

Being anti-social is a good thing though.
It’s not. Opposing a system of power and being anti-social are not the same thing. Anti-social in the context of conditions where revolution can form would be, at best, adventurist and aimless violence.
I want people to be angry and see trump for what he is, a war monger with an ambition to rule the world.
The problem goes far beyond Trump. He is the current face of the western empire, but the empire has been doing horrible things long before him and will after him if it’s not stopped.
I don’t believe in suppressing emotions, I mean that people should be less shocked by things especially when these shocking things happen all the time.
I mean, I would rather people always find brutality shocking than accept it as normal, but if you mean in the context of people acting like brutality began yesterday and has never been seen before, then sure. Liberals have a tendency to act like history began yesterday when colonialism has been going on for hundreds of years.





Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Right, but “innate psychological weakness” and a focus on will to break free sounds more like idealism than dialectics. Dialectical materialism tells us that, as chinawatcherwatcher put it better than I can reword, “relations of exploitation contain within themselves the seeds of their own destruction, or change.” So it is not will that makes the difference, even though that does have an impact (else we’d be saying that people are mere passengers) but that it is a factor along with external factors and that both of these are always interacting with each other and developing in one direction or another.
One of the reasons that “breaking free” from it is rarer in the imperial core than, say, in the global south, is because the material conditions put people in the imperial core in a position of exploiter (whether they consent to it or not) via the exploitative relationships of empire. This allows them to, on average, experience somewhat better conditions than the most destitute in the world and as long as those conditions don’t go under a low enough bar for quality of life, many can linger there without a strong motive for change. Though I think with the empire in decline, this is already changing and could more rapidly change with how things are shifting under the mask off management of the Trump administration.
Another of the reasons is the narrative atop it (I believe what some term “superstructure”). This narrative feeds individualism, imperialism, and capitalism day in and day out. Working alongside the conditions to try to steer people toward support for empire and away from liberation.
And then there is of course the direct and indirect state violence (“political power grows out of the barrel of a gun”). This is and has been used to assassinate, imprison, and otherwise try to silence those who do resist. And there are often more who have resisted than people realize when they investigate beyond imperialist media.
The weight of all of this can be overwhelming if taken all at once as a thing to get past. But so can anything in life if we look at it as a challenge all at once. Quantitative leads to qualitative (another thing dialectical materialism teaches us).
AES states are subject to capitalist influence, yes, but they have also made great strides in spite of it. There’s a lesson from struggle that someone brought up recently. It goes something like: The USSR in its infancy has this moment where Germany of the time is demanding certain things of them and Lenin chooses to make a deal, rather than risk a confrontation when the USSR is not yet ready. Instead of this leading to a devastating loss, it is a temporary problem which leads to the USSR growing strong enough to overcome it.
The point of me bringing it up here is, don’t take every seeming capitulation on the part of an AES state, or liberation movement, as an inability to develop the world beyond capitalism. Socialist China has done an (I think astounding) job of engaging with the capitalist world economy in a way similar to that story about the USSR and in doing so, is now positioned where it and its anti-imperialist allies are rising and empire is declining. It is perhaps not yet in a position where it is believed that empire can be defeated with troops without devastating loss, but that doesn’t mean the day can never come that the capability is there.
There is even a term someone coined, that you may have heard before, that I think is relevant here: capitalist realism. “It is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism.” But this does not mean the belief is true. It’s an observation about the psychological grip that the status quo has on some people.