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/leftypol/ - Leftist Politically Incorrect

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File: 1783267651531-9.jpg (172.69 KB, 1280x720, fuckflock.jpg)

 

This seems to be one of the best ways to win over normies. Everyone hates these damn things. Taking down a flock cam is now on the same level of widespread approval as shooting a Healthcare CEO, and less likely to get you caught.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sX7dPwD6Sjg&t
12 posts and 1 image reply omitted.

>>2859253
Ideas:
  1. If they can put up faster than you can take down, you loose.
  2. If public facing flock cameras get struck, private concealed cameras will become the norm.
  3. Concealed CCTV cameras that look like metal bolts on highway signs already exist.
  4. Signal Detection of WiFi, Bluetooth, Car Tire Sensors already exist.
  5. Adding a new camera is speedy. The pole is the target, until they start putting up redundant poles to save time in the future.
  6. Onboard CCTV and Battery Backups can be added to CCTV.


File: 1783749802306-3.jpg (23.03 KB, 266x427, molotov.jpg)

>>2861866

Eventually, I suspect, direct action against the companies themselves will be necessary.

You don't. Flock is historically progressive. It will reduce crime and create a more harmonious society, just like China. Everyone was up in arms when that tech capitalist said people act better when they know they're being watched, and that's exactly what Chinese intellectuals say also. Trust the plan.

File: 1783751236678-4.png (839.36 KB, 746x864, ClipboardImage.png)

Ehh, it's not like anyone goes out anymore anyways. Just another reason to stay home.

>>2859322
Because they are cucks for capital but at least their living standard are actually improving



File: 1783012159745-8.png (1.82 MB, 1280x844, ClipboardImage.png)

 

REAL, NOT CLICKBAIT, NOT A DRILL, THE CHICAGO POPE CRACKS DOWN

https://www.vaticannews.va/en/vatican-city/news/2026-07/holy-see-decrees-excommunication-lefebrians-consecrations.html

As a result of escalating tensions revolving around some unapproved bishop appointments, it's officially happened: the Vatican has declared the tradcath Society of Saint Pius X to be schismatic and therefor not just its bishops but lay practitioners too are excommunicated. While the largest amount of tradcaths tend to congregate in America there's still plenty spread out all over the world. What are the implications of this split? Possible Antipope soon?
44 posts and 6 image replies omitted.

The worst, most repugnant, fascist inclined tradLARPing fundamentalists have been expelled from Catholicism- perhaps up to 600,000 individuals - and they're all seething about it on twitter.
You love to see it.
That said, Catholicism is still overwhelmingly reactionary and conservative and responsible for more crimes than you could list in a 1000 posts.

On a related note: There is zero evidence for a God or for any religion, but the with the amount of suffering in the world I can at least grasp the logic behind Buddhist and Gnostic perspectives.
Christianity though? Despite being raised it in I don't think I ever really believed it.

>>2859714
you can cultivate it yourself. its not hard and isn't very expensive.

>>2859707
I’ve had some wild experiences on Mushrooms but I don’t think I’ve really had religious ecstasy from it.

TBH I think the “mystical” elements of religion are so completely ignored in modernity that people kind of dismiss what religious thinkers went through with “lol they must’ve been high”

Within the more mystical strains of Judaism, for example (I think you can learn more from studying “Merkevah Mysticism” or “Chariot mysticism”) there were religious/historical figures whose mystical experiences had such a profound effect on themselves that one became a “messiah” contender and disrupted Jewish society by preaching whatever their form of “heresy” is while another allegedly went incurably insane. For many of these people the experiences were so profound that many were willing to die (or, sadly, kill) for their beliefs.

So when these ancient Rabbis talk about seeing the chariot of God and going mad, I think it’s important to know that to many of these people their experiences were profoundly real.

>>2864015
I’m not a Gnostic or a scholar, but I’ve been on a Gnostic text binge lately so if you’ve got questions about Gnosticism contra Catholicism, I can try to answer as best I can.


Liberation Theology BTFO



File: 1783722816170-8.jpeg (57 KB, 299x302, blurredmaga.jpeg)

 

I think I finally know Trumps ideology and its called Neo-Bonapartism

Bonapartism describes a state that achieves relative autonomy from any single class by claiming to stand above class conflict entirely ruling personalistically through plebiscitary mass appeal and charismatic authority rather than through a party program or a coherent class coalition, while materially serving capital's interests without capital directly controlling the state apparatus. Bonaparte's actual regime combined: personalist rule bypassing parliamentary/institutional mediation, appeals to a cross-class "people" against both organized labor and the traditional elite, military prestige projects and adventurism as legitimation (the whole Second Empire foreign policy pattern), and state-directed economic development (Haussmann's Paris, railway financing) alongside crushing independent labor organization. That's close to a checklist match for Trump: personalist rule, state economic direction, military/security emphasis as legitimating spectacle, hostility to organized labor and the left, appeal over the heads of institutions to a plebiscitary mass base.

