I agree it’s hard to know what’s part of divide and conquer political psyops and whether that was the intention or not of the person that created the original content.
I personally scrolled by this and read it as a debate about feminism in its most basic sense (equality for all) vs conservative traditionalism and patriarchy (heirarchy based control). Not as an attack on men, or to exclude anyone who doesn’t fall into the heteronormative categories which exist as a consequence of the protected heirarchies demanded by conservative traditionalism and patriarchy.
Like the propaganda behind conservative traditionalism has always relied on convincing people that all of modern society’s problems are simply due to moving further away from the traditional values of the past. It’s circular logic that offers easy and appealing solutions to those being targeted with propaganda by using a scapegoat and relying on supporters to either remain unaware of, or, to intentionally ignore the very obvious problems caused by the conservative heirarchies (“values”) that the traditionalist movement seeks to preserve and strengthen.
For example, addressing the declining standard of living with each successive generation, lack of affordable housing, affordable education, and job opportunities in the United States. Traditional conservativism often targets young men by offering them easy solutions to the issues by claiming they were caused by the feminist and civil rights movements that moved American society away from the traditional values (heirarchies) that were already in place.
According to the modern right, the DEI practices that arose from those movements mean all the resources which were previously available for young men to build the American dream, are now unavailable because of DEI. Modern society has redistributed all available resources and handed them to women and minorities, while young (white) men have been forgotten and left behind. Essentially, the movements towards equality have upset the natural order of things, and until that order is restored, there will be no way to fix the problems of modern society. How do you fix the problem? Simple, remove equality.
It’s certainly true that opportunity, housing, affordability, and standard of living have all noticably declined in the U.S over the last 50 years, so the argument that the lack of available resources in the U.S. in 2026 can be traced to and blamed on the most salient social movements 50 years prior (1970’s), is a deceptive but easy conclusion to lead people to out of context. It simply requires you have some prior knowledge of the history and culture of the decade, without acknowledging what was simultaneously happening in the background of the U.S. in response to those movements.
Blaming social equality movements and toppling of established heirarchies, very intentionally ignores the fact that since the 1970’s wealth has become increasingly concentrated in the hands of the 1%. It also ignores the fact that the 1970’s marks the establishment of the first U.S. conservative think tanks (Heritage Foundation, Free Congress Foundation), which were funded by billionaires, and created in direct response to fighting the civil rights movement by establishing political influence and promoting conservative economic and social policies, which both ultimately favor the economic inequality that continues to dominate America in 2026.
Tldr: To restore and preserve the conservative natural order and heirarchy, the policies promoted are always backed by a call to return to traditional values that require division by default.
The traditionalist movement argues a woman’s place is in the home, supported by a hardworking man. While equality based movements would argue a woman’s place, (like any autonomous human being, regardless of class, race, or other identity like male, female, cis, trans, NB etc.), is wherever they want it to be. Whether that’s at home, working, single, married, straight, queer, kids, no kids etc. It promotes equal choice for the individual rather than demanding conformity. The entire point is that there are no pre-established roles set out for her or anybody else.
An equal society means opportunities and resources are available to everyone who chooses to pursue them, rather than kept locked away under the control of a small but heavily insulated and protected 1%, who then decide how to divide up whatever meager resources they’re willing to allow the other 99% to share and fight over for their own survival.
Edit: It’s one thing to fall for propaganda because you don’t know what’s going on in the shadows. That’s been a very intentional strategy of the attack on democracy for the last 50+ years. However, it’s hard to imagine having that evidence presented to you, and intentionally choosing to be a willing cuck for the top 1% of the country. And yet …
Since 1975, nearly $80 trillion in wealth has been redistributed from the bottom 90% of Americans to the top 1%.
The wealthy have always had disproportionate political influence in society, the United States of America included. In Dark Money, Jane Mayer presents a compelling account of how wealthy ultraconservative business leaders organized themselves over the past several decades to impose their political ideologies of anarchism on the rest of the nation.
Part One focuses on the period from 1970 to 2008, when philanthropy was co-opted as a key participant in the war of political ideas and the free-market political machine, the Kochtopus, was assembled.
I swear memes like these seem like a psyops to keep us at each others throats
I agree it’s hard to know what’s part of divide and conquer political psyops and whether that was the intention or not of the person that created the original content.
I personally scrolled by this and read it as a debate about feminism in its most basic sense (equality for all) vs conservative traditionalism and patriarchy (heirarchy based control). Not as an attack on men, or to exclude anyone who doesn’t fall into the heteronormative categories which exist as a consequence of the protected heirarchies demanded by conservative traditionalism and patriarchy.
Like the propaganda behind conservative traditionalism has always relied on convincing people that all of modern society’s problems are simply due to moving further away from the traditional values of the past. It’s circular logic that offers easy and appealing solutions to those being targeted with propaganda by using a scapegoat and relying on supporters to either remain unaware of, or, to intentionally ignore the very obvious problems caused by the conservative heirarchies (“values”) that the traditionalist movement seeks to preserve and strengthen.
