Personally I’m not that good at countering liberal comments on our posts, which seems to be happening more and more frequently with any posts relating to China. It’d be a lot easier if we could have a big pinned post with all the materials we need so we can just link to it whenever we need to.
The danger to that is it adds to the “But lemmy is a tankie project that we should never use” narritive
Good point. Do you think it’s better to look to the links themselves rather than the database or to try a different tactic, as @Justice@lemmygrad.ml suggests?
I fundamentally disagree with Justice, in the fact that if we do not engage, if we do not counter at all ever, if we sit in our corner and talk about it no liberal will ever learn, and while we might hang on talking too them for far longer than its worth, and that it is infuriating talking to a liberal, we do not get anywhere if we do not at least TRY to talk to them.
With that ramble out of the way, I would say if you are going to link and leave, I would sugest leaving the individual links, however I would recomend also leaving a little bit of a statement with it, as it is easy to just ignore a link with no context.
I’m not sure if I’m being pragmatic or bitter, but I’m of the view that they’re not worth the effort. Liberals that are of the kind of mindset that would be willing to listen and reconsider their convictions won’t be found amingst the types that come into these kinds of places swinging Xinjiang and Ukraine around like a hammer. The kinds of liberals that do that will dig in and be stubborn, and would rather double down and make asses of themselves than admit to any mistake. And more importantly, those kinds of liberals are in the imperial core, where they have no real political agency because they can’t change the system from within and refuse to do it from without. Their opinions don’t matter, there’s no material difference to the work of AES states whether those liberals are class conscious or not. I mean it in the most pragmatic way possible when I say they aren’t worth the effort. Education effort should be spent on people at the periphery, in Africa and South America, where the fronts of this ideological struggle are and where changing someone’s mind could affect how they vote, and the cases they make in support at their local elections.