• @Echo71Niner@lemm.ee
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    9110 months ago

    USA failed to stop the drug trade (opium poppy crops) in that country, Taliban comes in a nuke that trade in 1 year, puts in question if the Americans were in fact running the drug trade themselves under their rule.

    • wtypstanaccount04 [he/him]
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      10 months ago

      Puts in question? I’d argue it’s 100% obvious. The opioid epidemic lines up pretty well with the invasion of Afghanistan.

    • @gowan@reddthat.com
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      10 months ago

      The Taliban is willing to murder people to keep them in line. The US DOD was not willing to kill the thousands of people extrajudicially that would have bern needed to stop the drug trade.

      Edit: EXTRAJUDICIALLY means without a trial or in this case as a directive from the WH. They aren’t in theory just murdering for the sake of murdering. The Tailban, on the other hand, are less focused on trials for these people though they are turning a blind eye to the growth of the opium trade post 2021 takeover.

      • Victor_Lucas [he/him]
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        10 months ago

        The US is willing to kill hundreds of thousands (millions) of people for trying to pass things like small labor reforms i.e the Jakarta Method in Indonesia

        Americans are the drug trade, the world supply of opium dropped to almost nothing after Americans retreated from Afghanistan and the Taliban re-established their already right-wing, pre-American invasion policies on poppy crops.

        The drug war funds the CIA black budget the same way Civil Asset Forfeiture funds your local police department.

        • @gowan@reddthat.com
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          110 months ago

          The USA is willing to let other people kill people in Jakarta. The US military is not doing it themselves which is the difference here. The US DoD would have to sign off on the extrajudicial killings of Afghani civilians vs not engaging in war crimes to stop killing in Indonesia.

          The rest of your post compounds on that ignorance.

          • Awoo [she/her]
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            10 months ago

            Not sure why you’re drawing a magical difference between the US military telling its troops to do it and the US military telling some other troops to do it. Both are happening at the request of the US.

              • Awoo [she/her]
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                10 months ago

                It’s extrajudicial BOTH WAYS you fucking dipshit. It’s not magically different. Both are extrajudicial.

                Why the fuck are you treating it differently?? Answer the question.

              • StalinwasaGryffindor [he/him, comrade/them]
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                3910 months ago

                I love how debate nerds get so caught up in whether something is legal or not. News flash, laws are worthless without enforcement, and there isn’t currently any entity capable of preventing NATO forces from murdering people whenever they please

              • SunriseParabellum [he/him]
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                2510 months ago

                “Your honor I did not murder that man, I just paid this hitman to do it. He pulled the trigger, I just happened to hand him an evelop that had ‘shoot my ex wife’ written on it with 50k in cash inside.”

                • Egon [they/them]
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                  910 months ago

                  Shoot my ex wife.

                  “I did not kill that man”.

                  Someone is a transphobe in that example of yours, and when I find out who I’m going to kill them (don’t worry it’s okay, I have a piece of paper that says it’s not extra judicial)

          • Victor_Lucas [he/him]
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            10 months ago

            The USA is willing to let other people kill people in Jakarta. The US military is not doing it themselves which is the difference here.

            That’s not what the Jakarta method is, sorry but you don’t know what you’re talking about.

            The rest of your post compounds on that ignorance.

            You can try saying that but you have a giant gap in your history education, and with that, a fundamentally incomplete way of seeing and interpreting the world, and world events.

            You don’t seem to be aware of Afghanistan pre-American intervention, the left direction of Afghanistan’s development (the sovietization of Afghanistan), its former place in the international socialist bloc, or the reasons driving the nation’s current relations with China.

            Take a long look at America’s relationship to the UAE and Israeli right-bulwarks and the general relationship and co-operation between the Soviets and the Islamic regions of the world. For whatever mistakes they made there were strong bonds between Soviets and Islam and together they would have built the middle east into the center of the advanced world again. The eastern republics would have landed on the Lunar South pole well before India did this month.

            The US has no interest in mutual and internationalist development, the entire core logic of the American project is post-colonial extraction. There aren’t sufficient democratic structures of enough robustness and sophistication to steer the project otherwise. Underlying any and all decisions by the American state is nothing and only capital.

            • @gowan@reddthat.com
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              110 months ago

              The Jakarta method was when 1 million people were murdered by the Indonesian military. Why aren’t you blaming the Indonesian government for that as they very willingly took part? It’s the sane situation the USA isn’t killing these people and asking why they don’t stop it is asking why the USA isn’t the world police.

