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by mempko
2624 days ago
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This isn't true at all. The USA has a strong left-wing history and events. These are forgotten in America but remembered by the rest of the world. It's just that nowhere has this history been more "erased" than in the USA. The rest of the world remembers. - An example is May 1st, international workers day which was inspired by the Haymarket Massacre in Chicago. - Another example is the Republican party! which was started by Socialists in Wisconsin. - Or the fact that Abraham Lincoln corresponded with Marx (most Americans read Marx at the time) and one of his army generals distributed the communist manifesto to the public during the civil war. - The writings of Thomas Paine were incredibly popular in the USA and abroad. - Russian Anarchists like Tolstoy was inspired by American Quackers, who later inspired Gandhi. - Influential thinkers like Chomsky and David Graeber are alive and American. The connections are deep! |
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Read Tolstoy. He was chiefly inspired by the Quakers' nonviolence. In reality, the Quakers themselves were a heavily Republican group (insofar as they identified with government force at all).
While there are left-wing inspired (and somewhat developmental) incidents throughout US history, I wouldn't characterize the situation as either "strong" or "erased." On the contrary, the U.S. has accepted many people fleeing from failed or failing socialist states, which may affect the local popular understanding of true left-wing ideology.