As a Jewish person, hearing people condemning Antifa makes me deeply uncomfortable. I know it can seem like they use violence against ideas (usually a disproportionate response), but the fundamental thing to remember is that neo-Nazi ideas aren't peaceful ideas.
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W odpowiedzi do @benchkf
I strongly believe that violence is not the solution to fascism, but actually feeds it in a never ending cycle. Antifa is not the solution, in my opinion. Violence can’t kill ideas.
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W odpowiedzi do @sarahlongthorne
Eh, I would like to believe that but inevitably fascism leads to violence & by that point several people will already dead. Prevention & scaring nazis from being openly bigoted & harmful often protects vulnerable people from their actions. Antifa is a normal reaction to it.
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W odpowiedzi do @KamSage
Obviously if someone is attacked, they should defend themselves, and there should defend them too. That’s not what I’m saying :) violence doesn’t kill the idea, it just forces people underground where you can no longer anticipate their movements
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W odpowiedzi do @sarahlongthorne
Yeah, i didn't think you were saying complete pascifism is the way to go, soz. It's more, when is the line of fascist violence no longer acceptable? Jo Cox was murdered by a fascist & fascism is on the rise with little mainstream challenge of it.
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W odpowiedzi do @KamSage
At what point is counter violence acceptable? Because we did get to a World War when it was allowed to continue, under the watchful eye of the international community who let it happen. I don't know when is best to employ violence but Antifa at least directs it at better targets.
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W odpowiedzi do @KamSage
Eh, tricky to say in so few chars when these things are so situational. My point is simply that we shouldn’t use physical violence against people without a corresponding threat or it just works against us in the long run.
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W odpowiedzi do @sarahlongthorne @KamSage
The problem with waiting for a corresponding threat is that it usually takes the form of abuse, an attack or the death of a marginalised or less privileged member of society. The ones that Nazis and are already proudly&actively calling for violence against.
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W odpowiedzi do @author_general @KamSage
I use to think similarly until a friend pointed out that it’s a very privileged position to preach nonviolence when you aren’t the ones facing the immediate risk of it. If we don’t take fascist and hate groups at their word we are acting complicit in the eventual attacks.
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W odpowiedzi do @author_general @KamSage
We have endless evidence that if such groups go unopposed or we wait for an inciting incident then marginalised folks will suffer as a result. Rhetoric becomes action. We recognise this in toxic masculinity, religious extremism and should recognise it in political hate groups too
2 odpowiedzi 0 podanych dalej 1 polubiony
I guess my point is that this kind of action should ideally be handled by official parties like the police, and that’s what I would be pushing for. People marching and shouting hate speech is undeniably awful to experience. But does that really merit an attack?!
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