a result of the system and so on.

          Why do people become terrorists? Or violent at all? We all know why. Because we all tortured them into it. Libs know this, but you have to remind them of it.

          Sell them on preventing violence in the system. Don’t scare them away, remind them that you want violence even less than they themselves do.

          • the_river_cass [she/her]
            hexbear
            4
            4 years ago

            if you have a lot of trust with them, you can pretty easily take it one step further and point out that violence to change the current system is good. don't do this with people who aren't really there with you on "the system is violent", though. that's the more important bit to get across. but once they're there, you can start to play the game of "what's more violent - allowing the present state of things to continue or stopping it by force?"

    • Nationalgoatism [he/him]
      hexbear
      4
      4 years ago

      There have been some good points made already, and this is a slight tangent, but perhaps the most effective way is for liberals to experience the physical violence of the state themselves. I know many people who have been catapulted left by confrontations with riot pigs, even if they aren't directly affected.

  • quartz242 [she/her]M
    hexbear
    24
    4 years ago

    Good post, it is chilling how so many libs dont even see service workers as people...

    • Nakoichi [he/him]
      hexbear
      17
      4 years ago

      "Human Resources"

      The fact that this is just an accepted term is horrifying. Capitalism dehumanizes workers and deifies the parasitic owning class.

      I remember someone in I think the walmart sub talking about a customer that came in to their store without a mask and when asked to put one on they said "why there's nobody here?"

      I work in retail and I encounter it all the time. People that have never had to do any real work in their lives who literally don't consider people in service jobs human.

      "Unskilled labor" is such a disgusting phrase as well. I have tremendous respect for anyone in a customer facing job. Being able to deal with entitled assholes all day is a skill unto itself.

      • quartz242 [she/her]M
        hexbear
        5
        4 years ago

        Right! I never ask in conversation so what do you do, but if through organic conversation I learn they are a fellow service worker, instant commordarie. Someone says they do shit like manage investment accounts it is like bitch get a job that actually creates something instead of an e-shell game with other people's lives.

    • cummynism [she/her,they/them]
      hexbear
      10
      4 years ago

      Seems like it stems from the idea that "If they didn't want to be treated like shit they would work harder to not be there" which is completely divorced from reality.

  • asaharyev [he/him]
    hexbear
    21
    4 years ago

    This is a really good post, and doesn't even really look at one of the biggest ways libs support violence: the military.

    All libs will say that the military is necessary to protect our freedoms. But literally everything about the military is violent. It is a violent institution by its very nature, and nothing can or will change that. But these same "anti-violence" libs are 100% against defunding the military to any extreme degree. Even if they agree with a proposal akin to Bernie's 10%, even that likely pushes the boundaries of what they see as necessary.

    So, yeah. They aren't anti-violence, they just believe wholeheartedly that institutional violence, especially US state sponsored violence, doesn't count.

    • cummunist [he/him,they/them]
      hexagon
      hexbear
      8
      edit-2
      4 years ago

      Thanks. There have been many attempts to make the military look like what it's not; as what it is is a very efficient killing and chaos sowing machine, and close to nothing else.

      Edit: the closest one in mind is the U.S military E-SPORT team. At this point it's just plainly comical. It's like Al Qaeda tried to compete in CS:GO or sth

  • wasbappin [he/him,they/them]
    hexbear
    18
    4 years ago

    Person robs a store and gets head blown off by Brazilian cop...

    Play stupid games win stupid prizes 🤣

    Guys create a system that forces workers to forge paperwork for subprime loans and then package those subprime loans into tranches and sell them as a financial products until the entire global economy collapses and no one gets arrested.

    Damn, that shit sucks.

    • cummunist [he/him,they/them]
      hexagon
      hexbear
      9
      4 years ago

      Brazilian military police is one of the most violent and wickedly brutal in the world. Yet Reddit fucking loves to suck their dicks each time shit goes down.

  • MarxGuns [comrade/them]
    hexbear
    6
    edit-2
    4 years ago

    I'm glad I'm not the only one who had that Brazilian cop video stuck in their mind.

    • cummunist [he/him,they/them]
      hexagon
      hexbear
      6
      4 years ago

      Say it loud and say it clear:

      Reddit is a pile of flying burning trash and human shit and should be wiped from the internet