• peej@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 days ago

    Okay, I made a play on words and a hopeful statement with the implication that these would be one and the same revolution.

    I’m not sure why that merits putting words in my mouth and then accusing me of lip service. You are right that I likely won’t be on our even near the front lines, but that’s because the current form of government has already failed me and I am disabled by long COVID. It has failed me through medication shortages for my ADHD. And society has failed myself and all autists ever since that nazi fuck asperger first othered us. Probably before that even.

    Can I ask you to try coming in next time with a bit more charity, a lot more curiosity, and to check your assumptions at the door? I bet we are more alike than you think.

    There are really interesting conversations we could be having now based on what you said, and I think you genuinely want to have those conversations, and sort of hope you just misread my tone or intention and assumed that I on the other hand do not. I am autistic, and this is s things that happens a lot, especially with my neurotypical peers but even some of my neurospicy family are not immune.

    How could this exchange have gone differently if you had asked me what I think would or should come after revolution, or offer your own ideas. What form of government do we both see as ideal? What do they have in common, where do we differ. Let’s explore those things. We could be building each other up, testing our beliefs and improving them together through discourse, even and especially where we still disagree after that.

    And I’d like to make it clear that if the revolution doesn’t include a vision of a world that treats disabled folks as equals, or more specifically, one that supplants the medical model of disability with the social model, then my revolution hasn’t come yet. If it doesn’t include all folks, that black lives matter and trans lives matter, my revolution hasn’t come yet. If it doesn’t abolish prisons and police, my revolution has not come yet.

    I can never be front line infantry but i have other less common and equally necessary skills to contribute in the hardware and software space. Will we need computers? Drones? Secure communications? If so then we will need more than a few people like me, able bodied or not.

    Friend, what’s in your revolution? What are your passions and what are your struggles? How can I support you and what you need?

    Maybe we didn’t communicate well today, that’s okay. Let’s try again another time. I hope that’s something you’d consider in the future, if not with me, with someone else. But when the revolution comes, I know I will be there, and I have a pretty good feeling you’ll be there too.

    • Comment105@lemm.ee
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      3 hours ago

      How quaint. A disabled chronically online communist.

      No, I’m not gonna come in with more charity next time. Your opinion will not matter in the event of a revolution. The sentence about you ending up dead would absolutely end up true. You will not be taken care of.

      Do you really want to know what “my” revolution is?

      It’s clumsy. People die. There’s a high chance of one of two kinds of failure. Either outright failure to take control, or the failure to create a successful and good government structure. None of the issues with the government are easier to solve through revolution. They’d all be fairly easy to solve if we bothered to figure out what we want, then picking the hierarchy to put in place.

      The reality of America is thay fascism was on the ballot, and it was picked by the majority.

      A socialist revolution in that context would have to mean a strong paramilitary dominance over American territory. You will not get what you want. You’re just dreaming and whinging and calling for people to take action to overthrow themselves and overthrow their decision to mistreat you.