Replying to Avatar rabble

Holy shit, have y'all seen Sánchez's Davos speech? Man really got up there and proposed making anonymity illegal on social media. Not just "we need better moderation" - straight up "one government ID, one account" dystopian nonsense.

Like yeah, misinformation and bots are problems. But his solution? Force everyone to link their social accounts to an "European Digital Identity Wallet." Want to keep your work life separate from your shitposting? Too bad, that's illegal now. Need anonymity because you're LGBT+ in a conservative area? Get fucked, government needs your papers. He claims it’ll only be platforms which see the real id, but we know no systems are secure. And it makes decentralized networks illegal too!

But wait, it gets better! He also wants to make platform CEOs personally liable when users break "laws and norms." THE NORMS. Not just illegal content - the fucking NORMS. It's like throwing Verizon's CEO in jail because someone planned a crime over the phone.

The only way ANY platform could operate under these rules would be to completely block European users. Twitter, Reddit, Discord - boom, gone. Or they become heavily censored government-ID-required wastelands.

And the real kicker? He buried some actually decent ideas about algorithmic transparency in between these two absolute nightmares. Like yeah, we should know how these platforms decide what content to promote. But holy hell, way to poison the well by sandwiching it between "papers please" and "jail CEOs for bad vibes."

https://www.weforum.org/stories/2025/01/davos-2025-special-address-pedro-sanchez-prime-minister-spain/

He's corrupted, fully signed up wannabe dictator

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I don't know much about him, i had to look up the wikipedia page. I'm a leftist, but to me that means opposing dictators and authoritarians. Everybody who wants to implement police state surveillance says they're doing it for the best of reasons and nobody will abuse their power.

You're old school, lefty now means authoritarianism and control

The left has always had a struggle between authoritarian and anti-authoritarian views. Anarchists in the 1860's... Claude summarizes it better than i can.

"Mikhail Bakunin led the key anarchist critique of Marx in the First International (1864-1876), centered on several main points:

Marx advocated using state power to achieve socialism, which Bakunin saw as inherently authoritarian and likely to create a new ruling class of bureaucrats and party officials. He predicted Marx's "dictatorship of the proletariat" would become simply dictatorship.

The conflict also had organizational dimensions. Marx pushed for centralized leadership through the General Council in London, while Bakunin favored decentralized federalism. Bakunin's followers opposed mandatory political participation by workers, which Marx required.

The split crystallized at the 1872 Hague Congress, where Marx succeeded in expelling Bakunin and moving the International's headquarters to New York, effectively ending it. The anarchist sections formed their own "anti-authoritarian International" that continued until 1877.

This schism established the fundamental divide between authoritarian and libertarian socialism that persists in leftist movements today.

Bakunin's 1873 critique of Marx's "dictatorship of proletariat" was remarkably prescient. He predicted a new class of bureaucrats would become the real rulers, using state power to create an authoritarian regime - exactly what happened under Stalin. The split between libertarian and authoritarian socialism in the First International basically previewed the next 150 years of leftist politics."

They just won't learn from history 🤷‍♀️

Or they learned the wrong lesson.

Yep