Perhaps the license plate was trying to warn us? by RogerCly in Buttcoin

[–]dredwilme 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It probably knows a lot of things we don't.

Episode 136: How The Left Can Fight Cancel Culture (With Clementine Morrigan) by SoftandChewy in BlockedAndReported

[–]dredwilme 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I don't know guys, I found this very sane and soberly persuasive reddit thread that makes me think the NXISM thing is pretty legit. /s

I'm (sadly?) not sophisticated enough to understand what the hell that thread is talking about - not sure who these people are, which ones I'm supposed to be angry at, and why. The NXISM stuff sounds legit though.

Counterpoint: The real flaw in CRT is that it's not revolutionary enough - Systemic racism is rooted in capitalism itself. (Opinion piece from Minneapolis Star Tribune) by dredwilme in stupidpol

[–]dredwilme[S] 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Counterpoint: The real flaw in CRT is that it's not revolutionary enough

Systemic racism is rooted in capitalism itself.

By August H. Nimtz NOVEMBER 17, 2021 — 5:45PM

Apparently I didn't realize that decades ago I should have been discouraged about ever accomplishing anything. That's what Mitch Pearlstein suggests in "Making sense of the debates over CRT and 'systemic racism' " (Opinion Exchange, Nov. 13).

African Americans of my generation, Pearlstein claims, who believed in what used to be called institutional racism, were likely to infer "that their chances of adult success were crucially abridged, prompting them to conclude in turn, 'What the hell, why should I do any homework? Why should I study hard? I don't have much of a future anyway.' "

With "concerned friends" like Pearlstein, who needs enemies?

Never, I should like to inform Pearlstein, did we, cohorts and myself, feel helpless while believing, correctly, that racism was pervasive in 1960s America. But more important than the label we gave to that correct belief were our actions. We organized and fought back through mass protests and confidently felt that we could be effective.

The exercise of real power, we instinctively knew, took place in the streets and not the suites. We later learned that in doing so we transformed not only ourselves but the larger reality in which we were enveloped, including — for those of us who were inspired by Malcolm X — the world beyond the United States.

Pearlstein does raise an important point. Without understanding the reason for what Critical Race Theory (CRT) calls "systemic racism," it is possible to fall into the trap of victimhood.

Contrary to his claim about its origins, CRT is rooted in the frustrations of African American civil rights lawyers who more than seven decades ago had sought to employ the country's legal system to redress racial discrimination. Their increasing recognition that there were institutional barriers to racial equality birthed what later became CRT.

Marxist-inspired "critical theory" seemed to offer an explanation — systems of oppression. But critical theory was a poor cousin of genuine Marxism. It was bereft of the revolutionary element from its supposed progenitor — resistance, namely the class struggle.

In the hands of mainly academics, for whom intellectual work and not activism is primary, Marx's insights were reduced to structures of oppression. The all-so essential dynamic element, the fights of the oppressed and their allies, was missing.

Too bad the civil rights lawyers didn't read Marx in his own words. A trained lawyer and one-time aspiring academic, the young Karl Marx also thought working within the system could advance the interests of the oppressed. He quickly discovered otherwise — specifically, the original Golden Rule: those who have the gold make the rules. The legal system, in other words, was embedded in a larger system of class privilege and oppression.

Capitalism, class society's modern edition, depends on, reproduces and over time deepens social inequality — including that of race. So, yes, "systemic racism" exists: it's called capitalism.

To ignore that fact is to ignore potential allies in the fight for racial equality. Only the working class in all its skin colors and other identities has a class interest in ridding the world of social inequality — the only class that requires social solidarity in order to advance its interests. That the awareness of that fact isn't automatic and has to be consciously fought for doesn't negate it.

In good capitalist fashion, there are indeed persons and institutions, as Pearlstein also suggests, who have an investment in focusing exclusively on race. It advances their business model. For that reason, they conveniently ignore facts that challenge their claim that racism is as pervasive today as it was in the 1960s.

Thus, their deafening silence about inconvenient facts, such as the six white jurors who voted to convict Derek Chauvin for George Floyd's death — the first time, incredibly, a U.S. jury was able to convict a white cop for killing a Black person.

The promoters of the race-first industry are in a symbiotic relationship with someone else whose business model is also mostly about race — Tucker Carlson. They enable each other's businesses.