              • Victor_Lucas [he/him]
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                10 months ago

                The Jakarta method, underselling it, describes US collaboration with right-wing capitalist governments to violently suppress left-wing organizing toward the transition to a socialist economy and mode of production. The Jakarta method differs from previous interventions with a wildly increased emphasis on daily terror, sexual violence and raising home-grown colonial-born, American trained, armed, and funded, equivalents of Weimar Germany’s Freikorp via the convergence of interests between liberals (capitalists) and fascists (capitalists).

                You’re outing yourself by either not knowing, or purposely omitting, the role of the PKI, the world’s largest Communist Party outside of China and the Soviet Union. A varied but ultimately democratic socialist organization historically defined and remembered by and because of its pacifism, and self-disarmament.

                This Party came in the wave of the Soviet-aligned post-war wave of anti-colonial revolutions and class consciousness that supported solidified after the Soviet defeat of the newcomer fascist bloc of capital (as opposed to the incumbent ‘liberal’ bloc of capital) during the second world war. Their destruction came after a string of successful resistances to American anti-socialist intervention immediately after the war. In Eastern Europe, in Korea and in Vietnam. The Jakarta method describes a more sophisticated, and wildly more violent and shocking, fascist response to the left-wing self-organization of former-colonial subject states. An intensity and volume of bloodshed, sexual violence, terrorism, and lies that you’re repeating to this day.

                Repeating because of something as simple and flimsy as an address on a spreadsheet.

                Edit: and yes communists and anti-colonialists have for what you’re describing, they’re called collaborators. You’re describing the administrative state that’s left in place to manage the flow of commodities and western capital during both formal colonial occupation and the imperialist post-colonial period of capital penetration.

              • RedDawn [he/him]
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                3110 months ago

                The US actively supported the killing and provided names of people to be killed, they didn’t just “not stop it” you fucking dingus. They ARE the “world police” and like other police they are murderous scumbags

            • @gowan@reddthat.com
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              110 months ago

              Oh I an aware of how the extremely small and unpopular communist movement within Afghanistan forced its jackboots down the throats of the working people of Afghanistan.

              • RedDawn [he/him]
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                3510 months ago

                So you like the US support the jihadists?

                “Forced its jackboots down the throats”

                Lmfao they sent girls to school and other liberatory things, that’s what got the jihadists (and apparently you) riled up.

          • @HornyOnMain@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            The US actively backed Suharto to coup the democratically elected government of Indonesia and then western press ran apologia for both the military coup and the murder of 1 million communists, feminists and ethnic minorities by the aforementioned unelected US backed military dictatorship

          • FortifiedAttack [he/him]
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            2310 months ago

            So what you’re saying is, if I were to hire a hitman to take out your sorry white cracker ass, I would be completely justified and be free of any blame?

      • Flyberius [comrade/them]
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        7010 months ago

        I’m sorry what? What do you think the US was doing in Afghanistan for 20 years. The US loves an extrajudicial killing.

        The Taliban have achieved this by offering better prices for food crops, which is what they need due to us sanctions. So it turns out that the us did have the power all along.

        Also, that’s another thing the us likes to do, starve countries that don’t dance to their tune.

        • @gowan@reddthat.com
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          110 months ago

          Your first paragraph makes it clear you don’t understand what extrajudicial means. Is there any point in reading past there?

          • h3doublehockeysticks [she/her]
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            6510 months ago

            If you think extrajudicial murder means a killing done without an order from the government, and since the US sanctions its own killing they aren’t extrajudicial, shouldn’t that same logic apply equally to the Taliban? Surely the Taliban sanctions the killings done by the Taliban.

          • ElHexo [comrade/them]
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            3310 months ago

            Aren’t you the one saying that an order an executive branch to murder isn’t an extrajudicial killing?

          • FortifiedAttack [he/him]
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            1610 months ago

            Intrajudicial killings are when you blow up civili—I’m sorry, the “terrorists” with a huge number of drone strikes, am I right fellow liberal?

          • Egon [they/them]
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            10 months ago

            Extrajudicial means a killing without a legal ruling, what do you thing it means? The taleban executing someone isn’t extrajudicial, because the government of Afghanistan (the taleban) has ruled that it isn’t. Notice how legality in no way informs morality. Also the United States killed a shitton of people extrajudiciously in Afghanistan.

        • @gowan@reddthat.com
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          110 months ago

          Key word is “extrajudicial”. We could easily have stopped the drug trade if Americans were willing to accept the wholesale destruction of Afghanistan.

          • Awoo [she/her]
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            10 months ago

            if Americans were willing to accept the wholesale destruction of Afghanistan.

            Americans didn’t give a fuck what happened in Afghanistan what fucking planet are you on??? They supported carpet bombing it. How old are you? Were you still a child when it started and can’t remember what it was actually like?

