Dude’s an ultra
Bonus: https://nitter.net/uncle_authority/status/1721967810241335347#m
I guess the Deprogram guys are the Three Stooges now? But the joke doesn’t really work
It is a principle of dialectics that “contradictions are inherent in nature, the struggle between the old and the new is the process of development”. Mixing religion with Marxism is a fundamental contradiction (idealism vs materialism, as pointed out by RD) that many of us leftist struggle with due to our own unique material upbringings, but one that we will ultimately overcome and unfetter ourselves off the idealism that comes with religion.
RD take is the correct one here but this is not the way to address it, it is simply unempathetic to Hakim (we don’t know the source of his spirituality, might be related to his upbringing during war?). A private conversation + follow up post would’ve been the way to address this.
Of the 2 takes I’ve seen RD make on Twitter beefing with Hakim I’ve agreed with him both times but he’s really the embodiment of “incredibly insufferable ML that needs to learn how to ‘just vibe’ and not drone out class analysis” when people are just casually chatting/hanging out
we will ultimately overcome and unfetter ourselves off the idealism that comes with religion
And if that doesn’t happen? China, North Korea, and plenty of AES have religious movements even when atheism is the official stance. China especially can be a guide as many religions were illegal for decades, and people did not stop being religious.
I think China’s dialectical decisions about this reality makes sense, at least for their regulation of it in place of encouragement. For Christianity, they utilize the three-self motto: self-governance, self-support (i.e., financial independence from foreigners), and self-propagation (i.e., indigenous missionary work) to keep practices as indigenous as possible which seems helpful to me.
The material conditions that made religion bury deeply into the cultures of the world will slowly fade as the world progresses.
As marx pointed out religion is the opium of the masses, not as in a party drug but as in a drug that eases the pain and suffering off the oppressed.
Sure, and he’s right as far as religions – and especially state-run bourgeois religions – hampering and preventing revolution. But we have material evidence that (1) religion can and does give voice to and even assist revolutions (Marx and Engels both used religious imagery in their writings) and (2) post-revolution, the desire for spirituality and forms of religion persist even with upheaval and reorganization of material conditions from feudal to capitalist to socialist. Maybe it will die off completely in the future, but that hasn’t happened in any AES country to date and that’s really important to note.