Permanently Deleted

  • Abraxiel
    ·
    4 years ago

    every mass political movement wherein the oppressed recognize themselves as a class with interests distinct from their oppressors, particular foreign oppressors, will of course bear some resemblance to a nationalistic movement in terms of how it relates to a shared sense of identity as emotional and rhetorical shorthand for those distinct class interests. The difference, which people so frequently resist thinking about, is the end to which this recognition of shared interests and identity is applied and the actions that follow from that end.