            • @Echo71Niner@lemm.ee
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              4010 months ago

              They never gave a fuck even when they armed the afghans to shoot down Russian planes, they were just a proxy US-Russia war with afghan as puppets.

              • Awoo [she/her]
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                It was fucking disgusting back then. You could speak to 99 random americans and they’d support bombing the shit out of afghan and killing whoever was necessary to get osama. It was SO fucking different to how it is now with libs at least being performative about not being bloodthirsty monsters. Back then it was bipartisan support for mass killing and obliteration. Nobody gave a fuck.

                Don’t get me started on the constant omnipresent casual racism.

                • Chapo0114 [comrade/them, he/him]
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                  1010 months ago

                  The first time I realized I was, for lack of a better word, different than the people I grew up around is when one of my high school buddies just casually said we should “just glass the middle east and get it over with”. Glassing is a term we got from Halo which means to incinerate an area with such a high heat the surface turns to glass. His proposed method was obviously nuclear bombs.

                  No one else thought it was an outlandish thing to say, much less a truly abhorrent one.

          • Victor_Lucas [he/him]
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            5510 months ago

            They don’t care, Americans destroyed every building in Korea (the famous “no targets remaining” quote). Giving almost every right-wing group in the country rifles and stinger missiles, to throw the country into a permanent state of civil war, has the exact same effect as carpet bombing.

            Minus the invasion consolidating into a left-wing anti-American socialist front, which happened in Korea, Vietnam, Laos and Cuba.

            A permanent civil war, lead by a right wing government, still allows the export of surplus value which is collected by Americans. A left-wing government would try to keep that surplus inside the country to further develop means of production.

            It’s called Shock therapy and even some liberals (the most politically educated and articulate) are conscious of this happening.

            Henry Kissinger’s life work is architecting American interventions that result in right-wing reactions rather than left-wing ones. Give all the right-wing groups guns, they kill the left, the country remains defenceless from extraction, and by the time Americans intervene it’s multiple squabbling right-wing militias instead of a united socialist front with an industrial base and functioning anti-air missiles.

          • RedDawn [he/him]
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            2710 months ago

            America was the one running the drug trade you absolute fucking dipshit. They didn’t want to stop it because they made bank off of it.

            if they were willing to accept the wholesale destruction of Afghanistan

            They were, and they did destroy it. What are you smoking?

          • TreadOnMe [none/use name]
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            10 months ago

            Ah yes, there it is. The ‘stabbed in the back’ ‘we weren’t really trying to win’ American military apologia.

            Even if you bombed every single building in Afghanistan, you wouldn’t have won that war. That’s why they stopped doing it. Get fucked you stupid loser.

      • robot_dog_with_gun [they/them]
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        6510 months ago

        The US DOD was not willing to kill the thousands of people extrajudicially

        michael-laugh

        go listen to blowback and stop embarrassing yourself in public

      • Awoo [she/her]
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        6110 months ago

        The Taliban is willing to murder people to keep them in line. The US DOD was not willing to kill the thousands of people extrajudicially

        HAHAHAHAHAHAHA holy shit people actually believe this.

        Have you read the Jakarta Method?

        • ikiru
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          2710 months ago

          They are an idiot troll and I feel like I wasted my time reading through their deranged contributions to this thread.

          But your book recommendation made it worth it! Thanks!

          • Awoo [she/her]
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            It is very painful and difficult to read.

            Every single person the book talks about is a person like every user here on Hexbear, with the same beliefs and ideals of a world future united and free of capitalist exploitation. It is very painful and very difficult to get through if you humanise the numbers, each with a family that was destroyed.

            For any americans looking to seriously break lingering nationalist brainworms they may have I also like:

            • ikiru
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              2010 months ago

              Yeah, I can imagine. I saw Act of Killing which was similarly brutal to watch for similar reasons.

              I don’t think I have any nationalist brainworms to break but I’ll look that one up too. Thanks!

              • Mardoniush [she/her]
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                1310 months ago

                It makes you go from “The US is evil and the current power structure must be destroyed, but with revolution it can become a force of peace and humanity on the world stage” to “JDPON wen?”

      • SoyViking [he/him]
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        5410 months ago

        The US was willing to kill half a million Iraqi children to prevent Saddam Hussein from rebuilding Iraq.

        • @gowan@reddthat.com
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          110 months ago

          What the fuck are you talking about? The first war was over the invasion of Kuwait. The second war was to steal oil. At no time did we attack to prevent Sadam from rebuilding.

