• IceWallowCum [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    9 months ago

    This only makes sense if you consider a political movement as a solid block that takes a single action then dies. Agitation and action are moments of a single thing. Agitation brings people, and people do the action - but only if you get the work done to turn a situation into agitation. The dude did his part, can you same the same about yourself?

    You could have spent the time it took to write your comment to instead get in touch with local comrades to figure out how to spread the news of this event further in your area and talk to people about it and Palestine. You can go do that right now.

    • JayTwo [any]@hexbear.net
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      9 months ago

      The problem I have with the way this is being lauded by some among the left isn’t it being used to spur people into action.
      No, that’s good.

      It’s that many either don’t understand or care about the rhetorical line needed to walk and are hoping it spurs people into the same sort of action.

      To quote the Crimethinc article on Aaron

      Let’s admit that the kind of protest activity that has taken place thus far in the United States has not served to compel the US government to compel a halt to the genocide in Gaza. It is an open question what could accomplish that. Aaron’s action challenges us to answer this question—and to answer it differently than he did.

    • CountryBreakfast@lemmygrad.ml
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      9 months ago

      You could have spent the time it took to write your comment to instead get in touch with local comrades to figure out how to spread the news of this event further in your area and talk to people about it and Palestine. You can go do that right now.

      Why would I do that when I can livestream my suicide and be lauded as John Brown.