zompist wrote: ↑Tue Jun 24, 2025 11:00 pm
Probably the weirdest conspiracy theory I've heard all week.
rich people fund parties and influencers.. is this a conspiracy theory? what else....employers don't actually want you to make as much as possible, is that a conspiracy theory too? the coup in chile was sponsored by the us? irak didn't actually have weapons of mass destruction? come on, man, this isn't even controversial. you think russia can fund influencers but rich gringos cannot?
okay, a lot of funding is direct from rich people to influencers, not going through the parties, but that doesn't really affect the point, does it?
this seems to me on the level of flat earthism: obviously rich people donate money to political parties. obviously parties use that money to fund activities that will further the party's interests. this isn't even corruption, this is the system working as everyone knows it works. what's next, the cia doesn't exist and the DoD is purely defensive? ICE is only deporting members of tren de aragua?
zompist wrote: ↑Wed Jun 25, 2025 8:01 amI'm contesting the conspiracy theory that Youtubers are
controlled by political parties, not the idea that people talk about politics.)
parties and billionaires do fund and exert influencers tho. if i had said something "every influencer is directly on the republican party's payroll" then your objection would be correct. examples and evidence abounds: for example, rich people, oil megacorpos and conservative groups funding the climate change denialist movement is broadly known. or is that a conspiracy theory as well?
Travis B. wrote: ↑Wed Jun 25, 2025 9:08 am
What you do is take the more left-of-center of the two parties and act from within it to pull it to the left rather than attempting to start your own party. This way you can take advantage of its existing funding and infrastructure rather than starting from scratch.
Note that I am not of the opinion that socialism can be achieved through party politics in the first place, though, as actual socialism simply cannot be voted into place. Rather, it is to be achieved through organically building
dual power from the bottom up that will eventually simply
replace the existing system. This is because for socialism to function as such the workers must be directly involved in it at all levels ─ simply trying to vote in socialism with nationalization and like will simply result in state capitalism rather than socialism.
I don't see why socialism can't simply be voted into place. we did it where i live. though afterwards we had a cia-sponsored coup: then again, history is not deterministic, the coup succeeded but this wasn't a necessary fact like 2+2=4. I do agree that it's very unlikely to happen.
the problem with trying to move the least owner-aligned party to the left is the same as voting in socialism: it's not impossible, but neither is flipping and coin and it landing on its edge. you can't keep the existing donors if you start advocating for policies that will reduce the power and affluence of those donors; they'll just donate to the party that doesn't. or out-donate you.
Also, if socialism is voted into place, it can be also voted away as well.
I mean, sure, but the same is true about the abolition of other evils: female suffrage was voted in, and in theory it could be voted out, but it hasn't. you can -and there have been cases- of slavery being banned as a result of voting, sometimes directly through plebiscite, as was the case I think in colorado? other times as a result of normal lawmaking: elected congressmen voting in a bill or ammendment blabla.