- 0 Posts
- 5 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
Cake day: June 22nd, 2023
You are not logged in. If you use a Fediverse account that is able to follow users, you can follow this user.
Hazefugger@sopuli.xyzto Ukraine@sopuli.xyz•Ukraine Rejects U.S. Demand for Half of Its Mineral Resources61·3 months ago50%, but only when Russia can never even throw a stone at other countries ever again.
Hazefugger@sopuli.xyzto Ukraine@sopuli.xyz•Europe quietly developing plan to send peacekeeping troops to Ukraine, AP reports54·3 months agoThe fact that this is the kind of shit that the UN security counsel is supposed to exist for, but is actually less useful than a prostitute without a vagina.
Hazefugger@sopuli.xyzto Suomi@sopuli.xyz•Jeep Introduces Pop-Up Ads That Appear Every Time You Stopsuomi2·3 months agoOma muutaman vuoden vanha LG:n OLED-töllö ei ole kyllä mainoksia vielä tunkenut ruutuun. Ehkä jos hyväksyisi ihan kaiken mitä se pyytää hyväksymään.
I get the frustration with unrestrained capitalism and the real harm it can do—wealth concentration, exploitation, and rampant inequality are major issues that can breed extremist movements. However, to claim fascism is an inevitable “fruit” of capitalism ignores a whole host of other historical, cultural, and political factors that shape authoritarian regimes. There are plenty of capitalist societies that have never slipped into fascism because democratic institutions, social safety nets, and regulations acted as guardrails.
It’s also important to remember that while corporations can capture political systems, it takes more than greed to sustain a fascist state—there’s often a strong dose of nationalism, militarism, and scapegoating of minorities involved. Lumping all of these under “capitalism leads directly to concentration camps” oversimplifies a complex issue. Yes, we should criticize harmful capitalist excesses, but we need to be precise in how we analyze the broader political environment that actually fosters fascist ideologies.