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celebratedrecluse wrote

I'm sorry that this comrade, ally, accomplice, felt the best way to contest the regime of concentration camps was to go out guns blazing in a clear suicide. They will be missed, and their lost future potential to be part of revolutionary activity will set us back.

We need to do better in supporting the inmates, and coordinating with those inmates to facilitate their own liberation. Actions like theirs, while aesthetic as fuck, and totally reasonable given the context and how there's no alternative, don't actually get rid of the concentration camps. It would take many more people, whether in individual actions, or in collective ones, to really get us there. I don't think anyone, even them, would deny that.

If you need to talk, please DM me. I'll reply as soon as I can. Suicide is real AF and no joke. I don't want comrades to go out in a blaze of glory-- personally, I'd much rather as many of us as possible, see the tomorrow that we so crave and need.

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[deleted] wrote

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lori wrote

Honestly? I think it partially was - the note explicitly mentions their broken heart and broken body.Just because it was suicide, though, doesn't mean that its not also a positive action against fascism.

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celebratedrecluse wrote

Yeah that's what I was trying to express. Sorry if it came across negative. I don't know, I just think that when a comrade dies alone with a gun in their hand and no backup, I cry hard as fuck

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