BELLISSIMA DA LEGGERE ❤️
Se un giorno mi vedrai vecchio, se mi sporco quando mangio e non riesco a vestirmi, abbi pazienza, ricorda il tempo che ho trascorso ad insegnartelo.
Se quando parlo con te ripeto sempre le stesse cose, non mi interrompere, ascoltami: quando eri piccolo dovevo raccontarti ogni sera la stessa storia finché non ti addormentavi.
Quando non voglio lavarmi non biasimarmi e non farmi vergognare: ricordati quando dovevo correrti dietro inventando delle scuse perché non volevi fare il bagno.
Quando vedi la mia ignoranza per le nuove tecnologie, dammi il tempo necessario e non guardarmi con quel sorrisetto ironico: ho avuto tutta la pazienza per insegnarti l'abc.
Quando ad un certo punto non riesco a ricordare o perdo il filo del discorso, dammi il tempo necessario per ricordare e se non ci riesco non ti innervosire: la cosa più importante non è quello che dico ma il mio bisogno di essere con te ed averti lì che mi ascolti.
Quando le mie gambe stanche non mi consentono di tenere il tuo passo non trattarmi come fossi un peso, vieni verso di me con le tue mani forti nello stesso modo con cui io l'ho fatto con te quando muovevi i tuoi primi passi.
Quando dico che vorrei essere morto non arrabbiarti, un giorno comprenderai che cosa mi spinge a dirlo. Cerca di capire che alla mia età non si vive, si sopravvive.
Un giorno scoprirai che nonostante i miei errori ho sempre voluto il meglio per te che ho tentato di spianarti la strada.
Dammi un po' del tuo tempo, dammi un po' della tua pazienza, dammi una spalla su cui poggiare la testa allo stesso modo in cui io l'ho fatto per te.
Aiutami a camminare, aiutami a finire i miei giorni con amore e pazienza in cambio io ti darò un sorriso e l'immenso amore che ho sempre avuto per te. ❤️
Lettera di un padre
a un figlio.
@SilviusBerthold Comincio a pensare che, quando sarà lui a tirare il calzino, non saranno in pochi a sbellicarsi dalle risate, a cominciare dagli 🇺🇸...
Most people “know” that Joseph Stalin was “evil”. But very few know that
- Under Stalin, and the Soviet Union set the world record for the quickest doubling of life expectancy from 32 to 68 in under 30 years, the quickest turnaround in history
- Literacy rates in the Soviet Union rose from a dismal 30% to 98.5%
- Women made up a third of Societ engineers and 79% of medical doctors
- Women in the ruling party went from 5 to 21%, at a time when Black and Native women in the United States were not allowed to vote
- Stalin took the Soviet Union to the second most industrialised nation globally in a decade, something that took Western capitalists centuries of colonial pillaging
- Healthcare, education, and childcare remained universal and were improved upon, hence the drastic increase in life expectancy
- Racist speech was criminalised!
- The Soviet Union defeated Japanese imperialism in both Manchuria and Korea
- Defeated Hitler and the Nazis
- Took a desperately underdeveloped society to a competing world Power with real, tangible outcomes
- Every national liberation movement that followed, Cuba, China, Vietnam, South Africa, all stood on Soviet shoulders
The popular Western political theory of “totalitarianism” which frames Stalin and Hitler as “twin monsters” of the 20th century is an ideological tool meant to hide the dark side of Western liberalism, specifically its history of White supremacy, the genocide of Indigenous peoples, colonialism, and chattel slavery, which actually served as the closest ideological inspirations for Nazism.
Western historians hypocritically isolate Stalin’s actions from the global context of the early 20th century, whereas in reality, the mechanisms of the Soviet state were the same things done by Western liberal democracies at the time.
For instance, France casually killed 10 million Algerians and tested an atomic bomb on their soil.
Westerners harp on about Stalin’s Gulags as if they were the same thing as Nazi extermination camps. In truth, the Gulag was a punitive penal system focused on forced labour and political re-education where redemption was officially possible, rather than a system designed for industrial racial extermination.
Meanwhile, the British in South Africa, the Germans in Namibia and the US with the Japanese population in the US, all used concentration camps when they thought it was necessary. A lot of projection going around.
In the end, Stalin was just a typical European leader. What sets him apart from the rest of the capitalist west, and why he is demonised is because he was attempting to build a socialist state while under total siege by civil war and foreign capitalist encirclement.
Source:
@ClaudioBorghi@RicBattaglia@Gionnos16 Ognuno ha il sacrosanto diritto di andare alle manifestazioni che gli piacciono, che sia senatore, deputato, assessore, dirigente, impiegato, operaio o disoccupato. Punto.
@Pamelo1313 I tre tizi che citi all'inizio sono sempre stati delle autentiche 💩💩, il negazionismo che praticano su ciò che a Gaza hanno fatto e fanno i nazisionisti è solo l'ultima (in senso cronologico) plastica rappresentazione dell'assenza in loro di un'etica che possa definirsi umana.
