• CannotSleep420
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    1 year ago

    I suppose getting high as hell on homemade drugs is one way to go to space.

  • ComradeSalad
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    1 year ago

    Cut to that one flat earther that spent 20 years building his own legitimate space-grade rocket, only to ultimately blow himself up on the maiden voyage.

      • ComradeSalad
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        1 year ago

        You’re pretty much correct, though the rocket launch was certified by the FAA, as shooting something of that caliber isn’t taken lightly, so it seems like they thought that he “might” make it lol

        • redtea
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          1 year ago

          Or they let him go in a rocket they knew wouldn’t make it so he couldn’t go up to prove the earth is flat spooky space conspiracy music

  • Star Wars Enjoyer A
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    1 year ago

    Anarchists try not to blow themselves up in their backyards challenge (impossible)

  • lemat_87
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    1 year ago

    This also applies to any other ambitious projects like intercontinental railway, nuclear power plant, hydropower plant, a cargo ship, a big airplane, roads, airports and most of technical civilization actually. How anarchism can be taken seriously? Oh, there is also a cancer version of it, ancap

    • WithoutFurtherDelay
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      1 year ago

      Why are we assuming that these things are all valuable according to anarchists? I think they are valuable myself, but this criticism doesn’t work

      • cucumovirus
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        1 year ago

        We are not arguing about what is subjectively valuable according to some people. These things are materially necessary for our society to function. It doesn’t matter what someone says is important or not. What matters is the material reality of the situation.

        • WithoutFurtherDelay
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          1 year ago

          Space travel is not objectively essential to the functioning of civilization lol

          • cucumovirus
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            1 year ago

            You’re replying to a comment about a lot more than just space travel. Those things are absolutely necessary to our civilization. They weren’t necessary for all of history because we didn’t have them but now we do. We know that there is no abstract civilization in general, each one exists in its historical context. Our civilization today needs all those things. If we just stopped doing them, huge numbers of people would suffer or die due to food and medicine shortages and all sorts of other related issues.

          • ComradeSalad
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            1 year ago

            Neither are the vast majority of technology over human history.

            So why do we have them?

            • WithoutFurtherDelay
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              1 year ago

              Because we just kinda wanted to do it? It isn’t essential to quality of life, either. I mean, i love the idea of it, but it’s not an objective good to such a degree

              • lemat_87
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                1 year ago

                And why we want them? To not die in some fucking cave. Some inventions are not just stupid whims. I agree that pickaps or private jets are such whims, bot not a power plant or a train. If anarchists thinks that this is not necessary, they are more stupid than I thought.

          • redtea
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            1 year ago

            It says space programs not space travel. Without them, life as we know it changes radically and for the worse.

  • ButtigiegMineralMap
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    1 year ago

    I also like to imagine that home-made substances refer to crack or methamphetimine that will send you to outer-space(metaphorically speaking)

  • ButtigiegMineralMap
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    1 year ago

    Just hop on top of your roof, shove grandma into a shopping cart, get the propane tanks lit beneath her and get ready for Blast off! Oh, and give her a helmet and goggles. Safety first😉

    • PolandIsAStateOfMindOP
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      1 year ago

      I love how this thing blown up 20 cm of killing that guy, then they tried a second time and only then somebody said “this isn’t the best idea”.

  • WithoutFurtherDelay
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    1 year ago

    There is such a severe misunderstanding of anarchism among socialists that not even self described anarchists know what anarchism is.

    I’ve always been under the impression that the difference between Marxists and anarchists was in the need for a transitory dictatorship of the proletariat to prevent reaction. Any issues an anarchist’s ideology would face besides reaction are issues Marxists will have to deal with anyways if they’re successful.

      • WithoutFurtherDelay
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        1 year ago

        I don’t think that Bakunin is representative of most anarchist’s beliefs these days. Many of them would definitely be willing to push for reforms in bourgeoisie states to amass more worker power as a secondary tactic, a distinctly more Marx opinion than Bakunin.

        I’m also going to commit a grievous sin, and say that Stalin is wrong in the exact same way a libertarian would be in that text. The individual and the mass have the exact same interests, the same character, as masses are made entirely of individuals. More recent schools of anarchism even emphasize this, with anarchists insisting that appreciation for and the liberation of the masses is essential to the liberation of the individual, that both struggles are truly identical. “For the masses” and “for the individual” are not irreconciliable, and if they were, it would imply that liberation of the mass hurts individuals… something that is blatantly untrue. Stalin‘s one and only mistake in that text is to assume that the two principles he listed are valid, and actually mean anything different from one another. Starting from an (understandably) faulty premise, Stalin is incapable of coming to a correct conclusion except through coincidence.

        I say understandable, because with a quick skimming of the text, it seems that Stalin is fundamentally arguing against the faulty conclusions that anarchists drew from their own ideology at the time. I am convinced that Anarchism’s true flaws lie in contradictions with itself, flaws that would reveal an entirely different philosophy (possibly Marxism, true) if analyzed and reconciled.

        And, finally, the post we’re literally talking on shows a fundamental misunderstanding of anarchism. How is it some kind of own that an anarchist doesn’t have a solid plan for space travel? Why is it presumed that everyone should want to have a solid plan for space travel? Why is our desire for space travel seen as automatically more valid than a desire to just exist without oppression? Arguing that anarchists couldn’t achieve space travel doesn’t dismiss or debunk their beliefs, quite the contrary, our belief that it can highlights that we have a fundamentally maladjusted view of anarchism.

