Understanding Antifa
I have long been warning you that Antifa is marxist. For the longest time they denied this. They claimed to be just like the boys who stormed the beaches at Normandy to fight the Nazis. They are not. They're more like the thugs who stormed the streets of Petrograd in 1917 and went on a nearly 110 million-person killing spree until the Soviet Union was finally put to sleep some 70 years later. Now they finally admit to who they are.
A "menacing" group of Antifas recently pulled down their cowardly black bandanas from their faces and showed themselves to the world on Twitter. Their now-familiar logo of the two waving flags, one red and one black, is the exact same logo as the Communist Party of 1930s Germany. This particular chapter in Denver has now dropped any pretense that it's not marxist. Their logo uses the 1930s nomenclature, "Antifaschistische Aktion," which means "Antifascist Action." Only this chapter has added a nice little logo to their flag: The hammer and sickle of the former Soviet Union.
I've done a lot of studying on these modern Antifa types. Basically they hate capitalism because they think the capitalist system is broken. The truth is it's not capitalism that's broken, it's them. And I mean this in all sincerity. They believe capitalism is a failure and they are the failures. That's why socialism and communism have, for so long, attracted the misfits of society.
It's easy for us to ridicule them. I've certainly done my share of that. For this moment I would like to try a different approach. To fully understand disgruntlement one must first understand the disgruntled. These people aren't losers in the conventional sense. Many a communist has come out esteemed institutions like Columbia University, which was a hotbed of communists during the Cold War. What attracts these people to marxism? To be blunt, many just don't fit in. Many are socially awkward. They lash out at society in general for their inability to function normally within it. Marxism or Antifa give them a sense of purpose, like they're changing the world.
I don't want to sound patronizing, nor do I want to excuse their conduct, but many of these Antifa types are very smart. They're that nerdy smart we all remember from high school. I'm sure many of these people were made fun of, or at least thought everyone was making fun of them. They also obsess over things including the state of society. It's easy to look around at the have-nots and assume it's not their fault. It's even easier to look at the haves and hate them for what they have. That's how marxism is bred and spread. It is quintessential class warfare.
Notice you don't see many Antifas outside of their twenties. Once people grow up and take on some responsibility, perspective starts to change. At 25, my emphasis was solely on me. By 45 my emphasis was primarily on my family and their well-being and their future. Growing up necessarily changes your perspective.
Capitalism provides a competitive atmosphere that continually makes us all better. Is it fair? Not always, but I can't think of anything more unfair than taking from those who produce and giving it to those who don't. Capitalism and the United States are inseparable. Capitalism is what made America great, despite what New York Governor Cuomo may tell you. If you are anti-capitalist you are, by definition, anti-American.
The nanny state is for those who need a nanny. For the rest of us, capitalism equals prosperity.