1/ Conspiracy theories are for those who don't understand how systems function, so they cling to the idea of evil forces behind the scenes, when in fact, most awful things that happen happen because the social structures within which we operate contribute to various outcomes...
2/ Sadly, American culture is so hyper-individualistic, it is easier to think of everything (good and bad) as flowing from either good or bad people, rather than social systems and structures that are far more complex...
3/ And unfortunately our schools don't really teach systemic thinking, or encourage people to have a sociological imagination. So it's easier to blame false flags and a "pending gun grab" for mass shootings, rather than look at the mental health system or violent culture...
4/ It's easier to blame an inside job for 9/11 than think about the way that U.S. policy sowed the seeds of hostility among the forces that became al-Qaeda. And some other conspiracies are easier to believe than to simply accept that sometimes awful things just happen...
5/ ...over which we have no control. And that lack of control is scary to people, because it means awful things could happen to us too. So to such folks as this, uncovering the Wizard of Oz is a way to feel less at risk...if we can just ID the bad guys we can deal with them!...
6/ But the irony is, the people who believe in conspiracies NEVER end up feeling safer or less at risk, despite "unmasking" the wrongdoers...it just makes them feel more uneasy, as the rings of the conspiracy grow outward...
7/ And conspiracy theories always proliferate at moments of major social transformation over which people feel powerless. Which is why they are common among culturally/economically insular communities, bc those folks feel the world passing them by, leaving their folkways behind..
8/ Ultimately one struggles to balance compassionate understanding of the systemic source of the absurdity (on the one hand) with a realization on the other that these people are dangerous to democracy and social cohesion, and mostly can't be reasoned with...
9/ Fundamentally it becomes necessary to create systems of education and responsible media that help minimize this kind of inanity on the front end, rather than hoping to clean up the mess on the back end. Because once you're down that rabbit hole, you're likely gone...
10/ And of course all of this is made more complicated by the fact that in history there have been certain conspiracies, if by that we mean, a plan between two or more people to do x, y or z thing for their own pernicious ends...I mean, these things have happened...
11/ The first people who enclosed land & said 'this is mine,' & used force to take & keep it no doubt conspired to that end w/other powerful people. So the system of private property begins conspiratorially. But now it's a full blown system w/its own logic, not requiring Oz...
12/ Even when things have a "conspiratorial" root, after a while, auto pilot kicks in, and even though there are individual bad actors who make things worse, the system is the real thing to focus on.
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The worst takes on the Nashville bombing remind us how awful some people can be..
"Nashville's run by Democrats!"
???
Who was Mayor of NY when 9/11 happened? Oh yeah.
Bombings happen in cities bc it gets more attention than bombing a barn, dumbass...
2/ Or how about...
"The bomb exploded outside the AT&T data center" (true)...
"And that's because they had data proving the election was stolen" (and there's the shark...make sure to jump)...
To be clear it also exploded right outside the Melting Pot, so...
3/ Or "it was antifa or BLM"...neither of which have ever bombed anything, anywhere, even once, as opposed to right wingers (who may not have done this either -- it might not have been ideological per se), but who have done literally dozens of bombings in the past 25 years...
1/ Seeing the clip of Mike Pence today complaining that Democrats want to make poor people more comfortable (as if that’s a bad thing) reminded me how powerful anti-poor folks stereotypes are in this country, especially about poor folks of color and Black folks in particular...
2/ A common claim is that poor people (especially if Black) are sitting around collecting checks from the government. Bullshit. The most recent data shows only 2 million people in the entire U.S. getting “welfare checks.” Cash aid has been basically ended since the mid 90s...
3/ Of the 2m receiving cash aid under TANF (formerly AFDC), 29% are Black. So, 580k Black folks receiving cash aid out of 40m Black folk in all, and 7.5m Black folk in poverty. That’s 1.5% of Black folk and <8% of the Black poor receiving cash aid. acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/…...
Does anyone doubt which side the MAGA faithful of today would have been on at the time of this Jackson sit-in picture? Of course not. And that is why it is fair to call them evil. Anyone who was not supportive of the movement then, or wouldn't have been, is a moral monster
...and yes, please, I know the bigots in this picture were likely Democrats. I know. I also know the people they were attacking were well to their left politically, and NO movement conservatives were part of the civil rights struggle. So miss me w/ "they were Dems" BS
Oh and yes, all these white folks pouring drinks on protesters heads and verbally assaulting them deserved to be canceled: professionally, personally, whatever, until and unless they had a complete come to Jesus turn around and proved that to the satisfaction of those they abused
1/ No matter your views on student debt forgiveness, these folks who oppose it bc "I had to pay MY loans off, so they should too," are really awful people. Wanting others to experience the pain and stress you did (supposedly to build character) is sadistic...
2/ Imagine parallels: If you were physically or sexually abused ('my kids should experience that too so they won't have life too easy!'). If you experienced medical bankruptcy ('we shouldn't make health care more affordable or have M4A bc going broke for meds made me stronger!)..
3/ I mean it's just bizarre. Being burdened with heavy student debt -- bc colleges have become big businesses where hiking tuition is seen as a proxy for status/quality, and bc states have cut back on direct financing of higher ed -- is bad for everyone, not just the debtor...
Y'all can scream and yell about Antifa all you like but between people who will actually confront fascists and stand up to them and those who think they can be reasoned with, converted to prog/left class analysis, or need to be "understood," I'll take the former every time.
That doesn't mean there isn't a valid critique of certain tactics, strategies & particular actions. As is true in ANY political formation. The question is, should we respond to fascists with kindness and ecumenism or militant self-defense? No evidence the first of these works
I feel like those who critique Antifa but are on the progressive/left of the spectrum really believe you can reason with fascists, or turn them on to Gramsci if given enough time, or some such shit...
1/ The goal of GOP election fraud claims (before & after 2020) is to limit voting by folk of color & the poor. We know this bc before COVID, when mail-in & absentee was overwhelmingly whiter & upper middle class, NO right wingers focused on tighter safeguards on those votes...
2/ Rather they focused on limiting in-person early voting (disproportionately POC) and photo ID, bc even though there was almost no evidence of in person fraud, they knew POC and the poor are statistically less likely to have photo ID...
3/ In close elections, if such efforts result in even a slight decrease in turnout by such groups, the right benefits. NOW because of COVID, as POC and lower income folks availed themselves more of mail in and absentee (to stay safe), the same folks scream about absentee fraud..