I'm gonna prole-tear that ass up
― Can't stop the dancing chickens (dyao), Friday, 22 May 2009 15:20 (seventeen years ago)
this party will repeat itself, the first time as a tragedy, the second time... as a porno!!
― rip dom passantino 3/5/09 never forget (max), Friday, 22 May 2009 15:22 (seventeen years ago)
from each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs, and baby, i need you
Anyone who knows anything of history knows that great social changes are impossible without feminine upheaval.
― I don't care if you're blah, quite purple... (kingkongvsgodzilla), Friday, 22 May 2009 15:28 (seventeen years ago)
the seas of change are certainly heaving
― Hard House SugBanton (blueski), Friday, 22 May 2009 15:33 (seventeen years ago)
I realize this is about history and its icons, but they are nonetheless signifiers of an ideology, although what Marx, Stalin, the USSR, etc, point to, with the people I've encountered, is less anything about wealth, property, state control, etc. and more just an empty punchline (literally: "communism, lol"). It works both ways with people mocking say Stalin on one hand and Marx on the other. Wealth, property, repression, state control, murder, etc. never enter the equation, conveniently forgetting about the history and the thought that informs it.
Of course this isn't exclusive to communism but it having so much currency in society, and at this point in time, where these people are too young to remember the fall of the Berlin Wall, for instance (i.e. at a time where people forget the reality of history). I'm trying to not be humourless, or too agitated, since as I said I'm not so invested in leftist politics that I take it personally, I just see this as a certain brand of humour and attitude toward history and thought that's increasingly detached from reality and unaware of the gravity of say, communism's role in history, be it Marxist thought or violent tragedy. I'm also looking at this at the viewpoint of people who grew up in Soviet states or are dedicated far-leftists, as something that more than insults them but denies any right to what they have experienced and believed in.
P.S. how'd you like to get that base up in this superstructure.
― Edward Saroyan, Friday, 22 May 2009 15:51 (seventeen years ago)
yeah. well. "modernism." whatre u gonna do.
― rip dom passantino 3/5/09 never forget (max), Friday, 22 May 2009 15:58 (seventeen years ago)
what Marx, Stalin, the USSR, etc, point to, with the people I've encountered, is less anything about wealth, property, state control, etc. and more just an empty punchline (literally: "communism, lol")
Actually w/r/t Soviet stuff, I think it's more that you now have younger adults whose memories of Soviet images are largely based around late Cold War stuff like bad 80s action movies and this seemingly Important Threat that had sort of evaporated by the time they were old enough to care -- this is a recipe for jokes, insofar as "late Soviet images," in addition to meaning historical stuff, also wind up filed in about the same mental place as the Thundercats and Alf
Kind of repeating myself here, but given that up until recently common people associated things like Stalin/the USSR with gulags, mass murder, repression, an Evil Empire, a mortal threat to our way of life, etc., surely "LOL communism" is a public-perception improvement? I mean if that had been the general attitude a few decades back, all those HUAC hearings would have more fun and hilarious for everyone involved
― nabisco, Friday, 22 May 2009 16:14 (seventeen years ago)
you know, you can't spell marx w/o M - A - X
― velko, Friday, 22 May 2009 16:32 (seventeen years ago)
Perhaps wise Doctor Casino will furnish us with examples of Communism having worked in practice.
― Dingbod Kesterson, Wednesday, July 30, 2008 10:48 AM (9 months ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
― rip dom passantino 3/5/09 never forget (max), Friday, 22 May 2009 16:35 (seventeen years ago)
I'm always ready for a good gulag joke.
― Bud Huxtable (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 22 May 2009 16:36 (seventeen years ago)
perhaps wise Dom will read the thread and figure out that's not the point i was trying to make
― Doctor Casino, Friday, 22 May 2009 16:41 (seventeen years ago)
homie
― rip dom passantino 3/5/09 never forget (max), Friday, 22 May 2009 16:47 (seventeen years ago)
dont play me like that
girl, i will bury you
― Swat Valley High (goole), Friday, 22 May 2009 16:59 (seventeen years ago)
I own that t-shirt that Edward linked to. idk, I like it. I don't think making a joke that the Communist Party could be a Communist party is anti-leftist, and I definitely think someone like Emma Goldman would approve of the sentiment. There's nothing wrong with having fun with the ideas, and the shirt doesn't undermine anything (unless it's in the sense that you have to exchange monies to get it). If anything, I've had more people think I was sympathetic with radical leftist ideas because of the shirt, than in spite of it.
― Mordy, Friday, 22 May 2009 17:13 (seventeen years ago)
I'm also looking at this at the viewpoint of people who grew up in Soviet states or are dedicated far-leftists, as something that more than insults them but denies any right to what they have experienced and believed in.
idk mayne the ppl i've met (including during the 80s) who lived in communiss countries really fkn hated living under it. i will ask if people going 'lol communism' denies them the right to what they have experienced, but i reckon they'd say 'buck the fuck up, what does that even mean?' i suppose they 'experienced' living under the russian imperium but didn't really 'believe in it' :/
― FREE DOM AND ETHAN (special guest stars mark bronson), Friday, 22 May 2009 17:20 (seventeen years ago)
i don't "get" constructivism, but that whole thing, in design and whatnot -- kind of creepy? a little bit imo. graphic designers, architecture students, etc, not super historians ime.
