• FunkyStuff [he/him]
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      29 days ago

      can you show us where the support for fascism is?

      And if you’re just going to say that the DPRK is fascist, what do you consider to be more fascist: an invasion and brutal war against a tiny country that kills 20% of its population, makes the remaining population live underground, relentlessly and indiscriminately bombs the country until there are no targets left; or the country that survives that war and refuses to play by the rules of the colonizers, imperialists, and occupiers who want them to be a capitalist country like the occupied south?

        • FunkyStuff [he/him]
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          029 days ago

          Sure, no whataboutism then: Why do you think NK is fascist in a vacuum? Why is anything perceptible if all things, at their purest forms, are isolated atomic objects that have no relation to the rest of the world?

            • FunkyStuff [he/him]
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              028 days ago

              That’s not what fascism is. Are you suggesting that fascism is when some people are well fed and others aren’t?

                • FunkyStuff [he/him]
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                  028 days ago

                  You said that we support fascism, then you’re saying that there’s mass starvation for the elites and that’s what I assume you mean by fascism. If that’s not what you meant, then what is it that we support that you think is fascism?

            • Cowbee [he/they]
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              027 days ago

              The DPRK had mass starvation during the Arduous March, a catastrophe caused by disastrous weather and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, combined with intense sanctions from the US. Decades after the Arduous March, food is relatively secure for everyone, even if it’s difficult to grow up in the northern-Korean climate and geography.