- 2 Posts
- 7 Comments
RevolutionsPerMinute@lemmygrad.mlto
GenZedong@lemmygrad.ml•General Discussion Thread - Juche 115, Week 6
9·2 months agoThat’s great, I’m glad it’s going well for you! I’ve also been teaching myself Spanish and have been really enjoying the process of learning it.
I agree that it helps a lot to immerse yourself in the language. So in addition to Duolingo lessons daily, I’ve been reading news websites completely in Spanish (TeleSur in particular), reading short stories on https://www.fluentwithstories.com/, and have a browser extension called Toucan that changes many of the words on webpages into Spanish.
RevolutionsPerMinute@lemmygrad.mlto
GenZedong@lemmygrad.ml•General Discussion Thread - Juche 115, Week 2 - Venezuela Solidarity Edition
0·3 months agoIn my opinion, Drop Site News has some issues: they have a noticeable anti-Russia and anti-China bias, and they shill pretty hard for the U.S. socdem/demsoc politicians (Ryan Grim in particular seems obsessed with defending Graham Platner). That said, they do some great reporting on Palestine, and their Drop Site Daily newsletters can be useful for an overview of what’s happening broadly.
RevolutionsPerMinute@lemmygrad.mlto
GenZedong@lemmygrad.ml•General Discussion Thread - Juche 115, Week 2 - Venezuela Solidarity Edition
0·3 months agoI do the same as you, check the bourgeois headlines and read them critically. There are also some email newsletters I subscribe to, such as Monthly Review’s mronline.org, consortiumnews.com, and Friends of Socialist China (socialistchina.org). For Palestine, my go-to source is Electronic Intifada electronicintifada.net.
Then for analysis of the news, Ben Norton’s Geopolitical Economy Report is great (though it can get repetitive if you watch every video, as he tends to go over the same information). Danny Haiphong does some good interviews, though they can be kind of hit or miss depending on who the guest is - same with India & Global Left. And of course Lemmygrad.
Edit: links were wonky so had to adjust them
RevolutionsPerMinute@lemmygrad.mlto
GenZedong@lemmygrad.ml•General Discussion Thread - Juche 114, Week 51
0·3 months ago
I’m honestly so excited for this course on Imperialism by the Critical Theory Workshop.
Edit: website source for the image: https://criticaltheoryworkshop.com/upcoming-events/
RevolutionsPerMinute@lemmygrad.mlto
GenZedong@lemmygrad.ml•General Discussion Thread - Juche 114, Week 51
0·3 months agoYeah I feel that way sometimes too. The western liberal status quo can be really frustrating, especially their stubborn resistance to new perspectives. Arrogance about having ML views probably feels better than that frustration.
When I notice arrogance in myself, I try to remember that everyone has to start somewhere - that there was a time before I became an ML, when I was an ignorant radlib westerner lost in a sea of propaganda. It’s humbling (even somewhat embarrassing in hindsight), and it helps me to be a more effective educator when I can have empathy and understand where people are at. Not trying to give any unsolicited advice, just sharing my own experience.
RevolutionsPerMinute@lemmygrad.mlto
GenZedong@lemmygrad.ml•So...how *do* people get convinced?
0·3 months agoThis discussion makes me think of a concept from Mao’s On Contradiction,
Changes in society are due chiefly to the development of the internal contradictions in society, that is, the contradiction between the productive forces and the relations of production, the contradiction between classes and the contradiction between the old and the new; it is the development of these contradictions that pushes society forward and gives the impetus for the supersession of the old society by the new. Does materialist dialectics exclude external causes? Not at all. It holds that external causes are the condition of change and internal causes are the basis of change, and that external causes become operative through internal causes. In a suitable temperature an egg changes into a chicken, but no temperature can change a stone into a chicken, because each has a different basis.
Mao is talking about changes in society more broadly, but I think this idea can be applied on an individual level as well. A person’s internal state needs to be such that they are open to new information, in order for that information to meaningfully shift their perspective.
So my hypothesis is that you were able to change your mind when you learned more about the Iraq War because, for whatever reasons, your internal state was receptive to new ideas. Some other people may be presented with that same information, but then just mentally discard it if they aren’t in a place where they’re ready to hear it. So essentially I’m agreeing with what some other commenters have already said, that organizing is most effective when it’s focused on people who are sufficiently agitated and open to hearing what we have to say.


The recent webinar about Michael Parenti was a much-needed mental pick me up for myself, personally, so if you haven’t seen that yet I would recommend it https://www.youtube.com/live/eGPXwOPDD-g
There was a new Tankie Group Therapy video a few weeks ago that was good too https://www.youtube.com/live/rX2hbS3eKqg
Friends of Socialist China regularly posts articles with positive news/analysis that can be uplifting. For example, this one about China supporting Cuba with solar power https://socialistchina.org/2026/02/25/with-chinese-support-cuba-triples-solar-power-in-one-year/