Bonapartism in the Marxist tradition is specifically theorized as arising when class conflict reaches a stalemate where no single class can rule directly, so an autonomous executive arbitrates from above, critically, without needing to make durable concessions to labor the way a genuinely hegemonic class-coalition government would. Gramsci's extension of the concept (he uses “Caesarism” interchangeably) is explicitly about a strong personalist arbiter stepping in during a legitimacy crisis of the ordinary political process, offering national/military grandeur and personal charisma as substitutes for programmatic concession. That's the theoretical explanation for exactly why Trumpism is anti social welfare while pro military spending Bonapartist/Caesarist rule doesn't need to buy off labor, because it's explicitly a crisis arbitration form that draws its legitimacy from personal charisma and national mythology rather than from a stable coalition requiring material payoffs.

So: Bonapartism (Marx's term) or Caesarism (Gramsci's near-synonym) is the actual name for 19th-century style personalist strongman, holistic state-directed military-industrial policy, minimal welfare concession, legitimated by charisma and national grandeur rather than institution-building or class-coalition bargaining. Specifically it explPost too long. Click here to view the full text.

Call it anything but fascism

>>2863937
"More money for me, fuck you" isn't much of an ideology. Also this is old hat, the Chapotards back in 2017 were talking about the 18th of Brumaire and I think Jacobin had an article comparing Trump to Napoleon III.

I truly don’t think he has any ideology beyond sleeping, partying and eating McDonald’s. He will say and do whatever the people paying him and sucking his dick the most convince him to. He’s raised bourgeoisie, he has no thought beyond “god I hope number go up so I don’t have to actually do any work”

>>2863937
I think Bonparatism is a good descriptor for what Trump "is" but I'm not sure it's really an ideology. Egypt really has a regime like this.

Chris Cutrone gets too into contrarianism for its own sake but think he's one of the better American leftists on Bonapartism:

>Bonapartism is characterized for Marxism by precisely the inability of leading political figures to render society and the state tractable: Louis Bonaparte is the “farce,” compared to Napoleon’s (and Caesar’s) “tragedy,” because of his futility; he is not a cunning hero but a comedic villain. Where celestial forces swirl around a protagonist of Divine Fate, instead, we have the folly and error of someone who is merely “human, all-too human” (Nietzsche): not punished but merely scorned by the gods. While the conquering Napoleon summoned Goethe to insist that “there is no Destiny, only politics,” he was for Hegel nonetheless the “World Soul” of eternal History[2] when he rode his horse into town at the young professor’s first academic appointment. Louis Bonaparte is not the substantial character of political action, but a holographic projection of greater forces that neither he nor anyone else can master: “Bonapartism” is Marx/ism’s term for the self-alienation of politics in capitalism. As Marx summed it up about the plebeian masses in capitalism (petite bourgeoisie, lumpenproletariat, et al. — including workers, insofar as they are not self-organized into a social and political force of their own): they cannot represent themselves; they must be represented; they will be represented.[3] Bonapartism means the state represents everyone and no one. The state is universal but also its own particular interest.


>Police and military are “citizens in uniform” — as are bureaucrats — and hence playing a role that anyone could; and yet in capitalism they become their own specific caste apart from everyone. This is not merely a function of specialized knowledge but of role: the peculiar political role of the state in capitalism. Bureaucracy is considered by Marxism to be endemic in capitalism differently from its role in traditional civilization, which was of course a caste system that bourgeois society is not or at least is not supposed to be. Bureaucracy is a function of reification of social and political activity
Post too long. Click here to view the full text.

>ideology
Didn't read a word past that



 

This site has no WHOIS or RDAP available so you know what that means. They sell stahlhelm themed, 3D printed bottle covers. This is exactly the kind of kitsch shit that neofascists love to hock on X.

https://capsalute.shop/

whois capsalute.shop
Notice: Effective May 1, 2026, the WHOIS service has been retired in accordance with ICANN's RDAP transition policy. All registration data queries are now served via RDAP. The Registration Data Access Protocol (RDAP) base URL is: https://rdap.gmoregistry.net/rdap/

rdap capsalute.shop
# Error: No RDAP servers responded successfully (tried 1 server(s))
2 posts and 1 image reply omitted.