― FREE DOM AND ETHAN (special guest stars mark bronson), Friday, 22 May 2009 17:22 (seventeen years ago)
BROSEPH STALIN
― pitiable, strong and a little orgasmic (latebloomer), Friday, 22 May 2009 17:26 (seventeen years ago)
i'm having trouble understanding the objection to this dumm tshirt. like, this sentence:
"I can't imagine anything more frustrating for a committed leftist than this sort of reduction of a history of social theory and action to a petty, unaware, and outright not-funny punchline."
is incomprehensible to me. first, who give a shit? second, if i think about it for a second i CAN imagine some things more frustrating for committed leftists, many things in fact.
― Swat Valley High (goole), Friday, 22 May 2009 17:28 (seventeen years ago)
i think if you *do* get annoyed by it yer probably a bit weird? apart from marx and to a extent castro all of the people on the poster are total scumbags and unmitigated nogoodniks.
― FREE DOM AND ETHAN (special guest stars mark bronson), Friday, 22 May 2009 17:35 (seventeen years ago)
imo the most cogent complaints about the attitude displayed in the shirt end up being the conservative ones: "communists and communism killed millions and kept millions more in servitude and poverty, goddam kids these days think it was all a JOKE!?"
as a rough equivalent you can't have "lol nazis" shirts, something right wingers complain about in a strange way; socialism and communism is still a weak club to beat the left with, no matter how hard they try, but everyone "just knows" that fascism/nazism is uniquely evil and not jokeworthy on a public tshirt level (creepy internet level, fine). "everyone" hates the outer edges of right-wing politics, but the outer edges of left-wing politics are just... funny? dead and therefore... goofy? the conservative complaint is that this structural imbalance isn't "fair" which is pretty lulzy but also, i dunno, interesting, historically. talkin out my ass here.
― Swat Valley High (goole), Friday, 22 May 2009 17:38 (seventeen years ago)
communism has roots in the enlightenment, nazism = excuse to murder jews
― pitiable, strong and a little orgasmic (latebloomer), Friday, 22 May 2009 18:02 (seventeen years ago)
sorry to be glib about it
― pitiable, strong and a little orgasmic (latebloomer), Friday, 22 May 2009 18:06 (seventeen years ago)
since when can't you make jokes about nazis? Springtime for Hitler anyone? Hogan's Heroes?
― Wrinkles, I'll See You On the Other Side (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 22 May 2009 18:07 (seventeen years ago)
hm good point
― Swat Valley High (goole), Friday, 22 May 2009 18:09 (seventeen years ago)
http://www.wooyayhoopla.be/hammerzeit.jpg
― languid samuel l. jackson (jim), Friday, 22 May 2009 18:11 (seventeen years ago)
hey i said creepy internet nazi humor was ok
love that jpg btw
― Swat Valley High (goole), Friday, 22 May 2009 18:18 (seventeen years ago)
I generally agree with Swat Valley High, to hopefully clarify my point, though: past the cold-war impression of the evil communist boogyman, a lot of young people (for whatever reasons they may have) look at communism as just a punchline, conveniently moving the history of it and theory behind it off to the side. These sorts of attitudes will probably at least annoy dedicated leftists, or people who have had to live through a lot of strife, because it replaces communist thought and history to a joke. I.e. it doesn't just make fun of the idea of it, but also pacifies it, in a way different from just mocking it (where it seems like there still can be an awareness of an actual communism, not just a detached reflection of it (usually the product of the stuff nabisco mentioned upthread, which lends itself to being camped up. Which has not all that much to do with Marxism and gulags, for instance).
Also, I just got the communist-party-as-a-party-joke, so that makes a lot more sense now. I'm not going to criticize you for that shirt, the concert poster I saw yesterday with that image for a background on the other hand. . . (also keep in mind, this is mostly based of pretty specific experience with people I've encountered, who aren't to smart to begin with).
― Edward Saroyan, Friday, 22 May 2009 20:55 (seventeen years ago)
you really think making a joke about communism completely trivializes it?
― s1ocki, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:04 (seventeen years ago)
i mean, couldn't you say that about humourous takes on ANYTHING?
yes and no. I mean certain attitudes behind jokes appear to be more trivializing.
― Edward Saroyan, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:11 (seventeen years ago)
This might be a bit obvious, but if part of your complaint is that people just don't take communism seriously enough as a valid ideology, my response might be that it is sort of up to an ideology to justify itself to people, not the other way around
― nabisco, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:15 (seventeen years ago)
in america 'dedicated leftists' doesn't suggest 'communist' anymore. this is a good thing...above all for 'dedicated leftists' who want to be taken seriously.
rather, somebody could be a chomsky-reading-hardcore leftist stereotype and still wear/enjoy that t-shirt. how many real marxists are left to be offended by this?? I don't know any and I spend my life in berkeley+san francisco.