@giuslit@eluu_eei Visto che la rivoluzione non ci sarà (negli ultimi due secoli e mezzo in Europa ce ne sono state due, che io sappia, e nessuna delle due in Italia), l'unica speranza è la guerra (e di quelle ce ne sono state, e ce ne sono, a iosa).
What the Germans did on the Eastern Front cannot be judged by the ordinary measure of war, because it was not war. Let me explain !
Part 1:
You were taught that the Second World War was won on a June morning on a beach in France, that it turned on paratroopers and landing craft and a long, triumphant march to Berlin down roads lined with grateful towns throwing flowers. You learned the names by heart. Omaha. Bastogne. The Bulge.
Every man who fell there was brave, and I will never insult them. But sit down for a moment, because no one in your country ever sat you down and told you the true shape of this thing.
The war they taught you was the side door. The real house was already an inferno a thousand miles to the east, and the overwhelming majority of German soldiers who died in this entire war, by many counts four out of every five, died there. In the snow, in the mud, in the burning sunflower fields, fighting not an army but a whole people who had looked the alternative dead in the eye and decided they would sooner be ground into the soil than kneel.
In the East, it was not war. Not war but worse. Not a rougher front. Something that stops being war at all. I need that distinction in you before you read another line.
I do not mean it as a flourish. I mean it as a category, a hard wall between two different things. War, even hideous war, has a shape. There is a soldier, and across from him another soldier, and they try to kill each other for what the other does, for the uniform, for the ridge. And when one of them throws down his rifle and lifts his hands, the killing is supposed to stop. He becomes a prisoner. He is fed, badly maybe, but fed. Letters go home. There is the idea, however thin and often betrayed, that the man in your sights is still a man. That is war. It is monstrous, and it is bounded.
What crossed the Soviet border in June of 1941 had no such shape and obeyed no such limit. It was not built to defeat an army. It was engineered to empty a section of the earth of its human beings so that other people could move into the space. And I refuse to let you file that under feeling, so here are the documents, because that is exactly what they were. Plans. Typed. Signed. Stamped. Handed to ordinary men who read them over breakfast and then went to work.
The Hunger Plan.
Before a single shell was fired, German economists sat in warm, clean offices and calculated how to feed their invading army straight off Soviet soil. They ran the numbers, reached the answer, and wrote it down without a tremor in the hand. Doing this would starve, by their own cold estimate, twenty to thirty million people, mostly in the cities of Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. The mass starvation was not a tragedy they failed to foresee. The mass starvation was the plan. Read that again, slowly. Educated men sat down, did arithmetic, and scheduled the death by hunger of thirty million human beings, then stamped it and filed it like a budget.
Generalplan Ost.
The blueprint for the morning after the victory they were certain was coming. Tens of millions of Slavs to be killed outright, driven beyond the Urals to die, or kept alive as illiterate slaves to wait on the German colonists who would farm the land their grandfathers had cleared by hand. Not conquered. Not ruled. Erased. The Russian, the Pole, the Ukrainian, the Belarusian were not enemies to be beaten and then governed. They were a stain to be scrubbed off the map so that a better sort of person could live where they had lived and breathe the air they had breathed.
The Commissar Order.
A formal, written command of the German army itself. Captured Soviet political officers were not to be taken prisoner but shot on the spot. The army. Not some shadow outfit working in the dark. The institution signed its own name to murder, called it procedure, and then carried that procedure out, tens of thousands of times, with paperwork.
@toninog2 Spero che l'analisi sia corretta, perché se così fosse il giocatore di scacchi che siede al Cremlino è quello che ha in mano il gioco e decide il come e il quando infliggere l'attacco definitivo alla NATO-U€ (🇺🇦è solo un portabandiera), anche se al costo di altre vittime civili.
@avantibionda Questa υβρις senza fine da cui è patologicamente affetto quasi tutto il popolo d'Israele, avrà la sua νεμεσις solo quando d'Israele, del sionismo e dei loro lacchè resterà solo il ricordo.
@SAntonio10273 "...ma quando la Russia replicherà etc.". Il problema è proprio questo: ma la Russia replicherà? Finora ha parlato molto, ma can che abbaia, non morde. O mi sono perso qualcosa?
@Lukyluke311@markorusso69 ... già, a questo punto comincio a pensare che @erny110393 abbia qualche ragione a criticare duramente l'inquilino del Cremlino 🤔
@GeromanAT Può darsi che non funzioni così, ma intanto i civili russi, uomini donne e bambini, come a Starobelsk e anche più recentemente, continuano ad essere uccisi dai neonazisti ucraini...
1) ⬜️🟦🟥... QUESTO VOLTO NON LO VEDRETE SULLA STAMPA OCCIDENTALE, QUELLA "LIBERA, PLURALE E DEMOCRATICA."
QUELLA CHE SI ARROGA IL DIRITTO DI DECIDERE COSA SIA VERO O FALSO.
La canzone parla del bus, che è stato attaccato dai droni ucraini.
⬇️