People need to realize you can use alternatives

    • Gray@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I generally align with the left most of the time, but I hate making one label the basis for your entire political opinion. I am very against censorship. My greatest pet issues have to do with censorship and democratic principles. In terms of American politics, I will never vote Republican. If I feel a Democrat has let me down in a big way, I would consider voting third party, but 99% of the time I would vote Democratic. Centrist Democrats piss me off more than leftist ones. My foreign policy stances are probably the least in line with the further left. I am generally pro-NATO with the understanding that NATO isn’t perfect. I just worry way more about a world with China/Russia at the helm given their propensity for censoring opinions that oppose their majority parties.

      • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I am generally pro-NATO with the understanding that NATO isn’t perfect.

        I’m terminally-online enough that I am used to the paths of most arguments that have appeared on this website about politics, but – and I say this to be transparent – this one baffles me and I don’t know how to respond to it. I’ve seen people say it but, well, it gets hard to explain within rule 1.

        Maybe if we agree that “NATO is an extension of US foreign policy” we can sidestep the issue for now.

        I just worry way more about a world with China/Russia at the helm given their propensity for censoring opinions that oppose their majority parties.

        This one I am much more used to. Remembering that NATO is a military organization and not, you know, “who controls the internet,” I’d like to just present you with a simple pair of questions:

        1. How many of the past thirty years has the US been at war?

        2. How many of the past thirty years has China been at war?

        Beyond that, for all the fearmongering people do, China is remarkably less interested in unilaterally dictating relations than you might think, so explaining things in terms of “which country is the master of the unipolar world order” is not justified. Unipolarity has only been the state of things for a little over 30 years (and only obvious for a little over 40) and was unheard of before that. There is no reason to suppose that the future can only be unipolar, especially if the country that ushered in unipolarity and viciously guards it with world-historic levels of violence (the US) is no longer the strongest force.

        China has shown every indication of seeking bilateral development and cooperation. An example in severe microcosm is the US banning China from the International Space Station and China responding by making its own space station which the US isn’t banned from, nor most other countries (though I think it is still a finite list and not totally open, owing in part to being a new program). Stories like “debt traps” from China are grotesque projection, as China doesn’t do things like forced restructuring or asset seizure, unlike the IMF.

        I truly think this sort of “US is the least of the available evils” ideology has a hard time existing except in a subcultural bubble where it meets no challenge at all, because it is an astoundingly flimsy position.

        • Gray@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I don’t oppose China’s right to exist as a power. I do disagree with the US doing things like banning China from the ISS. I also am not blind to the IMF scheme and what it has done to the non-western world and I oppose that. I am quite opposed to the way that Israel has been handled and there clearly needs to be some kind of compromise with Palestine. I’m not even going to try to touch that issue in terms of the way right way for it to be handled, but clearly the solution isn’t what they currently have. I am pro-NATO in how they’ve handled the war in Ukraine. I am pro-NATO in the sense that it prevents attacks on its member nations, which Ukraine in my eyes has been very clear evidence of the need for.

          Like I said before, I think checking all the boxes in one political ideology more often than not leads to some shitty, lazy stances, so maybe labeling myself as pro-NATO was a mistake. It’s fair to say that the world doesn’t need one superpower. In terms of China, more than anything I just wish they allowed for more debate and opposition within their political structure. Again, democracy and censorship are my pet issues. I worry for any world where the mechanisms that allow us to express ourselves and correct our flaws are stifled. The US hasn’t been some gold standard for the right way to do it, but I don’t see anyone better stepping up to the plate yet.

          In terms of my original comment that triggered this conversation, at the end of the day I think it is wrong to ban anyone for posting opinions that a moderator disagrees with. That’s political censorship and it’s shitty. If lemmy.ml had clear rules about their political stances and what’s allowed, then that would be different. But as it is, I think they’re misrepresenting what their community is if they’re going to censor such content. “Orientalism” in their context implies that any conversations about another country not from within that country should be taken down. Should non-US articles about the US also be removed? Is anyone not from China allowed to talk about China?

          As for my original comment about “anti-NATO bullshit”, I confess that was a personal opinion that probably didn’t belong next to my more objective opposition to politcal censorship. I personally wouldn’t join lemmy.ml for their political stances. I objectively would recommend people not join that instance because of their political censorship.