• utopianfiat@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It’s not stupid, it is designed to criminalize political participation by anyone who isn’t pro-putin.

    • Arbiter@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Fascists can’t conceive of something without a strict hierarchical power structure.

      • lad@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        Unfortunately, I think some are more equal. Those laws are not to be applied to an acting member of elites. When they do something to fall out of favor or just seen as not important anymore, that’s when they will get accused of anything.

      • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        There were gossips about some top branches’ kids living in EU being not exactly straight. I don’t think direct attacks would ensue, but charging each others’ children as a form of a racket? I can see it happening.

    • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Not really, but kinda. Antifa is an ideology that explicitly rejects leadership, but lgbt is just a thing some people are. Some people are black, and when society treats them like shit over it sometimes they organize. Same goes for lgbt. We organize but we exist when disorganized. The mattachine society and daughters of bilitus were examples of early LGBT organization in my country.

      Banning us from organizing is a way to say that if we acknowledge our existence or if anyone acknowledges that our oppression is oppression it will be punished and treated as extremist opposition to the regime.

        • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Formal/persistent organization and people trying to be leaders are generally frowned upon in antifascist scenes. It’s partly due to the anarchist current in them, but it’s also because antifa is something you do not something you join or something you are. Someone may lead an event or something but it will reject someone becoming “a leader” instead preferring those who would be leaders be seen as people having more experience

          In short your local lgbt community may have a group with a president, that’s normal. Your local antifascist community almost certainly won’t.

    • aidan@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The problem is pro-LGBT activists continue to call it a community, and use other terms that portray it as having a unity that doesn’t exist.

    • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Well, when defined as a collective noun it does make sense, it’s largely just “a group of people that support the same thing”

      an organized body of people with a particular purpose, especially a business, society, association, etc.

      But I see what you’re getting at: there isn’t a head honcho for that organization (AFAIK). It’s like trying to charge the head of the hacking collective Anonymous.

      I’m all for people having rights and support and stuff, but some of them love to shove it in your face and put it everywhere (like Pink during Breast Cancer Awareness Month,"slap that shit on everything!) and it gets annoying after a while, like Pride flags in video games (Skyrim, Fallout and Starfield to name a few) or having the weapons be the colors of their flag (just saw these mods for Skyrim). Yes, I don’t have to download them, but NexusMods is already a cesspool of shit quality mods that like 5 people out of the million or so that just the site will actually download.

      Maybe I just get triggered when I see this stuff because I grew up in Southern New Jersey (a largely white farming town for the most part, Blacks make up a good portion as well) and my high school (about 2500 kids total) was half Puerto Rican. They would constantly chant/sing “PUERTO RICO!” through the halls, in the gym and other places. They’d also wear big, gaudy jewelry with the PR flag, paint the PR flag on their car, and then tie a small PR flag to the antenna. If you love it so much, why don’t you go back there?

      I’m partially German, but you didn’t see me running though the halls screaming “Deutschland! Ich liebe dich!”, carrying around German flag necklaces, and draping my Benz in the German flag. I don’t think I’ve ever seen *any nationality do it like they do, anywhere".

      • 8deus8@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        This weird feeling when another group is around and shining is an underlying cause of xenophobia. It’s natural for some people to strive to belong to a group, and it’s natural to be cautious of a group you don’t belong to because the animal part of your brain can take the group as a threat, and rightfully so in some cases.

        In other cases, when there’s nothing threatening about a group, that animal part should be kept at bay by conscious effort, by understanding both the group and its pain and the origin of your feelings. Many people don’t know how to do this, and this is the biggest problem. Especially when instead of teaching how to build bridges, instead of learning new things about the other, people just go into defense mode. I’m so devastated to observe this everywhere now.

        That said, LGBTQ people still have to fight for their rights, because lots of people still get murdered even in the US and that’s unacceptable. ‘Shoving it in your face’? I personally would love to stop it once people finally get accustomed to the idea being different doesn’t mean being a threat and we stop being bullied and harassed and murdered every frickin day.

        • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I just feel that it’s a bit much. Outside of Puerto Ricans, I don’t think I’ve ever seen another group (aside from the crackpot Republicans, but that’s not your average American) that has so much pride for their heritage that they need to deck themselves out in it and plaster it on everything they own. I just moved to Miami and there’s a massive Cuban population down here, I don’t see anyone decked out in the Cuban flag or anything close to that.

          As for the “alt groups” (the acronym just keeps getting longer) there’s a difference between fighting for your rights and just plastering your flag everywhere and essentially shouting “respect me because I’m different!” to everyone. As an example, do people love the guy or girl that makes Marijuana legalization their identity? The ones that wear “legalize it!” Tshirts, wear socks and hats with pot leaves on it, and it’s all they ever talk about? No, most people (including myself, a heavy smoker for about 2 decades) find them annoying as fuck.

          You can fight for something and promote it without making it your entire identity.

          • 8deus8@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’m foreign, so I googled Puerto Ricans and man do those guys have a rich history and culture. Man they have so much to offer the world, and queer folks too, they all have so many things to tell if you just ask, so many out-of-the-box things I bet you’ve never thought about. You clearly don’t want to ask though, so okay.

        • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Umm no? I’m not “scared” of them, I have nothing against them. I was hanging out with a gay guy last night and one of my friends from college is trans. Neither of them make being gay/trans their entire identity though.

          People love to downvote when you say anything against a marginalized group. No one is allowed to have their own opinions anymore.

            • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Oh yeah, totally 🙄 That’s why I’m friends with people from multiple different races and cultures. Anytime you say you find something annoying there’s cries of “homophobe!”, “xenophobe!”, or “racist!”.

              Also, you dumb fuck,Puerto Rican isn’t a race, it’s an ethnicity.