LeninsRage [he/him]

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Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: August 12th, 2020

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  • spoiler

    You: I know I can get history back on the right track.

    René: The “right track”? This is the right track! The only track. (he gets visibly annoyed) This is the world we shaped, a reflection of what we are: cowardly, ugly, and numb. And there are no second chances. We don’t deserve them! You just can’t go back and restart — that would make everything MEANINGLESS! (a shadow of pain comes over his face)

    Empathy: There’s something substantial moving in him, trying to get out.

    Volition: He would sooner die than let it surface.

    You: What is it?

    Empathy: Regret.

    You: Regret about what?

    Pain Threshold: (as the camera zooms in on Gaston) Him.

    You: Him?

    Pain Threshold: There’s tenderness in the carabineer’s look. Tenderness that’s curdled into pain or something darker.

    You: Ex-love, ex-tenderness…

    Pain Threshold: Even worse, a love aborted and smothered, stamped beneath his brilliant boot heel.

    René: (you catch the old carabineer’s gaze slowly leaving his opponent’s wrinkled face as his dark eyes meet yours — whatever turmoil raged in him a moment ago is quelled for now)

    Conceptualization: Like the last rays of the evening sun gently kissing the day goodbye, before giving way to unfathomable darkness.

    Volition: Willed back into the darkest unexplored depths of his mind — never meant to be shared, seen or confronted.

    Composure: A true master of his emotions.

    Inland Empire: Hopelessly alone behind the unbreakable walls he spent a lifetime erecting. No one will ever know him.







  • Literally no one here is arguing that Ukraine is good, but the actual leftists (as opposed to national chauvinists) here are arguing that this is unmistakably an inter-imperialist war and not some convoluted “the invasion of Ukraine is anti-imperialist because Russia is on the imperial periphery of a super-imperialist bloc” bullshit argument.

    I’m someone who can absolutely advance arguments that the Russian invasion of Ukraine was caused by outside imperialist circumstances. But now that it has happened, and is actual fact? There is zero “critical support” of Russian aggression here. The only legitimate communist position in this scenario is for Ukrainian and Russian soldiers alike to turn their guns on their own generals. Will that happen? No. But that’s the fucking position the Bolsheviks themselves took from the start, not some ridiculous stance about how actually the Kaiser was right to resist all along and criticizing the German war effort is bad.




  • No they’re not named. But what it does explicitly state is that the discontent against the noble Romanovs was literally fermented by demons, and the male lead in one of the palace servants and helps her and her mother escape. Then in the next scene the opening musical number is the people of St Petersburg Petrograd Leningrad singing and dancing in the streets at the rumor that a Romanov princess survived, and they quickly shut up when a commissar (hammer and sickle on his cap) looks at them angrily.

    I also have to say, it’s a really strange choice that the two leads (and members of the royal family) are the only characters designed to look like real uncanny people, and everyone else looks like a caricature.




  • He might do extensive research for each season of the podcast but in this one there is very much a gaping hole that could have been filled by reading Red Petrograd.

    He at least did a good job of emphasizing how every non-Bolshevik faction completely fucked up their position in between February and October 1917, thus throwing support to the Bolsheviks. But he pretty firmly turned against the Bolsheviks in his narrative after October in a very Orlando Figes kind of way. Thankfully he is covering how the Whites continue to be so incompetent and reactionary that everyone else has no choice but to support the Bolsheviks as the lesser evil. But a major tell is that he puts a lot of emphasis on the Bolsheviks dissolving the Constituent Assembly, ignoring how if the Constituent Assembly was even remotely relevant to the interests of the masses it would not have been so trivial to dissolve it.