pull down to refresh

129 sats \ 10 replies \ @grayruby 6h

Don't worry comrades, all the free stuff is coming soon. Trust me bro.

reply
114 sats \ 9 replies \ @jasonb 6h

What’s sad is that I think there’s a lot of honest (non-volitional) ignorance surrounding all that.

reply

The resources are out there for anyone to learn. At some point, we have to say that the ignorance is volitional

reply
128 sats \ 7 replies \ @jasonb 5h

Sure, and I know for many it already is. I just personally know a lot of folks that legitimately think this stuff and have so much going on in life that it’s really unrealistic to expect them to learn where they’re at. Part of why I talk kids’ ears off about this stuff.

reply
71 sats \ 2 replies \ @kepford 5h

I agree, especially with the young who are propagandized in school, online, and often at home with Marxist influences disguised as caring and common sense.

reply
72 sats \ 1 reply \ @jasonb 5h

And my point is, if it's a kid who's serious, they still got the free time to read a little and see if we're right.

reply
41 sats \ 0 replies \ @kepford 5h

I agree. There is more than enough information to self correct if one realizes something is off. But the number of people that are wired to dig is small. It's not nothing but it's small.

They also have to be wired to not care so much about being in the out group.

reply

And yet how much time do they spend watching TV or planning vacations? It seems I am turning into @DarthCoin with my lack of sympathy for people.

reply
88 sats \ 0 replies \ @jasonb 5h

I’ll be real with you, I legitimately know more than a few folks that really don’t. They’re doing their best.

That said, I know a whole other crew (more than a couple people) who being very serious will say they get their news from late night shows. I don’t even respect the person that gets all their info from legacy news, but that’s a whole new level of volitional ignorance.

reply
61 sats \ 0 replies \ @kepford 5h

When you mostly hear criticism of these ideas from hypocrites on the right who really are in favor of a different flavor of socialism lite and do not strike at the root of the issue with integrity... it makes sense.

I firmly believe we are reaping what we sowed in the cold war era. Former socialists overtook the conservative movement and did a piss poor job refuting the ideas of Marx. It was all about the Red Scare and not a rejection of the issues with socialism that have nothing to do with the USSR. I've watched US propaganda films from the 50s and 60s and they largely suck at explaining the core problems with socialism.

Central planning, lack of a pricing system. Price controls. I could go on. The US has done all of these in spades and we see it doesn't work. The US is doomed largely because of this failure to reject socialism. The answer is freedom but most people don't want that.

We reap what we sow.

reply
68 sats \ 0 replies \ @grayruby 5h

It's hard to be sympathetic for the willfully ignorant.

reply

Mamdani’s 9.5% property tax hike isn’t “budgetary buffoonery”—it’s economic arson. He inherited a $5.4B deficit from Adams, then doubled down on fantasy math: taxing middle-class homeowners while his DSA base screams “eat the rich.” His own comptroller calls it regressive, hitting Black neighborhoods hardest.

Meanwhile, he’s draining rainy day funds to bankroll unworkable programs like city-run grocery stores. Adams kept the lights on with real cuts.

Mamdani? He’s torching the city’s fiscal foundation to fund his socialist cosplay.

reply
reply

Meanwhile, he's also taking it on the chin from the left because he's not honoring promises he made.

(I think he might just be a . . . politician.)

reply
37 sats \ 0 replies \ @gmd 4h

It truly baffles me how stupid the average voter is... humans are really cooked.

reply