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Cake day: June 9th, 2025

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  • the supreme Court does not interpret the constitution, they apply the constitution to laws.

    That’s a pedantic dispute, they interpret the constitution when applying their understanding of the constitution to laws.

    They are not some God-like Watchtower society, and when they stray, they Must be impeached.

    Theoretically that would be nice, but getting two thirds of the Senate to agree on anything is unrealistic.

    We, the people, elect our representation in Congress and are at fault for all of this.

    Eh… We don’t exactly have a direct democracy, and the bicameral nature of our representative government was created to empower conservatives. This was made even worse by the Great Compromise.


  • No, it is not. The people have failed.

    That’s a contradictory statement. The constitution is null and void if “the people” have failed to uphold it. The constitution isn’t self evident, nor is it enforceable or interpretable by any single individual. It’s a social contract defined by the courts and enforced by its martial arm.

    When you swear an oath to uphold the Constitution you aren’t swearing to uphold your personal interpretation of the Constitution. You are swearing to uphold the legal definition of the Constitution, inpreted by the supreme court. A court which has made it pretty clear that prior interpretations no longer really matter.






  • Lol, risotto takes like 30 min to make. The hardest part about putting a PC together isn’t the assembly, it’s picking out what parts you want and then buying them all.

    For me it’s dealing with my indecision of balancing cost and performance and then the obsessive need to find the best deal for every part I picked.

    But yeah my main point was I think you’re overestimating how long risotto takes to cook.







  • However, without confirming in reality, some took it to mean that the peasantry would oppose socialism if they weren’t already proletarianized. It isn’t quite as stupid as it sounds.

    I can see how someone unfamiliar with the countryside could make the assumption. However, as a person who’s lived and worked on a farm it doesn’t make a whole lot of sense. Farming communities are extremely interdependent on the local community to get just about anything done. No one person or family can work the land by themselves, it really does take a community if you’re not a wealthy land holder.

    Trots take it to mean that all socialist countries are generally highly flawed to outright bad

    Yeah… He was a messy bitch about a lot of things. Really a mixed bag of conflicting ideas in that little dude.


  • Well… The problem is that the Catholic Church does not act as a unified body, especially in America.

    Trad Catholics in America have been hating the pope since basically Vatican II. That doesn’t mean that “they are at war with the church”, just that organizations like Opus Dei are actively trying to pull the church further to the right.

    So while some of the church maybe doing good, the other part of the church is ending abortion rights and partaking in other crazy shit on the supreme court.


  • but prevalent idea that the peasantry would be counter-revolutionary, as they would have more of a petite-bourgeois ideology based on their largely self-driven living conditions.

    I guess hindsight 20/20, but I had always figured they were referring to the landed peasants like kulaks or sub-kulaks. Seems incongruous that peasants in poverty would be counterrevolutionary.

    Trotsky also rejected that a country itself could be socialist, as he believed internationally the system being capitalist would cause a reversion to capitalism eventually.

    Kinda agree with this to an extent.


  • When the Russian revolution failed to inspire successful revolution in the west, they reached a dillema. Trotsky feared the Russian peasantry would attack, and so wanted to go on the offensive first

    What time frame are we referring too here, and what peasantry? Im guessing well before the implementation of the five year plan? Also, in his references to the peasantry I always kinda figured he was speaking about the kulaks.

    Chinese Trotskyists were wrong, wanting to attack both the KMT and Japan before kicking out Japan. Mao and the CPC formed a temporary alliance against Japan, then kicked out the KMT, which ended up being correct.

    I mean… Like most things in this time period, it kinda depends on when you are talking about. In the beginning most communist did not like the decision to form a united front with the kmt, but acknowledged it as necessary. There wasn’t really much of a delineation between trotskyists and stalinist until when it came to the kmt until the Shanghai massacre. And tbf it’s kinda understandable that people like chen duxiu would want to break/attack with the kmt afterwards.


  • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.todaytomemes@lemmy.worldFactual btw
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    20 days ago

    Why? The government has better purchasing power than any private corporation and most things, but especially infrastructure become more economic at a greater scale.

    Another point is that utilities are natural monopolies, and that the government building and controlling the infrastructure would cut out the profit motive that is currently driving up the cost.


  • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.todaytoMemes@lemmy.mlAm I wrong??
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    21 days ago

    Trotsky’s plan of Permanent Revolution rested on the idea that the peasantry would erode socialism, because he thought they could not be truly aligned with the proletariat.

    Isn’t that just in the case of later developing capitalist countries? My understanding was that he believed later developed capitalist countries would be unable to build the industrialized economy that creates a large proletariat class. So in these countries the existing proletariat would have to seize control and then later form an alliance with the peasantry down the road.

    However, I don’t think that means he only wanted to develop socialism with western nations. I mean Stalin and him had a major rift develop over Trotsky wanting to support the Chinese communist and Stalin siding with the kmt. One of the things I kinda agree with when it comes to Trotsky was his opposition to the socialism in one country policy.

    This is kinda dependent on what year it is of course, Trotsky was kinda all over the place once he fell from grace.