― iatee, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:16 (seventeen years ago)
does it have to be offensive though? I just think it's a trivializing attitude, on the part of certain people, not necessarily these shirts on their own.
― Edward Saroyan, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:21 (seventeen years ago)
as an economic system, yes, communism has been pretty universally trivialized.
as a GIGANTIC part of 20th century history, I can't imagine it will ever be.
― iatee, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:24 (seventeen years ago)
I don't really get your complaint since "lol communism" really entails laughing at the socialist regimes of past and present that were and are really pretty terrible. I am glad Lenin, Stalin etc. are now figures of fun, because they shouldn't be figures of admiration.
On the other hand what this kind of thing does not make fun of, and shouldn't, is certain Marxian concepts, approach to history and society that takes in to consideration economic factors as well as individual agency of politicians and diplomats, the socialist inspired labour movements and workers' rights etc.
One side of my family is in parts very far left-wing, and many of the family friends of my parents were committed socialists/communists. My uncle is a trotskyist and lived in Cuba in the 70s after being exiled from Chile. Two of my cousins grew up for similar reasons in the GDR (and hated it of course). etc. etc. The ones of these who have retained their far-left politics are all very sympathetic and I believe are in it for good reasons. However I am glad that their extreme politics are now discredited and that now their politics are only really reflected in good things: activism that promotes social justice and supports the labour movement, minorities and LGBT rights etc.
― languid samuel l. jackson (jim), Friday, 22 May 2009 21:28 (seventeen years ago)
― Edward Saroyan, Friday, May 22, 2009 9:11 PM (18 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
i don't get it. you're angry on the behalf of hypothetical communist sympathizers who might not like jokes at stalin's expense because it trivializes marx's ideology? i mean seriously, who is giving marxism a worse name here, stalin or lol jokes people?
― s1ocki, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:31 (seventeen years ago)
i feel like u are kind of trolling here saroyan
― s1ocki, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:32 (seventeen years ago)
Achhh, I'm starting to get as confused as you, really. This started from what I thought was a pretty uncontroversial point which I apparently haven't thought out enough. I promise I'm not trying to troll here, nor am I really angry on behalf of anyone, nor am I trying to defend any aspect of communism (also I think a lot of people generally see stalin and marxist thought to be in the same boat)
― Edward Saroyan, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:41 (seventeen years ago)
fwiw, out of curiosity, I asked my Ukrainian friend if she thought it was funny. does not.
― iatee, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:43 (seventeen years ago)
I don't know what else to say, let alone to vindicate my original point, so I'll take any opportunity to sneak out out this debate, but I just think it's a kind of lame humour, and generally empty critique.
― Edward Saroyan, Friday, 22 May 2009 21:50 (seventeen years ago)
okay went to get a second opinion, this time Russian:
Evgeniaof course it is hahai think ive seen them on the red square
― iatee, Friday, 22 May 2009 22:23 (seventeen years ago)
is there nothing more cringe-worthy than the "lol, communism" attitude of certain people today
The other day I saw an Asian guy wearing a shirt with a picture of Mao, and then underneath it said LMAO
This shouldn't push yr buttons, though, cause for all we know he was expressing his genuine and substantive contempt for Maoist ideology, and his opinion that it is ultimately laughable
― nabisco, Thursday, 4 June 2009 17:34 (seventeen years ago)
Also, I just got the communist-party-as-a-party-joke, so that makes a lot more sense now.
^^^omg a+++
― FREE DOM AND ETHAN (special guest stars mark bronson), Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:18 (seventeen years ago)
For the record I've softened on my stance since.
― formerly: mehlt, edward saroyan (EDB), Thursday, 4 June 2009 21:41 (seventeen years ago)
communism, lol
― ice cr?m, Saturday, 6 June 2009 16:36 (seventeen years ago)
I do, however, resent people who don't mark any difference between communism, lol and socialism, lol.
― formerly: mehlt, edward saroyan (EDB), Saturday, 6 June 2009 16:52 (seventeen years ago)
the spelling, obv
― Kerm, Saturday, 6 June 2009 17:02 (seventeen years ago)
communism fails because it does not go far enough in trying to reshape the possibilities of the human. usually it just results in typical power structures re-asserting themselves under the guise of the dictatorship of the proletariat. under a true collectivism there would be no central leader. every unit of the collective would be plugged in to all the others and have no reason to take orders. decisions would be distributed across the whole, acting as a single brain. to achieve this, advances in technology and social engineering are necessary. communism arose in a period when these advances were unthinkable, so its goals of true egalitarianism were of course in vain.
― banaka, Saturday, 25 September 2010 09:47 (fifteen years ago)