[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 69 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Hey news nerds, I'm disappearing for a longer period now due to travel and certain life things that need to be addressed. I'll of course pop in here if something funny or cool happens, but expect a very light posting schedule until spring at least. Before I go, I need help on a few things from you nerds:

  1. My kid is starting to be fascinated by screens and I feel that we're quickly approaching the cartoon age. I don't want him to watch any brainrot-inducing fascist Cocomelon or make the same mistake that my dad did by accidentally making young kid me watch the American bombing of Iraq on Al Jazeera, so please recommend any communist cartoons for kids.

  2. Is there any good books on the Arabs of Latin America and West Africa? I've been quite fascinated recently about random Arabs in Latin America and all those Lebanese families in West Africa.

  3. Another book-question. Any good books about connections between sports and politics? I recently read Angels with Dirty Faces about Argentinian football and politics which was pretty good. I would love some recommendations of similar books.

[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 69 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

The greatest visionary of our times, Yahya motherfucking Sinwar

[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 68 points 9 months ago

I'd give the Democrats credit for showing some decent political instincts for once. Walz seems like a human being at least and not a total freak. He's a lib, but someone with at least some humanity compared to that ghoul Shapiro.

[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 69 points 9 months ago

I don't get why people are so shocked about the Satanyahu congress speech circlejerk. This is the face of the West that everyone that pays attention fully knows. The imperialists in the US, Israel, UK, Germany, France, whatever are all one team and have the same donors and come from the same evil ass institutions. Expecting a drop of justice or conscience from these freaks is delusional. Stop paying attention to what Senator David Deportlatinowitz has to say or which congress seat Lisa Loveisraelson is stealing with AIPAC money, this is all worthless. The internal politics of the blob isn't important, the most evil and depraved scenario will happen and expecting anything different will just lead to constant disappointment.

[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 68 points 11 months ago

Critical support to severe psychological issues

[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 69 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

COTW: United States

What's that, North American Israel or something? On a more serious note, I've been reading a lot about the "discovery" of the Americas recently and it's just crazy how random British, French and Spanish guys just got given ships and some money and were told to like fuck off and find something useful out west. Imagine being some loser smelly French guy and stumbling upon something as majestic as the Mississippi River. Or imagine being the Spanish dude that found Florida and suddenly saw the wildest swamps possible. Or the Brits that sailed into the most frozen fucked up parts of Canada and only found some delicious fish types that didn't exist anywhere. What an insane time for humanity. Yeah I know that those explorer guys were mostly bootlickers and had awful intentions, but the timeline of these "accomplishments" by the European explorers is astonishing. 30 years between Columbus first voyage and the fall of Tenochtitlan feels unreal.

[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 67 points 1 year ago

Just wanna say Fuck Jordan and their white guy British cuck-king

[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 67 points 1 year ago

News circulating on Twitter about Gonzalo Lira being tortured to death in a Ukrainian prison. His family has apparently confirmed his death.

[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 69 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Very interesting story about the massive political changes in Yemen in the 1940s. Had this saved in Arabic somewhere, so I translated this for you homies and cleaned it up with comrade ChatGPT.

Until the mid-twentieth century, Yemen in the 1700s retained a sense of enduring stability, seemingly impervious to the transformative winds of change. To external observers, Yemen appeared motionless and resistant to evolution. In the northern part of the country, the Zaydi Imamate stood as an institution with an eleven-century legacy, interrupted only briefly on two occasions. The entrenched divides, passed down through generations, manifested predictably in various relationships: Zaydis versus Shafi’is, Zaydis versus the diminishing Isma'ilis, Qahtanis and Seyyids, Upland tribes versus the villages and plantations of Lower Yemen, and coastal towns versus inland towns, among others. Although change had the potential to manifest, the fundamental structure remained steadfast.

