this post was submitted on 17 Mar 2026
1012 points (99.0% liked)

Comic Strips

22771 readers
3731 users here now

Comic Strips is a community for those who love comic stories.

The rules are simple:

Web of links

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] TheObviousSolution@thebrainbin.org -2 points 6 hours ago (1 children)

The meme is literally about people are traditionally labelled different classes fighting against themselves.

So grass routes mobilisation/organisation seems required at this point, otherwise, the status quo continues on.

And if successful, then becomes the system, including the legal system, and then the same flaws appear. The revolutions that have been most successful kept in mind the laws and legislation that needed to be changed or enforced. Otherwise, it's just regime change insert number here.

[โ€“] MisterFrog@lemmy.world 3 points 5 hours ago

The meme is literally about people are traditionally labelled different classes fighting against themselves.

The whole point of this comic is to point out the absurdity of working class people with different incomes fighting each other, when there are people extracting extreme levels of wealth.

Yes, people's definition of working class may differ, but the message of the comic is the same regardless. It's pointing out how silly it is to fight at the kiddie tables.

And if successful, then becomes the system, including the legal system, and then the same flaws appear.

There's always going to be problems in society, but this type of argument is unconvincing, considering how much, and how frequently society has changed over the last 2000 years - practically in the blink of an eye in the scope of human existence. The same problems aren't guaranteed to appear under a new system. The various forms of society throughout history have definitely had different problems.

The revolutions that have been most successful kept in mind the laws and legislation that needed to be changed or enforced

I'm just saying that the fundamental key here is mobilisation of the people, who are the ultimate arbiters of the law. The law is fundamentally democratic in origin and only exists because we collectively believe in it.

There have been numerous movements in the past that were illegal at the time, but are obviously moral in retrospect (the civil rights movement in the US comes to mind).

"Just work within the system" as a blanket statement is not a serious argument to be making when the system is massively rigged in favour of wealth. (Apologies if this isn't exactly what you were arguing just seemed that way)

No one's suggesting you abolish rules/laws entirely and start completely from scratch. Well, no one I take seriously anyway.