• 小莱卡
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    211 year ago

    My favorite paragraph from Inventing Reality

    “Despite a vast diversity of cultures, languages, ethnicity, and geography, the nations of Latin America, Africa, and Asia, with some exceptions, show striking similarities in the economic and political realities they endure. Lumped together under the designation of the “Third World,” they are characterized by concentrated ownership of land, labor, capital, natural resources, and technology in the hands of rich persons and giant multinational corporations; suppressive military forces financed, trained, equipped, and assisted by the United States—their function being not to protect the populace from foreign invasion but to protect the small wealthy owning class and foreign investors from the populace; the population, aside from a small middle class, endure impoverishment, high illiteracy rates, malnutrition, wretched housing, and nonexistent human services. Because of this widespread poverty, these nations have been mistakenly designated as “underdeveloped” and “poor” when in fact they are over-exploited and the source of great wealth, their resources and cheap labor serving to enrich investors. Only their people remain poor.” - Parenti.

  • @201dberg
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    161 year ago

    Liberal propaganda is like eating food that’s made of all those special “no calorie” ingredients. They consume it endlessly because they digest none of it because it’s all empty of any real facts. Meanwhile communist propaganda is like a hearty meal loaded with facts and history, logic and reasoning. Eat it and it will keep you full and warm.

  • @VictimOfReligion
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    -81 year ago

    The meme is backwards. Jesus was the one wanting massive genocide except for a little group of cultists.

    • Anna ☭🏳️‍⚧️
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      161 year ago

      I like how you just pop up anywhere where it even shows or mention religion. Not even talking about religion directly, just showing some pictures is enough to make you wanna react.

      • INACTIVE ACCOUNT
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        131 year ago

        I suggest not escalating things further, we don’t need another flame war thread with 70 comments…

      • @VictimOfReligion
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        -51 year ago

        I have to plant the seed of counter propaganda, comrade. This myth of portraying Jesus, a character who was condoning racism, tribalism, pseudoscience, theocracism, inmovility, etc, as some sort of socialist caring bear makes good to no one except for religious institutions, who have enormous material and social benefits from it.

        Kind of like making memes with Churchill as a good guy and Stalin as worse than Hitler thing.

    • @frippa@lemmy.ml
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      131 year ago

      Why do we need to rehash this old topic even when someone posts something tangentially related to religion such as a meme that only uses it a sa template?

            • @frippa@lemmy.ml
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              71 year ago

              Still, where was the necessity for that comment? A post got locked, people got banned, we had our little arguement just a week or two ago. I don’t see why provoking is the thing to do.

    • Muad'DibberA
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      101 year ago

      I’d never heard of jesus wanting a genocide, where does this come from?

      • @VictimOfReligion
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        -51 year ago

        Jesus was an eschatological prophet-avatar that announced the comming of the end of the world to achieve world dominance/paradise, while portraying non Jewish as worthless dogs and generally bad people. Also, its teachings were mostly, if not all, towards Jewish, being himself the guru of hos own cult following, and, here we come, demanded that the followers pray for this end of the world massacre where only few (of course of his own race) will be saved. Something that is still present in the Gospels and the NT in general.

        • Muad'DibberA
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          1 year ago

          Jews were one of the many groups that were victims of roman imperialism / domination. Early christianity and much of judaism should be seen in this light: as a resistance to Roman imperialism.

          Do you have a source for Jesus comparing non-jewish people as “dogs and generally bad people”?

          • @VictimOfReligion
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            -31 year ago

            I was making a walltext, but because my phone is garbage, and can’t do a swift job regarding copy pasting from different sources, so I will first say the first short part, and do the fat one in some note or something that doesn’t dissappear because of not enough data…

            Ahem.

            The Hebrew supremacy is not something that was born during the Roman Empire, its something the Old Testament is filled with, to the point that there’s even today in some Judaist sects, the celebration of the Amalekite genocide (which could have been pretty fictional, but still not so wholesome, frankly). The OT is filled with promises of conquest and of enslavement of the rest of the world from the Israelites, either from Elohist (older) sources and from Yahwehist sources. Now I’m going to do the collage work wherever I can.

      • @VictimOfReligion
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        -71 year ago

        Both. Both of them. And if you count trinitarian mythology, Jesus is god.

        • @Kirbywithwhip1987
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          101 year ago

          Wait, Jesus has a status of god? Wasn’t he always a normal human

          • @PolandIsAStateOfMind
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            1 year ago

            There was incredibly intense struggle session in early christianity about that. And the only options were a) he’s just god and b) he’s human and a god. No christian denomination think he was just a human, it would not be christianity anymore then.

            So yeah, he’s always a god, and not just any god but THE God, omniscient and omnipotent. And yes, they did noticed the fact if he was really omniscient there would be no need for Jesus at all, but those guys were declared heretics and majority of christianity just proceeded to happily ignore that paradox, like every other one.

          • @VictimOfReligion
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            01 year ago

            No… Wtf? I mean, yeah, the Gospels contradict each other, and stuff, but depending on the sect and in general therms, Jesus was never a normal man, only in the most gnostic of the gospels, Mark, which is the first one (historically) may interpret this thing, but the religious consensus is that Jesus is divine, not just a prophet like Moses, even if Jesus said that if Moses wasn’t real, he was for nothing. Spoiler:Moses never existed.

            • @CannotSleep420
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              161 year ago

              Back when I was in Catholic indoctrination school, I was taught that Jesus was both completely god while also being completely a normal man. This is of course ridiculous, but Christians thought it made sense because muh god.

              • @VictimOfReligion
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                111 year ago

                I mean, the meme wasn’t talking about historical Jesus, but if you wanna put it this way…

                While we don’t have any writings nor direct testimonies of a historical Jesus, if he was real at all, what original Christians were, was an escatohological (apocaliptic) sect very into interpreting Judaist texts and sort of a mix between Amish, Jehovah’s Witnesses and those not so known Christian cults from Russia from the pre Soviet / Tzarist times. Basically, “the end is near” + tribalism + persecution complex to the point of asking Roman judges to be executed so they could be martyrs.

              • @PolandIsAStateOfMind
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                1 year ago

                This one, even if was real, is nearly completely nonexistent in christianity.

                To know more about supposed human Jesus, i would suggest reading about the essene sect rather than christian sources, since judean preachers of early I century were heavily influenced by that sect. In next two generations they went much more radical which ended in the bloodbath of uprising.

        • INACTIVE ACCOUNT
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          1 year ago

          I always thought in christianity he was just the son of god, lol.

          In Islam he’s the son of Mary and is a prophet, not god or the son of god or anything like that

          • @VictimOfReligion
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            41 year ago

            Yeah, it’s the same interpretation that a sect of ancient pre-orthodox Christians (we have to interpret Orthodox not as the Orthodoxy post great Schism) that were then persecuted and had to fly outside the Roman Empire to the Arabian Penninsula. The Gnostics had a similar fate, but I think that Gnostics were directly wiped out.