21

Basically I was tagged as mentioned in a comment, one of several in the thread, and got an inbox notification of it. It was about 20 min after the comment itself was posted, in a community I don’t interact with, with a user I don’t think I’ve ever interacted with before.

Not sure if it’s a piefed problem, a cross-talk problem, or just a random bug, but as per screenshot, it wasn’t intended behavior, and I wasn’t meant to be tagged.

I’ll edit this to include a link to the actual thread if desired. Or if any other info is needed that’s cool too.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[-] Tuuktuuk@nord.pub 4 points 2 days ago

It's a religion. Such an extremely pious person will see what they want to see, no matter what. They'd probably be disgusted by seeing people who have voluntarily left the paradise that was USSR, and that view would shape the interpretation of whatever those people might say.

[-] pet1t@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago

I'd love to take them on a trip to former Soviet countries and have them sit down with people that actually lived through it. I'll start making some popcorn already

[-] Tuuktuuk@nord.pub 4 points 2 days ago

My grandma has that same religion. In the late 1980 she was visiting Berlin, and coming back she had said: "On the western side the wall was full of graffitis and really ugly, but the eastern side of the wall was completely clean. That shows where people are happy and where not."

They would definitely manage to protect their mind from any information contradicting their religion. Once the brain's gone, the brain's gone. There's a small chance that a new one will grow to fill the hollow, but that's not something that can be influenced from outside the brain.

[-] pet1t@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago

My dad was stationed in Germany for his compulsory service and worked there for a few years after that. He has crossed the wall to the Eastern side as well and he hated it. Constantly feeling uneasy, strict etc. Tanks stationed along the road. He described it as a depressing, eerie place.

To each their own view, ofc, but I wouldn't exactly call it a happy place and neither would he

[-] Tuuktuuk@nord.pub 3 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Neither would anybody in their right mind.

But, my grandma saw both cities through the goggles of her religion. Those were tanks of peace.

In 2015 I spent some days in East Türkestan – in Qulja, in Ürümqi, in Khorgos. I've been wondering how the tankies would have interpreted if they visited there and saw what I saw. I noticed people avoiding certain themes, I saw them getting scared if I tried speaking Uyghur near Han children, I saw heavily armed policemen on top of APCs. I saw a dystopy.

But a person for whom CCP counts as high clergy... They would see all that differently.

I believe that a pious communist would be a horrible bother for a person who has fled the USSR. They'd get no more out of it than my grandmother got out of visiting both sides or Berlin back then. You'd get a very pissed off survivor of USSR and a pious person who is feeling good and righteous for proving once again that all people opposing his thoughts are nazis. Except for those who actually are, because they have such similar thought patterns to those Pure in Faith that they would feel like friends to such a pious person. Unless, of course, they'd outright show a swastika tattoo to them.

this post was submitted on 26 Feb 2026
21 points (100.0% liked)

PieFed Meta

3926 readers
35 users here now

Discuss PieFed project direction, provide feedback, ask questions, suggest improvements, and engage in conversations related to the platform organization, policies, features, and community dynamics.

Wiki

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS