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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • Why did the Romans fail?

    I remember learning that the Romans fell because they were too gay and debauched and woke, so they lost their manly vigors.

    Nevermind, history doesn’t like copypasta

    I suppose its worth noting that the Roman Empire lasted centuries (millennia, if you see the Byzantine/Ottoman Empire as a continuation of Roman history). The UK is more comparable than the US, which flourished after WW1 and made it barely a century before fumbling.

    But also, the book is hardly closed on the US as an empire. China, India, Persia, Rome, France… they all had their ups and downs.






  • Like tankie never really meant anything before

    I mean, its historically described Soviet policy in Eastern Europe and Chinese domestic policing (Khrushchev putting down the Hungarian fascist revolt with armored infantry and Deng sending tanks into Tienanmen Square).

    Now it just means whatever the opposite of neoconservative policy is, updated daily.

    Being against tanks makes you a tankie at this point.

    Everyone knows that if you’re against US tanks, you must be in favor of non-US tanks. You’re either with US or you’re with the Tankie-rists






  • Liberals will go on and on about how any defense of the Venezuelan government marks you out as a “Tankie”, then clap like seals as US tanks and helicopters obliterate homes, massacre civilians, and snatch people up as political extortion.

    These are the same tactics used time and again by ICE Agents within the US’s own borders. They’re the tactics used abroad, to quell dissidents in The Philippines and Haiti and Gaza and Yemen. These are the actions of a fascist government for the purposes of genocide of native peoples, seizure of lands, and generating capitalist profits.

    Anyone who endorses it has picked a side. Just a shame they can’t have these decisions carved into their foreheads for all the world to remember.




  • Flipping through David Graeber’s Debt: The First 5000 Years

    Turns out some of the first coinage was a means of providing field pay to soldiers. Its local circulation - combined with Roman taxation - was effectively used to extort occupied nations into paying for their own conquest. Locals were forced to pay the Roman designated governor in coin only Roman soldiers were provided, on pain of confiscation, enslavement, and death.

    This practice of minting coinage to recollect as tribute has been a cornerstone of imperial economics into the modern day.