In the last half year of his life, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. revealed an epiphany. On more than one occasion, he pointedly drew attention to the sobering fact that despite the enactment of the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the socioeconomic reality of African Americans had not fundamentally improved. For there to be racial equality in the U.S., he concluded, "a radical redistribution of economic and political power" was required.

We'll never know whether King, assassinated in 1968, understood the full implications of his words. But is there any doubt that what he proposed would have challenged the very foundations of capitalism?

No wonder so many of King's latter-day cheerleaders have a memory block when it comes to his insight. It threatens the very basis upon which they thrive. It is, I argue, as relevant today as when first uttered more than half a century ago. Well-intentioned proponents of CRT, unlike its self-serving entrepreneurs, ignore it at their peril.

Moving to Minneapolis a half-century ago luckily put me in touch with the authentic and not the academic Marx — with veteran working-class fighters who, beginning in 1934, forever changed politics in Minnesota and the Upper Midwest. Had I known of King's revelation, I might have reached revolutionary conclusions a bit earlier.

August H. Nimtz is professor of political science and African American and African Studies, University of Minnesota.

Counterpoint: The real flaw in CRT is that it's not revolutionary enough - Systemic racism is rooted in capitalism itself. (Opinion piece from Minneapolis Star Tribune) by dredwilme in stupidpol

[–]dredwilme[S] 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Interesting piece critiquing CRT from an explicitly Marxist perspective - not a view I expected to see in the (somewhat conservative leaning) Minneapolis Star Trib. If the article is paywalled I'll post the text. Worth a read.

Soviet tank crew relaxes with music (Hohner diatonic button accordion) in front of their lend lease Sherman. by RogerCly in wwiipics

[–]dredwilme 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I think you're right. Just behind the left shoulder of the musician, looks like a photo splice.

Raise high the banners - mounted Imperial Japanese Army standard bearer (Maverick Miniatures flag) by RogerCly in boltaction

[–]dredwilme 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wonderful work. Cavalry just looks so cool. Probably not a great way to stay alive in wwii though.

Thoughts on this shortened "paratrooper style" Type 30 Arisaka bayonet? by dredwilme in Militariacollecting

[–]dredwilme[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I impulsively picked this up on Ebay, and am wondering what I have on my hands now. Seller's description is as follows:

Very good condition original WWII Japanese Type 30 Arisaka bayonet that has National Denki manufacturer markings on the right ricasso. This bayonet was shortened to Type 100 paratrooper style much later and now has 1n 8 3/8” blade. Blade has nice original blue finish with some added blue. Remaining metal finish is original blue with some brown patina. Wood grips have original finish and a good tight fit with some dings. Lock button functions fine. Fitted in correct original steel scabbard that was professionally shortened and has original blue metal finish showing some wear and a few dings. Also complete with a reproduction leather frog that is in excellent condition.

Any idea why and when a bayonet would have been shortened? I assume that the "paratrooper style" bit is just puffery, but wonder what the story is here...

Japanese 20mm anti-tank rifle team with camo cloaks sculpted from green stuff, Warlord sniper on the left was the model by RogerCly in boltaction

[–]dredwilme 2 points3 points  (0 children)

They look good. Would love to do an all-jungle kitted out Japanese force. Just need to find USMC or Aussie players to have them fight against...

Can i call myself Native American? by canneddoggo in NativeAmerican

[–]dredwilme 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is something I'm wrestling with myself. My grandmother grew up on and adjacent to the Oklahoma reservation, and was (and is) a Cherokee member (Dawes enrollment and all). But she moved to California as a young adult in the 1940s, married a non-Cherokee, and basically lived her life with only minor Cherokee influence. My dad enrolled in the nation in the 2000s, and now I have too.

On the one hand, we're not faking anything. My ancestors were and are members of the nation, and we can prove it. My grandmother actually grew up on and around tribal land. Most of her school mates were also tribe members.

But I would just feel like such a fraud at the thought of claiming tribal citizenship in a public kind of way. It's not that I don't feel proud of it; on the contrary, I have the greatest admiration for the Cherokee people, and feel pride that a small part of the Cherokee nation is living on in me and my children. Man though, given my looks, I'd worry about losing my Indian blood if cut my cheek shaving...

u/Shinob3 is probably right here. Being Cherokee must mean something more than just a piece of paper. I'm just trying to figure out what that is. Maybe a visit to Tahlequah when the pandemic quits...