I’ll get this out of the way right now, I’m a progressive socialist and Kissinger’s legacy in the world is one of reactionary repression and suffering. I find pretty much everything he stood for to be wrongheaded and harmful to society.

That said, celebrating someone dying in the way that’s happening now shows disrespect to human life and an utter lack of humanity. I understand the motivation, but it should be fought against by remembering that no one is ever just one thing, everyone is a mix of good and bad, and we certainly shouldn’t give in to the desire to rejoice at another’s death, no matter what we think of them.

  • @[email protected]OP
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    1 year ago

    No one’s asking anyone to pretend he was a good person, or that he never existed. We don’t have to do any of that in not celebrating his death.

    Younger generations can learn to avoid the mistakes of the past through being educated by those who lived through it and by being exposed to human kindness and compassion instead of retributive hatred.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      So if people celebrated the death of Hitler, you’d say the exact same thing right?

      There are times when it’s ok to celebrate the death of evil. The witch is dead was a UK #1 when Thatcher died. For good reason

    • Zerlyna
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      71 year ago

      No that makes the kids feel bad to learn the shitty mistakes we made in the past. Can’t teach that. /s