• LeniX@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 months ago

    I can see where your perspective comes from. However, I don’t think it’s a good idea to bury the entire thing just yet. Yes, the situation is really dire, but history shows us many instances of Western imperialism ruining entire regions, grinding them to dust, with no apparent prospect of any sort of future. Just look at the Arab countries - Yemen, Iraq, Syria, all of them really… Think about what the people of Chile felt after the Allende government had been overthrown in a coup, with fascist Pinochet reigning supreme and killing leftists all around the country and opening the doors for the plunderers wide open. Latin America is full of examples. It’s always been like that - people live day by day, not seeing any end to the dark tunnel their lives go through. I’m one of them, by the way - hiding, not being able to just go out and have a walk in the streets. It’s soul-crushing, incredibly stressful - that sort of isolation.

    And yet, there’s always a path to recovery. The Nazis in Ukraine are, what, exhibition 100 of the “freedom fighter contra” type that the US propped up globally? And yet the people are there, struggling. I doubt the Nicaraguan people living under peak Samoza brutality could imagine the Sandinistas, and yet here we are.

    It’s never in our material interests to give up.

    • KlargDeThaym@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 month ago

      You’re right, if course. But being trapped in a fascist country for 2.5 years, I have dim views of the perspectives of this nation, as well as my own. At this point, all that I feel towards this place, as well as people who gleefuly support turning it into what it has become, is deep resentment. I, personally, intend to leave it at the first opportunity and never step on Ukrainian soil again. That is, of course, if I won’t get buried in it.