is this and this only: supporting the status quo, but disagreeing on minor points, so that while receiving the plaudits than go along with holding the majority opinion, they can feel (somewhere in their pathetic TV-poisoned minds) that they are “brave” and “intelligent.” It is the ancient gambit used by every would-be intellectual who desires to to be popular as well: “Yes, I agree with you all, but not for precisely the same reasons. Would you perhaps like to hear what I think?” These words, when spoken aloud, are always in that back-of-the-throat drawl which, in American English, signifies considered thought and long acquaintance with books, and of course a string of letters at the end of one’s name.

Thus we get the typical liberal position on anything. “I sympathize with the Palestinians, and the policies of the Israeli government are certainly to be criticized, but all civilized people should denounce Hamas because nothing justifies terrorism!” Or: “Yes, Ukraine has a problem with corruption, and there is a troubling right-wing element in their military, but we still need to side with them because Russia is much worse!” Always there is the ghost of an acknowledgement that the situation is complex – a cheap rhetorical trick – and then doubling down on the socially acceptable position. The ultimate in this stupid game is the invocation of an equally stupid phrase, “two things can be bad at once, mkay?” – which always means in practice that the side America supports is actually the less bad of the two ostensible evils.

Hence we “tankies” are always accused, by liberals, of having for great revolutionaries of the past a wholly uncritical admiration. This is manifestly false, for nearly every discussion among Marxist-Leninists at some point devolves into a picking apart of historical minutiae, with the goal of finding what Mao or Stalin or Honnecker did right or wrong. We are one of the few political groups that does not spare our heroes. But when liberals ask us to approach Mao with “nuance,” what they mean is: admit Mao was a bloodthirsty tyrant who ate babies for breakfast and never brushed his teeth, but he also ended footbinding. Hence the historical record is “complicated.” We Marxists, of course, will not engage in such asinities, and we state openly that Mao’s successes far outnumber and outweigh his mistakes. For liberals, who are at root historical nihilists, this is unacceptable, and why? Because we refuse to play the game, but also because them out in their silly attempts at pandering and social climbing.

  • DamarcusArt
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    6 months ago

    I find their constant accusations calling us an “echo chamber” fascinating. They can’t imagine “tankies” existing. We aren’t real people to them. We don’t go down to the shops and watch tv or take our dog for a walk. We’re a group of evil monsters ruining their day by existing and disagreeing with them in way they don’t know how to respond to. So they get mad and try to dismiss us.

    They legitimately don’t understand that for the vast majority of us here (who don’t life in AES) that we are in fact not in an “echo chamber” as we interact with dozens, if not hundreds of liberals on a daily basis. Their attitude is pushed onto us by all the people around us in our daily lives, by the media and advertisements that plaster every street in capitalist countries. They can’t imagine anything other than the status quo, which is one of the reasons we make them so mad. We’re disagreeing with them that the status quo is good, and on some level, they probably understand that we have a point there, so they have to bury that idea, lest they start seeing the cracks in liberalism. So they find some excuse, calling us “brainwashed” or “shills” etc. finding some way to declare us “morally invalid” so they don’t have to acknowledge anything we say when they stumble upon an online community like this one. I find the cognitive dissonance interesting, they love calling us an “echo chamber” because we disagree with them, and because we don’t debate the same things they do, like whether or not violent brown people deserve to exist.

    • ExotiqueMatter
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      5 months ago

      Exactly entirely correct.

      They can’t imagine “tankies” existing. We aren’t real people to them. We don’t go down to the shops and watch tv or take our dog for a walk. We’re a group of evil monsters ruining their day by existing and disagreeing with them in way they don’t know how to respond to. So they get mad and try to dismiss us.

      The thing with liberals is that since they are unable to actualy refute any of our arguments, the only way they can shut down cognitive dissonance and not change their current world view is to find an excuse to dissmiss our talking points without having to engage with them. This is why they love calling us wumao bots or CCP shils and screaming whataboutism. This lead them to have a very conpiracy theorist way of thinking about us. To liberal, we ontologicaly can’t be genuine, to them we can’t even be crazy peoples sincerely beleving in crazy ideas, we have to be bad faith actors of some kind, bots or troll paid by the seeseepee or whoever else, every idea we push must be a ploy of some kind. The reason they have to go that far is because if they even just conceed to us that we are honestly telling them our oppinion, then they will be forced to engage with our arguments, because it’s not a comfortable position to conciously dissmiss and refuse to engage with someone we know is honest, that makes them feel bad, which is why we HAVE to be trolls, that way they can just reject everything we say without thinking about it and not feel bad.

