Hello, baby Marxist here!

Personally mine was reading.

When I was a liberal I loathed reading and found it hard to even read a short article. I rarely researched everything I heard, and as a teenager, I was like every other liberal, getting my news off social media.

Now I make sure to research everything, however, getting into theory is a bit hard. Most of the information I learned about communism was through fellow comrades, because like before, I got my information from other people’s comments.

Currently I’m restoring my motivation for reading by starting small. Reading long comments from comrades helped a lot. I’ve now moved on to reading information from leftist sources without effort, and I’m starting on reading the communist manifesto.

Enough about me, what were your side effects?

  • MexicanCCPBot
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    11
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    2 years ago

    God, the US obsession with their ancestors as a way of coping with the lack of US culture and neutering of their immigrants past roots is so weird.

    I’ve always wanted to talk about this more. I mean it’s alright to be proud of your culture as diaspora, but people living in the US have a very unique tendency to turn their cultures into reductionist, degraded, Disney-esque caricatures of themselves. I guess it’s a side-effect of living in a consumerist, pop culture-addicted society.

    • @Franfran2424
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      82 years ago

      Correct on both. I like people wanting to tie to their ancestors, but the way they do it is usually a weird imitation, and it sometimes rings a bit obsessive.