• 小莱卡
    link
    fedilink
    1310 months ago

    This take perfectly embodies how libs only care about aesthetics.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      1410 months ago

      I am lost and this is a reply to my own statement. May I ask you to expand on what a “lib” is, how I erred to be labelled as one, and finally how it is you think I care about aesthetics?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        1710 months ago

        Can’t speak for anyone else but I may be able to answer this.

        A lib is a liberal, someone who is pro-capital, not an anti-capitalist (very little overlap with how liberal tends to be defined in ordinary language in the US). Optics, relating to how people see the event, is idealism not materialism. Liberalism is idealist, unlike Marxism, which is materialist.

        The dig at liberalism and aesthetics is likely a critique of the implication that what this looks like has much to do with the material reality. That’s an aesthetic argument. It doesn’t matter what this looks like because the optics don’t affect the material relations. Someone who elevates the optics at the expense of the material relations is making an idealist, likely a liberal argument.

        Hence the comment embodying an aesthetic argument of the kind that liberals often make.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            710 months ago

            You’re welcome. I’m glad you’re taking this in the spirit in which it’s intended. When Marxists criticise idealism, the target is the liberal world outlook, not the individual.

            By implication, really. Focusing on what people think of Russia’s/Putin’s trustworthiness rather than on it’s record or the factors that would keep it honest, so to speak. It’s Ukraine that violated Minsk, apparently prompted by France, Germany, and ‘NATO’. Looking at the optics, that seems a little more duplicitous than assassinating someone who attempted a coup (if this was an assassination and if what happened before can be called a coup).

            Would I trust a single person, e.g. Putin to uphold an international agreement? It doesn’t matter. It’s not a one-man show. War is expensive and the longer it goes on for the more expensive it becomes, in support as well as the cost of arms, soldiers, etc.

            Nobody has to trust Putin. An agreement would be maintained because material factors require it to be maintained. What westerners think it’s by-the-by. (I’m assuming you’re not Russian as you were asking about Russian sources—I’m not asking you to confirm or deny as I don’t want you to dox yourself; I’m just trying to give an answer that makes sense from the available evidence.)

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          1310 months ago

          Please guide me on this, other wise these are just vague statements that make us both look silly.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            610 months ago

            You’re pissing in the wind trying to get anything from a Tankie unfortunately.

            Jumps in, stirs shit, refuses to elaborate, leaves.