no pls don't destroy my small business, i'm grifting nazis. they're retarded and give me money for cheap trash

>>2863943
I know you're joking but unironically we should all get together and make some kind of business to appeal to rightoids and then give the profit to Palestinian charities or something

>>2863932
It kinda l9oks like the bottle is pointing a luger at its head

>>2863948
>>2863948
>It kinda l9oks like the bottle is pointing a luger at its head
😂

>>2863940
cute! idk why anyone would pay for it though



File: 1783728776664-0.jpg (80.44 KB, 400x580, e16-73.jpg)

 

Water service returns in Iraq’s Kirkuk Kakai villages
Ahmed Kirkuki said that the committee treated the issue “as a top priority” after receiving complaints from residents, launching a series of meetings with relevant authorities to find a permanent solution and restore water supply lines. “Many residents had been forced to rely on water tankers and alternative sources to meet their daily needs, placing a significant financial and living burden on families.”
https://shafaq.com/en/society/Water-service-returns-in-Iraq-s-Kirkuk-Kakai-villages

Iraq making headway on pass long-shelved, controversial cybercrime bill
The bill was first introduced by the Iraqi council of ministers under the ex-preimer Nouri al-Maliki in 2011. The political establishment sought greater control over digital infrastructure following the regional so-called Arab Spring protests, which demonstrated the power of social media to mobilize the public.
https://www.rudaw.net/english/categories/iraq/1078261

Deir Ezzor tops the list | 61 attacks by IS*IS claims lives of 50 people in Syria in 2026
Despite the ongoing security and military operations to pursue ISIS cells in different areas of Syria, ISIS cells have carried out different attacks, ambushes, assassinations and IED explosions since the beginning of 2026, targeting primarily military and security forces of the Syrian Interim Government along with civilians in several areas.
https://www.syriahr.com/en/384202/

‘Farcical reality’: Healthcare workers respond to targeting over pro-Palestine symbols
Middle East Eye spoke to a number of pro-Palestine NHS workers about their experience campaigning against the genocide in Gaza and the backlash they have faced from their workplace as a result. The Mann report was commissioned by former health secretary Wes Streeting in 2025 to investigate antisemitism in the NHS. However, the British Medical Association (BMA) noted that, although the need to combat antisemitism and racism within the NHS is vital, some of the recommenPost too long. Click here to view the full text.

EPA proposes weakening heavy-duty truck pollution rules
Specifically, the proposal from the Environmental Protection Agency would scale back and postpone two provisions designed to make sure emissions-reducing technology keeps working while a vehicle is in use; one related to warranties, and another related to the useful life of emissions technology.
https://www.npr.org/2026/07/09/nx-s1-5886354/epa-heavy-duty-truck-emissions

In ‘Death Knell for America’s Wildlife,’ Trump Admin Guts Habitat Protections for Endangered Species
Whereas the law has for decades been interpreted as protecting endangered animals’ habitats from significant “modification or degradation,” the administration said that offenders would have to directly injure or kill an endangered animal to be considered in violation of the law.
https://www.commondreams.org/news/trump-endangered-species-act-2677204239

Detainees tell their lawyer an ICE officer shot a Houston driver through a passenger window
The shooting Tuesday during an attempted traffic stop by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers in Houston has revived critical voices deriding the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown and how ICE operates. Immigration arrests around the country recently surged to 10,000 over a five-day period, fueled in part by massive Congressional funding.
https://apnews.com/article/ice-shooting-houston-lorenzo-salgado-araugo-10cf77f29d4559f0f3796342b946031a

Thousands of LA renters housed during pandemic no longer at risk of homelessness, officials say
On Thursday, city and county housing authorities announced that increased federal funding and improved local budgets will now allow all emergency housing voucher holders to transition out of the temporary pandemic program and into the traditional Housing Choice Voucher program, widely known as Section 8.
Post too long. Click here to view the full text.

Indian Workers Are on the Front Line of Global Exploitation
All over the world, we can find Indian migrant workers subject to extreme forms of exploitation and abuse: dying in the Gulf states as a result of the US war on Iran, just as they died a few years earlier of heat exhaustion as they built the stadiums for the World Cup in Qatar; brought in to replace Palestinians on Israeli construction sites after October 2023; trapped in modern slavery on Italian farms or bamboozled into the Russian army. This is not a coincidence but a structural design. To understand why Indians are so consistently available to do precarious work in the most dangerous places and on the cheapest terms, we have to begin in a Dalit basti in Bihar, a manual scavenger’s neighborhood in Andhra Pradesh, or an Adivasi village in Jharkhand. The compliance that global capital values in Indian labor was first produced inside India itself. It operates through caste structures, landlessness, and the systematic informalization of work, codified by a social system that treats these workers as disposable long before they cross any border.
https://jacobin.com/2026/07/india-caste-migrant-labor-exploitation

