"Progressives should not make the same mistake that Ernst Thälmann made in 1932. The leader of the German Communist Party, Thälmann saw mainstream liberals as his enemies, and so the center and left never joined forces against the Nazis. Thälmann famously said that ‘some Nazi trees must not be allowed to overshadow a forest’ of social democrats, whom he sneeringly called ‘social fascists.’
After Adolf Hitler gained power in 1933, Thälmann was arrested. He was shot on Hitler’s orders in Buchenwald concentration camp in 1944."
What tf does God have to do with anything, are you mental? Your entire comment is ridiculous.
What you’re “understanding” is make believe.
It was the other user who mentioned God first, maeve was just replying to it
Please read the entire thread.
Maeve said that history wasn’t people, it was an inevitable process. I pointed out that they were making history into G*d.
That isn’t what happened at all, by the way.
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I said history is the course of physical reality, not Maeve, Maeve merely added on because you weren’t making any sense
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Humans and their actions are a part of physical reality, I did not at any point say otherwise
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I was not making history into god, nor saying it was an “inevitable process.”
What did happen, was I was pointing out how you follow Great Man Theory even if unintentionally, which I firmly reject as idealist, and instead was trying to explain Historical Materialism. You then went off on a million tangents and never grasped what I was saying, making it useless to continue.
There’s a difference between history being people and history being Great Men tm. They are including people in material reality and saying that material reality is what creates the basis for the procession of history, not the appearance of great individuals who stand outside it and move it unilaterally.
I don’t understand why people are even arguing against this. It’s widely understood even in popular liberal academia that Great Man Theory is primitive, idealist, childish, and absurd and that you need to look at material circumstances, class interests, popular movements, and so on to understand why things happen.