          • Cromalin [she/her]
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            5610 months ago

            “half a million iraqi children” is a reference to the sanctions in the 90s that were explicitly a punishment meant to prevent iraq from rebuilding post gulf war

          • ElHexo [comrade/them]
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            2310 months ago

            The first war was over the invasion of Kuwait

            If the US told Saddam what they would do in the event of an invasion, there wouldn’t have been one

          • SootySootySoot [any]
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            1010 months ago

            You’re somewhat agreeing - by preventing rebuilding, it becomes a lot easier to build/steal a country’s oil refineries. You already admit one invasion was over oil - Surely you can see how invading a country and killing tens/hundreds of thousands of civilians just to steal oil is ‘extrajudicial’ killing?

      • silent_water [she/her]
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        10 months ago

        The US DOD was not willing to kill the thousands of people extrajudicially that would have bern needed to stop the drug trade.

        this might unironically be the funniest and most incorrect statement ever posted. it’s so divorced from reality that you must have typoed and meant some other place. the US has not once ever stopped murdering tens of thousands – or even millions – of people for the sake of a quick buck. please, dear god, listen to the Blowback podcast. you’re talking about the military that firebombed Korea so hard that people had to live in caves in order to survive after virtually every single city was completely and totally leveled, kill 20% of the population, all to institute a despotic police state in the name of repressing every single progressive tendency in the population.

      • @Echo71Niner@lemm.ee
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        3010 months ago

        Fuck the Taliban and the US war machine, they are both fucking assholes esp. the way Americans ran the fuck away from AFGHANISTAN, but facts are fact, Taliban nuked that trade while the US allowed it to flourished. It does not make Taliban better in general, they are still close minded, uneducated door knobs, just like half the US rednecks.

        • Victor_Lucas [he/him]
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          2910 months ago

          The Taliban closed the opium trade but the big picture is they are still exporting low-value form commodities (raw oil, ore) instead of retaining enough surplus to develop the means to produce high-value form goods (gasoline, electronics, stainless steel medical needles) which is what a left wing government would (did, 1987-1992) do.

          If the U.S Government was unsuccessful in supplying and elevating the Gorbachev clique into power and unsuccessful in arming the Mujahideen+ affiliates (which consolidated into the Taliban), the Republic of Afghanistan would probably have fully secularized and industrialized by now.

          Any space for right extremism would have been taken up by universal high education, land-reform, cyberneticist economic planning, advanced high-value production and other zero-poverty + full-employment initiatives.

            • @gowan@reddthat.com
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              210 months ago

              Not at all look at the sates in your article vs the ones in the study. Your article is talking about after 4/23 and mine is before then. It isn’t bullshit the fact is it might be eventually reduced but immediately afterwards it spiked.

      • Egon [they/them]
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        1310 months ago

        Lmao the law isn’t some infallible deity. It’s a tool of oppression wielded by those in power. The fact that someone got killed, but a judge said it was ok, doesn’t mean it’s in any way not a murder.
        Though I’d like to see the trial of the wedding that got dronestriked, or the many other civilians murdered by the us in Afghanistan.

  • @DavidGarcia@feddit.nl
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    10 months ago

    Well the war machine did a bang up job at preventing Ghadaffi from implementing gold backed currency to keep our scam money system going.

  • YeetPics
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    5110 months ago

    So THAT’S where my affordable housing and groceries went!

  • Infamousblt [any]
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    4810 months ago

    Not useless at all. In fact they did exactly what they set out to do. They produced a fuckin ton of shareholder value for industries that profit off war!

  • Catradora_Stalinism [she/her, comrade/them]
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    4410 months ago

    Reminder of the time the US overthrew its own dictator in haiti to create a “liberal anticommunist” president but they killed him 3 months in because he wasn’t enough of a fascist dictator

  • Mardoniush [she/her]
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    2510 months ago

    More like 30 if you count US support for the “Moderate” Mudjahadeen that took the L in the mid 1990s.

  • @drathvedro@lemm.ee
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    810 months ago

    You should see Russian law majors faces when Taliban envoys went to Kremlin and got their diplomats approved by MFA, even though the supreme court has ruled that Taliban is a terrorist organization and any of it’s members should be arrested on sight and put in jail for 10+ years just for being a part of it. And now we get people who, under one law, are terrorists and have diplomatic immunity at the same time…

    • 420blazeit69 [he/him]
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      5110 months ago

      If there’s anything that would have fixed the situation in Afghanistan, it was not having the U.S. stay there indefinitely.

        • 420blazeit69 [he/him]
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          3610 months ago

          There’s plenty of blame to go around; no need to hang it all on one person. If you like Biden, the better argument is that he was correct to leave.

