relatable.
Relatable? Maybe, sure, although I'm sure there are oligarchs in the non-english speaking world who ought to concern people at least as much as these guys.
Bet no one can name them, Bezos, Gates, Zuckerburg? The real movers and shakers are people who havent heard of.
Nor are you ever likely to.
Did you watch the video out of curiosity? What I meant by relatable is the guy's introduction to anarchism is relatable to me.
No, not out of curiosity, anarchism is an appealing ideology in many respects.
I just find much of the time of agitators, whatever their ideas may be, are focused on the obvious or public, all too public oligarchs and no one ever tries to see beyond that.
Overall attacking oligarchs is often a net gain for other equally unsavory types, that's before you consider the national or geo-political angles too, not all oligarchs are equally menacing or criminal, although the "lesser evil" argument isnt perfect I guess.
I, of course, dont think this is an either/or deal or dichotomy per se but most politicians, some people in general too, think that the former services require funding and the later do not (or are the cheaper alternative).
Fuck, Rahm Emanuel who apparently Biden is looking at for his candidate cut mental health services in Chicago.
Actually I find it kinda funny how people fail to realize that basically the biggest winner of 2020 is GOP establishment.
Senate will almost surely be theirs, even if odds were officially against them.
House is full of their talking points and it is so narrowly blue that it is totally flipable in 2022
If we ignore a few social issues the new president is basically a typical republican from 25 years ago.
Supreme court is evidently theirs. es" While on local levels they did pretty well and therefore they will get to define many maps and local issues.
Rahm Emanuel is a Democrat. But I agree that it would be a mistake to view this moment as a victory for leftism or progressivism; I'd argue that any hope of that ended when Biden, one of the most conservative of all the people in the large field, secured the nomination. It's a defeat of Trumpism (if not a final defeat), though, and that's something.
But centrism will not be enough to return things to normal (which was unsustainable to begin with, which was why it didn't last). It will be interesting to see what happens once this becomes clear to everyone. So much of the Democratic establishment believes it is effectively still the 1990s; it seems that they never got the memo about the "end of history" being a chimera. If you look at the beliefs of people in foreign policy circles alone, this is obvious. The failure of U.S interventions in the 21st centuries is, to them, merely a consequence of people not doing them "correctly" rather than an obvious symptom of the fact that the American empire is no longer sustainable.
Trump's legal adviser Jenna Ellis in 2016 called him an 'idiot' and said his supporters didn't care about 'facts or logic'
Not in the U.S., they don't.