I was exploring this small historic town in a Spanish language LatAm country recently. It’s frequented primarily by local tourists from the closest large metropolis, mostly on the weekends. There’s plentiful vegan/vegetarian eateries, an old cathedral square, and lots of natural beauty in the vicinity, etc. It’s got that old-urbanism charm with nothing over ~3-4 stories tall. So while I was exploring the place walking around, I stumbled into this cafe / book shop place. They had a coffee bar area, some books, reusable water bottles with local art, various notepads and sketchpads, some jewelry based on pre-Columbian art in a display case, etc.

As I’m looking around, I catch a glimpse of the book for sale. “Mi Lucha” in that chunky red Wolfenstein font and Adolf’s face on the cover. I was a bit shocked. Noped the fuck out of there as casually as possible. Just a very WTF moment.

15 points

If the bookstore is big enough I might not think much of it. But a smaller sized one… that’s unsettling.

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13 points
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one time in France I went into a souvenir shop and had picked out a few items until I noticed they were selling confederate flags. put down the stuff and left

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10 points

Pretty sure France backed the Confederacy in the Civil War

At least they sold them guns if I recall correctly

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10 points

it was a join support of the UK and France because they were buyers of southern cotton and saw the war as a way to cripple a potencial rival in the USA, France also use the chaos to invade Mexico and install a puppet ruler but failed, when the confederates lost i think it was the battle of Gettysburg both just drop them as a cotton supplier and supported the Union

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6 points

they probably sold weapons to both sides, like most European powers

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9 points

oh yea, i sometimes see them when i explore bookshops here in mex

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9 points
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It was really shocking because I had been so taken by the culture of the place. The social fabric of people there seemed so wholesome, I didn’t witness anything like the public displays of capitalist I’m used to seeing in the US: road rage, gratuitous flaunting, patriarchal / machismo behaviors, etc. A modest garden house on the outskirts had a DIY sign with the phrase “para que mas”. Just made it seem like such a contrast to the vibes of the place.

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14 points
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I mean it’s not like fascists and neoliberals are all bloodthirsty incels or anything. A lot of them, if not most are “normal” people who are very nice and pleasant to the groups of people that they don’t hate

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9 points

Years ago I was wandering a large used bookstore with a new friend who vaguely knew I was communist; she saw a copy of “Mein Kampf” and said “you like stuff like this”.

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7 points

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7 points

You got the authentic latam experience I see

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América Latina & Caribe

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[GUARANÍ] Tereg̃uaheporãite / [ES] Bienvenidos / [PT] Bem vindo / [FR] Bienvenue / [NL] Welkom

Everything to do with the USA’s own Imperial Backyard. From hispanics to the originary peoples of the americas to the diasporas, South America to Central America, to the Caribbean to North America (yes, we’re also there).

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“But what about that latin american kid I’ve met in college who said that all the left has ever done in latin america has been bad?”

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