For example, addressing the declining standard of living with each successive generation, lack of affordable housing, affordable education, and job opportunities in the United States. Traditional conservativism often targets young men by offering them easy solutions to the issues by claiming they were caused by the feminist and civil rights movements that moved American society away from the traditional values (heirarchies) that were already in place.
According to the modern right, the DEI practices that arose from those movements mean all the resources which were previously available for young men to build the American dream, are now unavailable because of DEI. Modern society has redistributed all available resources and handed them to women and minorities, while young (white) men have been forgotten and left behind. Essentially, the movements towards equality have upset the natural order of things, and until that order is restored, there will be no way to fix the problems of modern society. How do you fix the problem? Simple, remove equality.
It’s certainly true that opportunity, housing, affordability, and standard of living have all noticably declined in the U.S over the last 50 years, so the argument that the lack of available resources in the U.S. in 2026 can be traced to and blamed on the most salient social movements 50 years prior (1970’s), is a deceptive but easy conclusion to lead people to out of context. It simply requires you have some prior knowledge of the history and culture of the decade, without acknowledging what was simultaneously happening in the background of the U.S. in response to those movements.
Blaming social equality movements and toppling of established heirarchies, very intentionally ignores the fact that since the 1970’s wealth has become increasingly concentrated in the hands of the 1%. It also ignores the fact that the 1970’s marks the establishment of the first U.S. conservative think tanks (Heritage Foundation, Free Congress Foundation), which were funded by billionaires, and created in direct response to fighting the civil rights movement by establishing political influence and promoting conservative economic and social policies, which both ultimately favor the economic inequality that continues to dominate America in 2026.
Tldr: To restore and preserve the conservative natural order and heirarchy, the policies promoted are always backed by a call to return to traditional values that require division by default.
The traditionalist movement argues a woman’s place is in the home, supported by a hardworking man. While equality based movements would argue a woman’s place, (like any autonomous human being, regardless of class, race, or other identity like male, female, cis, trans, NB etc.), is wherever they want it to be. Whether that’s at home, working, single, married, straight, queer, kids, no kids etc. It promotes equal choice for the individual rather than demanding conformity. The entire point is that there are no pre-established roles set out for her or anybody else.
An equal society means opportunities and resources are available to everyone who chooses to pursue them, rather than kept locked away under the control of a small but heavily insulated and protected 1%, who then decide how to divide up whatever meager resources they’re willing to allow the other 99% to share and fight over for their own survival.
Edit: It’s one thing to fall for propaganda because you don’t know what’s going on in the shadows. That’s been a very intentional strategy of the attack on democracy for the last 50+ years. However, it’s hard to imagine having that evidence presented to you, and intentionally choosing to be a willing cuck for the top 1% of the country. And yet …
Since 1975, nearly $80 trillion in wealth has been redistributed from the bottom 90% of Americans to the top 1%.
•Heritage Foundation Influencewatch: The idea conceived in 1971 was presented to Coors Brewing Company president and right-of-center donor Joseph Coors in 1972, and Coors wrote out a $250,000 donation as the seed money for what became the Heritage Foundation (nearly $1.6 million in 2021 dollars). Feulner later said, “There wouldn’t be a Heritage Foundation without Joe Coors.”
•Scaife’s philanthropy has had a disproportionate impact on the rise of the right, perhaps the biggest story in American politics in the last quarter of the 20th century… His money has established or sustained activist think tanks that have created and marketed conservative ideas from welfare reform to enhanced missile defense; public interest law firms that have won important court cases on affirmative action, property rights and how to conduct the national census; organizations and publications that have nurtured conservatism on American campuses; academic institutions that have employed and promoted the work of conservative intellectuals; watchdog groups that have critiqued and harassed media organizations, and many more…When it began to make a mark in the mid-1970s, Joseph Coors, the beer magnate, was commonly credited as its chief financial patron. Coors did put up the first $250,000. But within two years, according to Heritage officials, Scaife had given more than twice as much, and he has kept on giving ever since – more than $23 million in all, or about $34 million in inflation-adjusted, current dollars. At Heritage the joke was, “Coors gives six-packs; Scaife gives cases.”
•Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaire$ Behind the Rise of the Radical Right
•God, Trump and the Closed-Door World of a Major Conservative Group
•Rand corporation 2023: Measuring the Income Gap from 1975 to 2023
•Wealth Of The 1% Reaches Decade High In The U.S.
Don’t forget to say thank you.
How the fuck does your TLDR start less than halfway through your post?
TLDR: Because I added citations after the TLDR at the end of the unedited post and included the word Edit: to indicate it was added afterwards
Na, a self-secure person can take a joke while acknowledging the truth in it.
Why is it any more okay to create conflict with less secure people?
Insecure about what?
No idea. You should ask raspberriesareyummy@lemmy.world about that.
It’s true. Us humans clearly only harm each-other, so let’s keep a distance, ok?
Am I too insecure to acknowledge the truth? Or maybe it just doesn’t have any truth to it.
Not sure I fully understand, that’s like saying “It’s true, but funny, because… reasons.”