- 11 Posts
- 9 Comments
TheMadPhilosopher@lemm.eeOPto Anarchism@lemmy.dbzer0.com•As the Temperature Dropped: The Prelude to the Cold War2·2 months agoDo you think Truman’s decision to nuke Japan was justified? Why or why not? Curious to know how others see this.
TheMadPhilosopher@lemm.eeOPto History@hexbear.net•As the Temperature Dropped: A Cold War Prelude in Poetic DissentEnglish2·2 months agoWould love to know what y’all think—
What stuck out? What did I miss? What gets remembered wrong?
TheMadPhilosopher@lemm.eeOPto History@lemmy.world•Prohibition and the Profit Motive: How the US Sold Control as VirtueEnglish11·3 months agoWhat do y’all think we still aren’t being told the truth about?
If they could sell Prohibition as virtue and get away with poisoning people—
what else do we accept as “normal” that’s actually built on control and profit?
TheMadPhilosopher@lemm.eeOPto Anarchism and Social Ecology@slrpnk.net•BLIND ITEM: #1 “The Watchlist Before the Crackdown”5·3 months agoFor those who know what this is—you know what to do.
If you’ve seen signs of this on your campus, in your org, or in your inbox… document it.
Assume everything digital is traceable. Assume nothing is private.
This one hit different when I wrote it.
I wasn’t trying to be polished—I just needed to get the fire out of me before it ate everything.
Anyone else ever write something down just to survive a moment?
TheMadPhilosopher@lemm.eeto History@lemmy.world•King George III's descent into madness: A tale of royal tragedyEnglish2·3 months agoI think it’s honestly insane that King George III was the monarch during the American Revolution. Like—he literally watched his empire unravel while mentally deteriorating. The symbolism of that? Wild.
And it makes perfect sense, too—he wasn’t just “mad” in the medical sense. He was a monarch at the edge of an era where people were starting to reject divine rule, hereditary power, and all the illusions that kept empires running. His madness almost feels like a metaphor for the collapse of monarchy itself.
He’s one of those figures where the history feels mythic—like the universe couldn’t have picked a more poetic villain for the birth of a republic.
TheMadPhilosopher@lemm.eeOPto History@lemmy.world•Pervitin, Propaganda, and PowerEnglish2·3 months agoThank you so much—nuance really is everything, especially when history gets flattened into black-and-white narratives. I’m really grateful you saw that in the piece. We need more conversations that live in the gray.
TheMadPhilosopher@lemm.eeOPto History@lemmy.world•Pervitin, Propaganda, and PowerEnglish2·3 months agoWhile researching this, what genuinely wrecked me was realizing that there wasn’t just one drug crisis in Germany—there were two. An opiate crisis after WWI and a meth crisis after WWII. Layered over that is the unimaginable scale of the Holocaust, the physical and moral scorched earth that followed, and the complete collapse of a population that had already lost so much.
I always knew the Nazis were monsters—but I didn’t fully grasp how many people inside Germany were also victims: people who resisted, who stayed because they believed they could fight from within, who were swallowed by a system they refused to join. It just… broke something open in me.
Have you ever come across something in history that made you stop and rethink everything—not just who the villains were, but what it meant to survive them?
Do you think Truman’s decision to nuke Japan was justified? Why or why not? Curious to know how others see this.