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https://twitter.com/AnarkYouTube/status/1359271454513262598?s=19

    • Pezevenk [he/him]
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      edit-2
      4 years ago

      Because they'd be squashed immediately, and a large and more urban society with much more internal homogeneity than the Zapatistas wouldn't be able to follow the same kind of strategy as the Zapatistas either way, since with the Zapatistas the main driving force wasn't class conflict between the same society, it was an oppressor external to the society (Mexico) which means they didn't have to deal with the same degree of internal issues. The thing is, Mexico doesn't care nearly as much for the Zapatistas as the US did for Cuba. The only reasons Cuba survived were because of their close alliance with the USSR which was guarding them and their robust militarization. Cuba was a place of great geopolitical importance during the Cold War, because not only was it a huge source of profit for Casinos and hotels, but also it was a key area which the USSR could utilize against the US, unlike the Chiapas which is just some place in the jungle. Beyond the many assassination attempts against leaders, embargos and and attempts at destabilization, the US actually did literally invade Cuba post revolution, which built up to a huge missile crisis. Thing is, the Zapatistas don't really care for industrialization or any of that stuff, and they are not a real geopolitical threat for anyone. Mexico is content with mostly just leaving them be as an autonomous area (tensions aside). That is not consistent with the situation in Cuba.

      • trans [they/them,she/her]
        ·
        4 years ago

        I'm being sincere when I say this, but you keep sort of dismissing the zapatistas as basically "irrelevant jungle people" and that feels like you're kinda teetering on racism. I don't think its intentional or anything, but I'd encourage you to just try and do better with it going forward.

        as for your main point, I don't really see the proof it couldn't work. I think its fair to say its less likely, but I still think its unfair to say it wasn't even possible.

        • Pezevenk [he/him]
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          edit-2
          4 years ago

          but you keep sort of dismissing the zapatistas as basically “irrelevant jungle people” and that feels like you’re kinda teetering on racism

          That's what you are imagining. The Chiapas is simply not an interesting place geopolitically. It has nothing to do with racism, or with the Zapatistas in particular. They're just not populous enough or in a critical enough area for them to be as big a threat as Cuba was.

          as for your main point, I don’t really see the proof it couldn’t work

          Why do you think it WOULD work? Has it ever worked that way? You can just look at the conflicts between the Zapatistas and the Mexican government and compare them to the revolution in Cuba and the Bay of Pigs invasion, and the massive internal conflicts Cuba had to straighten out, as well as the class nature of the society in the Chiapas compared to that in Cuba during the time of the revolution. The Zapatistas don't have a lot of infrastructure (that's kind of the point behind their rebellion, they do not WANT a lot of industrial development because it goes contrary to their way of life), they have little modern equipment, little organization in their military, and they just rely on social cohesion and Mexico not being interested enough in a large organized invasion. Cuba can't rely on any of these things.

          • trans [they/them,she/her]
            ·
            4 years ago

            I didn't call you racist, I'm just saying watch it bc it kinda sounds a little racist. I'd encourage you to actually do this instead of dismissing it as an unfounded concern. can't be a good leftist if youre comfortable using racially charged language.

            Cuba's got a pretty unified culture, and the US would not have cared about them as much during the Cold War if they hadn't viewed them as a soviet puppet state or an extension of capital C "Communism."

            • Pezevenk [he/him]
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              edit-2
              4 years ago

              can’t be a good leftist if youre comfortable using racially charged language.

              You brought up the racially charged language, not me, I never called them "irrelevant jungle people".

              Cuba’s got a pretty unified culture

              Not at all. Cuba was a settler state, just like the US was. Cuba was also ruled by a dictatorship which held a lot of sway with the bourgeoisie of the country as well as many people from other classes, and soft slavery was widespread.

              the US would not have cared about them as much during the Cold War if they hadn’t viewed them as a soviet puppet state

              They were a threat by default by virtue of deposing a US puppet dictator, moving away from the US while holding such an important geopolitical location (thus making them susceptible to influence by the USSR EVEN IF they didn't move towards them at first, which would be silly anyways because then they wouldn't be able to properly trade with anyone), and kicking out American businesses. They wouldn't be seen as a threat if they aligned themselves to the US but there wouldn't really be a point in that, would it?

              • trans [they/them,she/her]
                ·
                4 years ago

                yeah, I'm not gonna engage with someone who can't do basic introspection about just watching their language to make sure theyre not being racist. that's a vaush type beat I don't fuck with.

                • Pezevenk [he/him]
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                  edit-2
                  4 years ago

                  ? You imagined I was being racist or using racist language because I talked about the Chiapas being in the jungle. You said I was dismissing them as "irrelevant jungle people" because it somehow seemed to you like that's what I was doing because you read my post in a hurry or something. The place the Zapatistas live in is literally called the Lacandon jungle. It's about as impossible to talk about the geopolitics of the place they live in without bringing up the massive jungle as it is to talk about Cuba without bringing up it being an island. The point is that it's a 2 million hectare jungle, a part of which is completely untouched, there are no military bases, there is not much of interest there for Mexico.

                  • trans [they/them,she/her]
                    ·
                    4 years ago

                    your language seemed racially charged. I suggested you just tone that done going forward, you responded with several walls of text justifying that racially charged language. this is on you buddy.

                    • Pezevenk [he/him]
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                      edit-2
                      4 years ago

                      What was the racially charged language beyond what you imagined? You fake quoted something I didn't say. Like, just quote the part of my post that was racially charged. Is "jungle" racially charged?

                      • trans [they/them,she/her]
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                        edit-2
                        4 years ago

                        They’re just a handful of people living in small villages in a jungle of little geopolitical importance.

                        unlike the Chiapas which is just some place in the jungle.

                        you keep going back to this, and it sounds like it could very easily turn into racism. I'm asking you just watch that it doesn't. idk why you're freaking out over the insinuation that you should be careful not to be racist.

                        • Pezevenk [he/him]
                          ·
                          edit-2
                          4 years ago

                          Because when you're insinuating that what someone is saying "can turn" into racism or that it is "racially charged" when it clearly isn't and fake quoting stuff, you're just casting suspicion to delegitimize what they're saying for no good reason. The Chiapas is literally some place in the jungle (well not the whole thing, but the area in which they live very much is), and they do live in small villages in the Lacandon jungle. This is important not because it somehow says something about them, but because it being a jungle with no infrastructure, it is of little concern to Mexico. Mexico actually gave the ownership of a big chunk of the jungle to the native Lacandon people years before the Zapatista uprising.

                          • trans [they/them,she/her]
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                            4 years ago

                            my issue is not you pointing out that theyre located in a jungle, but that you seem to not be a super big fan of an indigenous movement that refuses to industrialize, and I'm asking you hey, make sure you don't actually say out loud that their way of living is inferior. I'm not saying you do or don't think that, I'm just asking you not to.

                            • Pezevenk [he/him]
                              ·
                              4 years ago

                              but that you seem to not be a super big fan of an indigenous movement that refuses to industrialize

                              This is also something that's not in my posts, I said from the very start what they did is genuinely incredible, the fact that they refuse to industrialize is not to cast shade on them, it is to point out a significant way in which they are different from Cuba.

                              • trans [they/them,she/her]
                                ·
                                4 years ago

                                ok, great, and I'm asking you to just watch your language is all. this sites supposed to be a safe space for all comrades, and just double checking your comment doesn't have any micro aggression type vibe to it is good practice.

                                • Pezevenk [he/him]
                                  ·
                                  4 years ago

                                  Alright, that's fine, I just don't think it was warranted and I saw it as an attempt to delegitimize what I said.