You probably saw me writing sentences in German in several posts. But yeah, join date March 2017. However, I only had a few hundred posts total under that handle and the vast majority of them came during 2018 (I'm a rookie!); like half of those were discussing space science - the inspiration for the user handle - with
@Hunter Simpson and
@Phr3121 in threads nobody cared about. Amazing
things like this thrown to the fucking dump? Ridiculous
@JDragon. I also hated the CCP with a fury as much as ever and told anyone who would listen that US manufacturing was coming back to wreck shit.
If I'm being honest...I think you're a good poster now, but I recall being really fascinated by V-2. So step up your fucking game.
Also, US manufacturing is not coming back to wreck shit. And if it could, we wouldn't want it. I think
@Rod1 has talked about this subject and how, with the new international economic order, the benefits that manufacturing yielded for the US during the 20th century (unprecedented bargaining rights, unprecedented wages, etc.) are no longer available if the sector is to be internationally viable.
Nevertheless, why are you so anti-CPC? For the others here who hate them, it makes sense. I am a communist who resents them for adorning the communist title while being less communistic than basically all of the developed world, possibly including the United States (however, I am more forgiving of their historical formation, as I am a dialectical materialist and realize that the current CPC is the result of infinite reactions to infinite exertions of power).
@InternetHero both lives/lived (right?) in China and is also religious, which is not super favored by the CPC. And @JoneBones is a conspiracy theorist who flocks to the scariest bad guy.
So what's your reasoning? For what it's worth, I think the CPC is, in terms of the full global and historical order, by far the worst result of Leninism (which is/was, in itself, a transitional and provisional model that was not meant to promulgate some series of guerrilla governments on the periphery of the world economy, but rather to leverage actual change within the organs of the world economy). The USSR did a lot of bad, but also did and prompted a great deal of good. Cambodia was terrible, but short-lasting. Cuba has, I think, ultimately been a beacon of hope in a lot of ways.