  • Maoo [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    For liberals, nuance is just an excuse to avoid dealing with harsh realities. Because they subscribe to the embodiment of the political ideology of capital, this does indeed mean supporting the status quo - insofar as it’s aligned with the local dominant form of capital. They will not find “nuance” when it comes to special economic zones in China where the capitalist mode of production is active. They’re not defending that status quo. China is the enemy of their ideology and so it must be reduced through orientalism and being gullible about any and all propaganda leveled at them. In fact, being “nuanced” on China, to a liberal, just means picking a less ridiculous but still entirely false and simplistic criticism of it. Maybe they don’t know anything about Xinjiang so they discard the US State Department talking points on it to talk about safety nets at Foxconn. Maybe they don’t know anything about trade or imperialism so they discard those criticisms to pearl clutch about Taiwan.

    To liberals, nuance is just a way to feel smart by saying something is complicated so they don’t need to take a strong stance on it, and perish the thought of criticizing the fundamentals of their ideology.

    When you present liberals with actual nuance, such as a thorough historical understanding or a rationale for critical support, they lose their shit, start calling you names, and generally act like babies. Unfortunately this is also all part of the radicalization process lol.

  • Ocommie63 [she/her]
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    5 months ago

    I always felt that what you describe is the case, but I never knew how to express it in words

    • JucheBot1988OP
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      5 months ago

      Glad I could help! It was sort of an epiphany that came to me yesterday, I don’t know why, while I was reading a NYT editorial.

  • GarbageShoot [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    I would articulate it along the lines of “not representing any sort of contrary camp to or path out of the status quo”. Libs are often okay with you making sweeping condemnations, so long as the range of the sweep also includes the opposition, because it ultimately still supports the status quo to support nothing.

    • JucheBot1988OP
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      5 months ago

      Yes, that is a more accurate way to put it. Liberals are not the subtlest of individuals, and their critiques have all the precision of a US airstrike. Thanks for the constructive criticism!

  • The_Filthy_Commie
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    5 months ago

    This is just to add a strategy that helps me out.

    The reason I caught on to this ‘‘nuance fetishism’’ some time ago was by looking at function. What is the function of nuance? What does it do, and whom does it benefit? What is the function of ‘‘leftists’’ who parrot their western media and repeat the same shit the right says, for example? They may claim to be nominally leftwing, but functionally they’re rightwing. Names don’t matter shit, what matters is what names do. What good am I doing by pissing into the sea? If everyone is criticizing say, China right now, on every news show and YT channel, what is the point, if I wish to counteract their bullshit, of me repeating the same crap those channels are saying? Or lending a shred of credence to their factually incorrect takes? If I want to convince you about my point, will adding critiques function as strengths or weaknesses to my point? In my opinion, they weaken my point, because we cannot give an iota to reaction. This brings me to a related point to nuance which is ‘‘balance’’. Balance, Bothsiding and Nuance, are the trifecta of liberalism, and function as the same thing: justifying the status quo. What are they functionally doing? What is the function of bothsiding? When you equivocate, speak from both sides of your mouth, are you to be taken seriously? In words, you’re not taking a position, but functionally, you’ve taken the position of the status quo. What is the function of saying, for example, with regards to Palestine, that ‘‘it’s complicated’’? To not do shit about it, and condemn those that do, like Ansar Allah and Hamas. This also adds the trick of ‘‘muddying the waters’’, of ‘‘equalizing’’ opposing forces as both bad. Let’s not forget the all time Christmas classic, ‘‘harm reduction’’, or more colloquially known as ‘‘voting for the lesser evil’’, which are related to ‘‘all governments are bad’’, and function as means of quelling change or believing in an alternative.

  • sooper_dooper_roofer [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    “nuance” means using terms like “institutionalized racism” for literally everything so that we can make racism sound less alarming

    cop shoots a black guy standing on the sidewalk

    cop shoots a black guy who’s sleeping

    cop shoots a white guy because the sun was in his eyes and he thought he was black

    all institutional racism

    • JucheBot1988OP
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      5 months ago

      The liberal dream is for a black man to be brutally beaten to death by cops, but on Martin Luther King Street, not Bedford Forrest Avenue.