The author was trying to shield themselves from the despair of political doomscrolling by reading books, but was dismayed to learn of Trump’s plans to declare a national emergency and use the military to carry out mass deportations of undocumented immigrants. The author speaks with anti-imperialist veteran friends who remind them that this is not the first time Trump has threatened to deploy the military against immigrants, and that actually carrying out such a plan would be a logistical and legal nightmare, requiring a massive expansion of the prison system at immense cost. The author argues that the only reasonable response for active-duty soldiers is to refuse to carry out these immoral orders, drawing parallels to the G.I. resistance during the Vietnam War. They advocate reviving networks of support like “G.I. coffeehouses” to provide a space for soldiers to organize and resist. Experts emphasize that troops have a moral responsibility to disobey illegal and immoral orders, and that immigrants are not the true enemy - it is the ruling class elite who are stealing from the working class. The author acknowledges the impulse to retreat into escapism, but argues that now is the time to collectively challenge these dangerous policies.

  • NarrativeBear@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Its amazing how much propaganda Americans are exposed to on a dailly basis.

    Hollywood basically a propaganda machine that always paints the US as a superior power.

    News agencies at all levels repeating the same stories from a predefined script.

    • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      They’re not unique but yes absolutely. They can wake up in the morning to the Sinclair local TV news propaganda. Listen to AM radio propaganda on their way to work. And come home to unwind to Fox News and oan propaganda in the evening they can basically go a whole entire day without contact with the truth.

      • NarrativeBear@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        You are absolutely correct, the USA is not unique in this regard. Its difficult to spot propaganda when living inside the bubble

    • Dasus@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      It’s funny how some Americans straight up deny the existence of any propaganda while there’s so many fucking movies of American Snipers and Colonel Badasses and whatnot.

      Like if those movies were equally realistic as they are now (movies require some flair I’m not above sometimes enjoying a nice American war movie, propaganda or not), but depicted like, Russian or Chinese soldiers instead of American ones, they’d seem ridiculous. But as they depict American heroes, people don’t see them that way as much.

      • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        You need to go read some medal of honor reports. There’s certainly some hilariously propagandistic movies out there, but there’s also so much Hollywood could never put in a movie because nobody would believe it.

        • Dasus@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Sure, I’m not denying there has been heroic shit.

          But so probably so has the other side. Like I’m sure at one point there’s been Russian and Chinese “heroes” throughout the decades. Japanese especially didn’t mind dying in combat, but usually in the Western movies, that’s depicted as them jumping up completely in sight, yelling something for three seconds, then blowing themselves up. I’m not saying that didn’t happen either, but I’m sure with the whole “take as many as you can and don’t care about your own life” mentality there probably were some heroic shenanigans the Japanese also pulled off.

          It just wouldn’t really seem like that from our perspective, because we don’t believe in the reasons why he did it as well as we can project ourselves onto the protagonists of war movies that are from our countries.

          From war movies, you’d sort of might get the impression that Americans pretty much single-handedly won world war two. Now by no means do I mean to put down the massive effort they put in and the effect it had, but Russians did quite a lot indeed, like the British, and the Americans didn’t join for a few years.

          It’s all just about perceptions.

          • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            A war movie that followed both armies would actually go a long ways towards puncturing the idea of a “heroic death”.