Corporate Dems Are Weaponizing Graham Platner’s Demise
It's clear something messed up happened in Graham Platner's relationships, and he hasn't hidden that. But let's be adults. This is a political attack. Notable Maine Democratic Party donors in recent years include Reid Hoffman, Haim Saban, and David Ellison. David Ellison! As in the Trump ally who fired Stephen Colbert and is taking over TikTok, CBS News, and CNN. These names should mean something. Saban may be the single most important AIPAC donor in the Democratic Party. Another big donor to the Maine Democratic Party is the founder of Zynga, Mark Pincus, who said in 2024 that "When you attack Amazon, you’re attacking America." It goes beyond big tech and Wall Street. Crypto fraudster Sam Bankman-Fried’s partner Nishad Singh at FTX gave $100,000 to the Maine Democratic Party in 2022. The insiders running the party are the people funded through these streams of revenue. They are the ones dealing with the donors and currying favor with them. And while I will not speak out of school, the Maine Democratic establishment simply cannot be trusted and thaPost too long. Click here to view the full text.



File: 1783725774332-8.png (1.07 MB, 1508x1388, ClipboardImage.png)

 

Growing up in my country I constantly read in our textbooks that the British conquered us because they divided us and that this should serve as a reminder that national unity is the only way to avoid foreign domination. But the historical reality doesn't show that.

In most cases the EIC formed alliances with regional rivals and local elites who were acting in their own political and strategic self-interest. These groups were not passive victims manipulated into conflict, they saw cooperation with the British as the best way to advance their own ambitions and often they achieved many of their goals through those alliances.
While I'm thinking primarily about South Asia, the exact same narratives appear is most third world societies. Former colonies often claim they were conquered because the colonizers "divided and conquered" them, implying that major social, political or ethnic divisions either did not exist before colonialism and shouldn't matter now.

I'm curious have socialist historians or theorists argued against the simplified "divide and conquer" narrative or offered a more nuanced explanation of how colonialism relied on alliances with local elites, existing class structures, and pre-existing political conflicts?

>>2863953
You're looking at things in a Black and White moralistic perspective. The Brits were on the team that beat the Nazis, that doesn't make them good. Your peoples were on the side that lost to the British, that doesn't make them good.

File: 1783726677643-2.jpg (639.06 KB, 800x1129, 9782348068232.jpg)

>>2863953
>I'm curious have socialist historians or theorists argued against the simplified "divide and conquer" narrative or offered a more nuanced explanation of how colonialism relied on alliances with local elites, existing class structures, and pre-existing political conflicts?

Even mainstream historians do that tbh, it's kind of the shtick of the discipline, or it's supposed to be anyway. You just need to find the people who are at the top of their fields, I liked studying François-Xavier Fauvelle regarding the history of Africa for example.

>These groups were not passive victims manipulated into conflict, they saw cooperation with the British as the best way to advance their own ambitions and often they achieved many of their goals through those alliances.
That's exactly what divide and conquer means though. If you're some random Indian prince in the early 19th century locked in a decades old struggle with a neighbouring kingdom, and the British offer to crush your rival in exchange for the right to export spices and tea from your ports, then obviously you're going to take that deal. Fast forward 50 years and that rival kingdom is now a under direct British rule, they have a permanent military presence in your kingdom, those trade concessions have grown into a total monopoly over your industries, direct taxation of your population, etc. Meanwhile you don't give a fuck because the Brits are making sure you and your cronies get a piece of the colonial plunder.

>>2863955
What do you think I'm talking about?

File: 1783727648723-1.png (1.18 MB, 800x1098, ClipboardImage.png)

One aspect that was at least somewhat unique to India was that the ruling dynasties of many of these kingdoms were Turko-Persian elites governing a population that was overwhelmingly Hindu, along with a large number of Indian Muslims. The royals generally showed only slightly more tolerance toward the latter, but overall they cared little for either group beyond maintaining their rule.



File: 1783016981673-1.png (33.11 KB, 674x455, planned.png)

 

Let's imagine an economy where production and distribution is determined through a plan, where workers obey an elected factory manager, and where there is no massive corruption or parallel market activity.
How would the following issues be solved ?

>information problem

How do you determine where to allocate labor, and where to distribute the products

>Under/Over reporting problem

There is an incentive gap between the workers at a factory tasked with production, and the planners who do not know how much they can produce.
How do you make certain that the workers are truthful about their productive capacities ?