        • cucumovirus
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          1 year ago

          I don’t think that Bakunin is representative of most anarchist’s beliefs these days. Many of them would definitely be willing to push for reforms in bourgeoisie states to amass more worker power as a secondary tactic, a distinctly more Marx opinion than Bakunin.

          I don’t know about Bakunin’s status among anarchists today but it’s not that important. This whole point is irrelevant, the important point is the underlying philosophy and world-view which is still the same.

          The individual and the mass have the exact same interests, the same character, as masses are made entirely of individuals.

          Not all the individuals in a mass have the same needs and interests. Classes exist but even within classes there are contradictions. The mass is thoroughly heterogeneous. Individuals make up the mass but they don’t exist as abstract entities outside of the mass. It’s a dialectical relationship - individuals exist only as parts of the mass. Some vague abstract freedom of the individual is not compatible with the material liberation of the masses. We evolved as social creatures and continue to exist as such, we can’t just yell about “individual freedom” while completely ignoring the material conditions we exist in. To quote Marx: ‘“Liberation” is an historical and not a mental act, and it is brought about by historical conditions, the development of industry, commerce, agriculture…’

          anarchists insisting that appreciation for and the liberation of the masses is essential to the liberation of the individual

          Anarchism as an ideology cannot achieve the long-term liberation of the masses. Historically through practice we know that Marxism is the path towards this.

          it would imply that liberation of the mass hurts individuals… something that is blatantly untrue

          I don’t see how this is implied anywhere here. The opposite of this, however, is true. The whole premise of liberalism is some vague idealistic freedom of the individual which in reality includes the freedom to enslave and exploit others.

          I am convinced that Anarchism’s true flaws lie in contradictions with itself, flaws that would reveal an entirely different philosophy (possibly Marxism, true) if analyzed and reconciled.

          You’re basically saying if anarchism was correct, it would be Marxism which is true but a meaningless statement. Anarchists are more than welcome to learn and become Marxists but this doesn’t save the ideology of anarchism form being incorrect.

          And, finally, the post we’re literally talking on shows a fundamental misunderstanding of anarchism.

          It’s just a meme which does expose some of the flaws and contradictions in anarchism but it’s by no means a theoretical analysis of it. Marxist analyses of anarchism have been done (I linked some of them in my previous comment) and all reach the same conclusion. The ideology of anarchism is not salvageable because it is fundamentally flawed.

          How is it some kind of own that an anarchist doesn’t have a solid plan for space travel? Why is it presumed that everyone should want to have a solid plan for space travel? Why is our desire for space travel seen as automatically more valid than a desire to just exist without oppression?

          Space travel here is just a bit of an exaggerated example but it really can be substituted by any sufficiently complex industry or endeavor which is necessary for the continuation of society. We cannot go backwards, we have reached a certain industrial, scientific and technological complexity which we keep advancing and which is necessary to feed, house, and educate all the people on Earth and is necessary for our daily lives to continue functioning properly. After capitalism, these things will still need to happen and this will require further organization and societal structures or institutions which when communist build them, anarchist call out as bad. Not to mention the protection of such a society from counterrevolution or outside imperialist forces.

          Arguing that anarchists couldn’t achieve space travel doesn’t dismiss or debunk their beliefs

          Saying that anarchist couldn’t achieve space travel follows directly from a debunk of their beliefs because in order to actually achieve space travel you need to first have a successful revolution and then a successful society which can fulfill all the basic needs of its people and then deal with all the technological and scientific work necessary for space travel which the anarchist ideology does not provide a basis for. If anarchists actually create a materially plausible plan for any of this, it basically just sound like a Marxist type socialism and not anarchism.

          • redtea
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            1 year ago

            These are good points. I was going to make similar ones but you’ve covered it.

            In addition, self-proclaimed ‘anarchists’ are free to answer that they aren’t interested in space programs. Maybe that would make them anarcho-primitivists. But if they reject that version and claim to have a plan to go into space, the answer in the OP meme is woefully lacking.

            Besides, no space programs (not just space ‘travel’) means no satellites. No satellites means no more emergency services. And good luck mapping and responding to climate change. Maybe the plan is just to make do with the satellites that already exist. But how long will they last without maintenance? That option sounds like a slow decline into another dark age where humanity’s scientific advancement has long since peaked.

          • PolandIsAStateOfMindOP
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            1 year ago

            I don’t know about Bakunin’s status among anarchists today

            He’s still mentioned basically every time anyone asks about anarchist theory so i would say he’s significant. Of course between “mentioned” and “actually being read” there is a huge gap, especially in case of anarchists.

          • WithoutFurtherDelay
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            1 year ago

            I agree with most of what you say, but I don’t think it’s entirely incompatible what I’m thinking. I think I’m just shitty at communicating what I’m thinking here

    • Beat_da_Rich
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      1 year ago

      “Transitory dictatorship” is left pretty vague by Marx. But what he is talking about class dictatorship, not dictatorship in the literal sense of one person in a country having unlimited political authority. There are so so many anarchists and liberals that do not understand this because they continue to conflate the word “dictator” in the way Marx meant with how Western capitalist states weaponize the word.

      Dictatorship of the Proletariat is seen as a law within Marxism the same way there are laws within other scientific fields. It’s the acknowledgement and observation that after political power is seized by the working class, class relations do not automatically just disappear. The working class will need to sustain and protect the revolution until those class relations from the previous mode of production wither away over generations. History has shown us this since the beginning.

      A centralized vanguard party is Lenin’s well-tested contribution to Marxist theory on how to achieve and protect a socialist revolution under seige by imperialism. But that doesn’t exclude the possibilities of other tactics in the future.