• doccitrus@lemmygrad.ml
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    8 months ago

    I made a comment about this on another post that’s now unlinkable because the post has been deleted.

    I suspect the quote is not just misattributed, but maliciously so, given its sudden appearance with a purportedly anti-Zionist framing, thus associating anti-Zionism with ‘extermination’.

    While Che never said that, the speech mentioned in the image here is real (though not given at the date mentioned in the image), and it does address colonialism. It even mentions Palestine! You can find the full text of it online.

    • carlesmu@lemmygrad.ml
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      8 months ago

      Other peoples are shedding their blood to win the rights we have. When we send our greetings from here, and from all the conferences and the places where they may be held, to the heroic peoples of Vietnam, Laos, so-called Portuguese Guinea, South Africa, or Palestine — to all exploited countries fighting for their emancipation — we must simultaneously extend our voice of friendship, our hand and our encouragement, to our fraternal peoples in Venezuela, Guatemala and Colombia, who today, arms in hand, are resolutely saying “No!” to the imperialist enemy.

      1000015240

        • doccitrus@lemmygrad.ml
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          8 months ago

          I kinda see what you mean in that Mao is confrontational and that one of his innovations in dialectics is an emphasis on destruction in the resolution of contradictions (rather than just thinking of sublation almost as a form of incorporation, or perhaps of synthesis as primary/only way for dialectical contradictions to resolve).

          But there are a lot of ways to defeat (or even ‘crush’) a collective enemy, including in violent conflict, far short of extermination! I don’t think Mao’s ideological combativeness or record as a military leader should (or can, really) be mistaken for the kind of raw bloodlust we can recognize in a call to ‘exterminate’.

          • Soviet Snake@lemmygrad.ml
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            8 months ago

            Heraclitus speaks of war as that which creates birth, because to him it portrayed death and so it can be understood as the antithesis of life.

        • diegeticscream[all]🔻@lemmygrad.ml
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          8 months ago

          I’ve never been able to find a source for Mao’s “communism is a hammer” quote when I’ve looked. I kind of think it might be misattributed as well!