Remarkably, Aden, under British administration, thrived as the world's second-busiest port at times, trailing only behind New York City. Meanwhile, families from Hadhramut sought prosperity in far-flung places such as Singapore and Indonesia. International trade in coffee flourished, sustaining activity in the western uplands and a few Red Sea ports, despite a decline initiated by evolving commercial and global cultivation patterns by the mid-eighteenth century. However, these shifts failed to shake the foundations of deeper traditions.

One might have anticipated that Aden, as a bustling port, could become a breeding ground for ideological shifts. It seemed plausible that subversive ideas could disseminate among the diverse migrant labor population, originating from all corners of Yemen, and subsequently find their way back to their respective homelands. Alternatively, returning Hadhramis might import provocative notions from their experiences abroad. Yet, when disruption eventually unfolded, it did so unexpectedly, emanating from a source that caught everyone off guard.

In the aftermath of World War II, the Kingdoms of Iraq and Saudi Arabia identified in Yemen a kindred, traditionalist state, deserving of reinforcement. This was particularly crucial as the Yemeni Imamate was undergoing a significant shift towards hereditary rule, mirroring the established royal traditions in Saudi Arabia and Iraq, in stark contrast to the Zaydi Shia tradition. A strategic plan was devised to enhance and modernize the Yemeni military. In 1940, Iraq implemented a multifaceted approach, flying in Yemeni students for enrollment in its military academy while concurrently dispatching a training mission to Yemen. This mission included Jamil Jamal, a young officer from Mosul, a decision that would prove to have profound consequences.

Merely four years earlier, Jamal had served as the aide-de-camp to the leader of the 1936 coup, directly implicated in the murder of the Iraqi Army's 'founder.' Despite the coup's failure and the demise of its leader, authorities sought to rehabilitate Jamal, consigning him to career exile as an officer in the riverine police. Unexpectedly, he found himself attached to the Yemen training mission, offering an opportunity for redemption. The mission concluded in 1943, yet Jamal chose to remain in Yemen. Five years later, he employed his coup-making skills, aligning with a plot to assassinate the ruling Imam. A new Imam briefly ruled in Sana’a before being overpowered by the slain Imam’s son and Jamal was executed soon after. This event triggered a series of complex local wars in both northern and southern Yemen, financially and logistically supported by regional powers. The ensuing two decades, spanning the 1960s and 1970s, witnessed a convoluted interplay of old cleavages, with Aden losing its significance due to geopolitical shifts brought about by the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Aden, once a bustling maritime destination, diminished in importance as the Suez Canal blockade during the Arab-Israeli conflict rendered it largely irrelevant. By the time the canal reopened, technological advancements allowed ships to travel longer distances without the need for restocking, further diminishing Aden's strategic value. In the late 1970s, a substantial portion of Yemen's male population sought employment as migrant laborers in the oil-rich Persian Gulf countries, reshaping the nation's economic landscape. As remittances from abroad became the primary source of income, Aden and traditional coffee cultivation ceded their prominence. The societal fabric in Yemen began to unravel swiftly, and the dissolution of long-standing structures occurred surprisingly rapidly. This tumultuous period prompted adventurous figures, such as the late President Ali Abdullah Saleh, to actively participate in reshaping Yemen's destiny.

[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 69 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)
[-] LargePenis@hexbear.net 69 points 2 years ago

I'm tired of reading the most insane dumb comments from western "leftists" who keep claiming that Hamas is a uniquely reactionary force that we as "leftists" shouldn't support because of their religious fanaticism. Do these people honestly think that they know better than the different Marxist-Leninist and Trotskyist Palestinian parties who not only just tolerate Hamas, but also fully cooperate with them on all matters. I don't care anymore about these stupid ass labels that only the most unemployed and useless "leftists" in the world keep competing about on the internet, while the bravest committed marxists in the world are fighting a literal colonial state. No offense to all the good people here, but the western sense of entitlement and the dumb utopian mindset where nothing is good is just poisonous and is why literally nothing has been achieved for 50 years.

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LargePenis

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