Reminder to read theory :knifecat:
Marx & Engels Selected Works :blushing-engels: :marx-ok:
-Capital Volume 1 :curious-marx:
-Wage Labor and Capital (kinda like a condensed version of Capital Volume 1 :animarx:
-How to Think Like a Vietnamese Communist by Luna Oi :uncle-ho-2:
-The Wikipedia page :michael-laugh:
Hola Camaradas :fidel-salute-big: , Our Comrades In Texas are currently passing Through some Hard times :amerikkka: so if you had some Leftover Change or are a bourgeoisie Class Traitor here are some Mutual Aid programs that you could donate to :left-unity-3:
:lenin-shining: :unity: :kropotkin-shining:
The Conquest of Bread :ancom:
Remember, sort by new you :LIB:
Yesterday’s megathread:sad-boi:
Follow the Hexbear twitter account :comrade-birdie:
THEORY; it’s good for what ails you (all kinds of tendencies inside!) :Richard-d-wolff:
COMMUNITY CALENDAR - AN EXPERIMENT IN PROMOTING USER ORGANIZING EFFORTS :af:
Join the fresh and beautiful batch of new comms:
Hell Yeah Motherfucker :deng-cowboy: what are you guys up to tonight (or morning :good-morning:)
@lydiaaaaaaa said shes making the megathread for tomorrow so uh yeah :among-drip:
:morshupls: Question of the Day:
What was the first Theory you read?
My point is more along the line of giving the 70% figure and flattening it to "literally everyone, even those firmly on the left" is a way of reducing the Iraq war build up to "the only rational and acceptable opinion to hold at the time was pro-war". And sort of giving in and not pushing back with the fact that 1/3 of the population did see the issues with the war leaves it even easier in future circumstances where we're in a war build-up for the same sort of push of this the only opinion presented on "objective" media -> this is the only rational and acceptable opinion.
Ah shoot, wrote a whole reply and lost it. I agree with your approach regarding future war efforts, but funnily enough I thought you were flattening things actually, by focusing on willingness for war. Some people believed that Iraq was involved in terrorism or had dangerous weapons, but opposed war and opted for sanctions, or wanted to wait for UN inspections to wrap up, or thought wars were expensive, or hated a possible draft.
I think looking at like, the amount of people who viewed Saddam as a threat, regardless of the action they planned for, or were "anti-terrorism" and also believed Iraq was tied into it, etc, is more meaningful, I've felt if Twitter was around then we'd have a ton of stuff starting with "Iraq is bad, but"
You also gotta remember the Gulf War is still in a lot people's minds at the time too, so the idea we can win in the ME, as well as the idea Iraq is our enemy, has already been imbedded in people's minds. I like this poll archive link scroll all the way down to the bottom for a fun one if you don't want to read the whole thing. You're right that it's not universal, but a ton of people accepted the premises that lead to the war, and the premises I think are more important to measure