          • @Rapidcreek@reddthat.com
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            110 months ago

            Biden had no choice. Check that…he could have added more troops, set up an armed enclave, told the taliban that Trump didn’t really sign that surrender and hope for the best.

                • 420blazeit69 [he/him]
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                  10 months ago

                  Check that…he could have added more troops, set up an armed enclave, told the taliban that Trump didn’t really sign that surrender and hope for the best.

                  Honestly not sure – were you being sarcastic here? Why couldn’t he have done something like this?

                  There’s also the ever-possible “find some technical violation the other side did and back out,” or “find some issue that’s larger than imagined and unilaterally delay the agreement,” etc. Who was going to hold him accountable?

    • Victor_Lucas [he/him]
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      10 months ago

      Imagine thinking world events happen because of whoever is on TV

      The Taliban governs Afghanistan because Americans overthrew the previous secular left-wing Republic of Afghanistan government because the Republic made extracting surplus value from the region difficult.

      The Taliban is in power because white Americans are so bloodthirsty and unhinged that Afghanis prefer a far-right evangelical government to a permanent fascist colonial occupation with liberal aesthetics.

      They will remain in power because Americans funneled so many weapons to right wing paramilitary death squads like the Mujahideen and others (which consolidated into the Taliban) that the country will never be stable enough to return to secular and left-wing governance.

      This is why China is pouring money into Afghanistan, if the country becomes stable enough, Afghanistan becomes a reliable partner nation and connects China to the Europe, right wing thought and nationalism is eroded by education into solidarity and internationalism, and the conditions for left wing organizing can eventually return.

      Which means oil is processed in the county, and the surplus value produced by those high-value form petroleum products remain in the hands of the people that live and work there, instead of the surplus value being siphoned of out of the country by the American corporations that Americans like to pretend are separate from the American government. Which is why Americans intervened to begin with.

      • TheDeed [he/him, comrade/them]
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        2310 months ago

        They will remain in power because Americans funneled so many weapons to right wing paramilitary death squads like the Mujahideen and others (which consolidated into the Taliban) that the country will never be stable enough to return to secular and left-wing governance.

        girl power eric-andre

      • ComradeCmdrPiggy [he/him]
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        2210 months ago

        permanent fascist colonial occupation with liberal aesthetics

        This. This is a good description of governments from US-backed Afghanistan to Ukraine to Tel Aviv.

        • Victor_Lucas [he/him]
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          10 months ago

          They have no choice because Americans gave the Mujahideen (and affiliates which later consolidated into the Taliban) guns and Stinger missiles to overthrow the democratically elected socialist Republic of Afghanistan in 1992.

          The American government gave rural right-wing evangelists the weapons necessary to overthrow the socialist government elected by a huge majority in the secular left-wing cities. Does that sound familiar?

          • @Rapidcreek@reddthat.com
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            110 months ago

            The US gave weapons and trained with NATO the Afghanistan military to safeguard an elected government. The military surrendered in days. That is why Afghans have no choice.

            • Gay_Tomato [they/them, it/its]
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              4210 months ago

              Have you ever considered the possibility that the training NATO gave them was just that shit rather then the Afgans being unable to comprehend the miracles of western tactics? matt-jokerfied

            • SeventyTwoTrillion [he/him]
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              1610 months ago

              The US gave weapons and trained with NATO the Afghanistan military to safeguard an elected government. The military surrendered in days.

              these two facts might be more intimately related than you think

        • came_apart_at_Kmart [he/him, comrade/them]
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          3110 months ago

          the US sponsored and financed those religious zealot networks in the 1970s to block a socialist movement in afghanistan that had begun in the 1920s. the farm laborers and workers of the country were sick of the feudal system of massive landowners and were tired of the british soldiers propping it up. they wanted universal secular education, an end to the honor killings of women, and a transition to a democratic republican form of governance uninterested in being occupied by western powers.

          the US merely continued the project of the british occupiers: financing, training and arming religious psychos (literally men who threw acid in the faces of women who were literate) and opium gangsters, because these are the kinds of assholes that can be relied upon to kill socialist reforms without compunction. the kind of people that will murder children, burn books, and firebomb schools/hospitals. the US wound this minority of killers up and set them lose on the soviet border to lure the US’ rival into an intractable war.

          it worked and then the disease got a mind of its own, containment failed (several of US-backed strongmen who functioned as cutouts in supplying war materiel in the gulf were overthrown), and the violence turned towards outwards, and specifically towards the west. the taliban and ISIS are offshoots of networks the US and the UK established and, at best “lost control” of. but, more cynically, they still play a vital role in goosing the military industrial complex and making americans angry at central asians/arabs, sparking their will to export money and violence at the border of our geopolitical rivals.