The American media loves saying that, but does it really have a right to exist? Does an apartheid colonizing regime have the right to exist in someone else’s land?

  • diegeticscream[all]🔻
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    10 months ago

    They who? Capitalists? Politicians? Every white person, going by the poorly defined US definition of white?

    I think we can look at the Cuban revolution for some answers. They started building their socialist project, and the opponents of that basically self selected. The ex-Cubans of Miami seem in general much whiter than people in Cuba.

    I don’t think there’s a reason to proactively define colonial lines or whatever (though I agree with @absentthereaper@lemmygrad.ml ).

    I think a revolution in the U$ will have to be lead (or mostly driven by) colonized people, and decolonization will be a part of that.

    The people who benefitted from Cuban plantations, and wanted to keep those benefits, weren’t removed in a process separate from the revolution - they opposed the revolution (and the restructuring that came afterwards), and were dealt with because of that.

    • Shrike502
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      10 months ago

      The people who benefitted from Cuban plantations, and wanted to keep those benefits, weren’t removed in a process separate from the revolution - they opposed the revolution (and the restructuring that came afterwards), and were dealt with because of that.

      See, now that is the logic I can actually follow. That makes sense. Thank you