>innovation problem

How do you make sure that there workers aim at adopting and implementing new technologies to the fullest extent possible, and that they also try to develop local innovations by themselves.
In essence, how do you make sure that the workers use the most efficient means of production.

>ECP/Price determination

If the economy is currency-less, how do you determine opportunity-costs ? If there is some form of tractability between goods, how do you determine the prices of different goods.
75 posts and 8 image replies omitted.

>>2858541
> on the contrary I have many premises, which is why I find your lazy assumptions about my motivations and inability to tell different users apart incredibly both tedious and, in and of themselves, part of the case against planning.
>its a material fact
>its an obvious fact
lots of assumptions there bud, still no premise

>>2858541
yeah, dirt cheap travel by plane is totally a prerequisite for a functioning market economy and not an example of the excesses and wastefulness of it. boeing becoming a dysfunctional quasi state enterprise that lost its core competency in engineering and manufacturing functional air planes is a great example for how well the market is able to allocate ressources in an efficient manner.
you ignoring every good faith post giving you arguments isn't you being a dishonest wrecker moron.

its totally us who are lazy and combatative and not you who has not a single clue about even the most basic fundamentals of political economy; or how a modern manufacturing supply chain operates end to end.

>>2858806
  1. (you) every post you think is mine, I need a good laugh
  2. yes, people being able to travel is good, actually.
  3. you can't accuse me of blaming the state for boeing's failures and then turn around to claim I'm using it being a quasi state entity as an example of market efficiency. this is just incoherent. stop seething and think before you post. (after you hastily (you) half the thread, of course.)

>>2858861
Nothing and no one will ever travel, that’s immigration and it’s scabbing

>>2856695
OP Please read through >>2566144



File: 1783568508931-4.jpg (78.55 KB, 894x610, 77711999.jpg)

 

I look at early Science fiction, and it seems a lot of it before the 50's had a communist character to it - thinking of stuff like "Red Star" or the whole topic of Russian Cosmism, it seems a lot of this got swallowed up by liberal and pro-colonial science fiction (starship troopers, star trek). So what happened? How would you contrast proletarian science fiction and bourgeoisie science fiction generally?
2 posts omitted.

I'm reading Andromeda: A Space-Age Tale from Ivan Yefremov (hottie) and it's very pleasing the optimism, I'm not exactly sure how far it is into the future but then everything is organized through councils/commissions.

you can also check this thread on /hobby/
>>>/hobby/2419

>starship troooooopers
>Pro-colonial

>>2863528
Might not be colonial but it sure compares the bugs to chinese communists

>>2863286

Bull’s Hour is the sequel and it’s also excellent!



File: 1783615252095-9.jpeg (6.1 KB, 183x275, IMG_4607.jpeg)

 

If crime is merely a function of poverty why do the bourgeoisie who are ultra rich commit so many crimes?

Seems to me crime is more of a function of sociopathy than poverty
11 posts omitted.

>>2863069
>If crime is merely a function of poverty
I'd say of wealth inequality, not poverty.
/QTDDTOT/ though, ig.


>>2863084
>theft is caused by poverty
The intellectual might of leftism.

>>2863069
>If crime is merely a function of poverty
it's not
literally every single study on the subject shows this

>If crime is merely a function of poverty
Nice misframing, monkey boy!

This claim is usually made in the context of petty theft, violent muggings and gang murders. The kind of crime that makes everyday people, or small business owners, feel unsafe.
The ultrawealthy and states tend towards committing different crimes.

>Seems to me crime is more of a function of sociopathy than poverty

Crime and law is not a proxy for morality or social cohesion. I regularly avoid paying the wealthy and I use those savings to support people and organizations in need - am I therefore a sociopath?



 

Why do almost all modern "communist" party members look like 'that'.
I sound like a conservative here but all communists nowadays look fat and uncared for. Aren't ML parties supposed to prepare a vanguard for the revolution? If so why do most ML parties have members like slobs? Every time I look at my local communist org I get repulsed and honestly, if I weren't a communist myself, I would never take them seriously.
What is the solution to this degeneracy?
>pic kind of related
24 posts and 11 image replies omitted.

>>2853562
Substack reads: "Virgil Abloh's Modernism"

>>2853790
good chance of that or he follows leftypol/leftypol adjacent accounts on twitter

File: 1783707604515-7.jpg (134.06 KB, 802x1200, smallest groyper.jpg)


>>2853449
Least of our problems when proletarians ask why "socialism failed" in the USSR.

>omg fellow commies, does anyone else think we're all fat and ugly teehee. why don't we all wear suits and rant about degeneracy



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