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This way to COMMUNISM

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Had a bit of fun in the last artwork. Drew myself in a uniform. Kinda wanted to do it again.

Searched for a while, and then found someone.

I remember finding them, and seeing some of their art quite a long while ago now that appears to be removed now. They have done a lot of nazi art, and nazi inspired artworks.

Anyway, was kinda inspired by their artworks. But yeah, they do go a LOT further that I am comfortable doing. At the same time, those artworks are a good example of what this piece is about.

This artwork is mostly related to all of these false calls of 'nazi' lately. Especially in the wake of the latest events.

That, for some reason, it seems to be horrible to depict one group, but perfectly acceptable to depict, and even openly support other groups that have, in the grand scheme of things, caused more damage, death and destruction.

Am I a nazi because of making this piece here? I definitely don't think so.

I don't particularly care for uniforms, but understand that some others have it as a fetish. Calling those who enjoy uniforms, even if they come from a horrible regime, a nazi or something along those lines is very flawed reasoning. That would be similar to saying that everyone who does pet play is a zoophile. Or anyone who does something fictional for their own fun, that they are that fictional thing and they believe they like that fictional thing in real life.

People are complicated, and people often do draw a line in where things start and end.

This flawed reasoning is why this piece was created.

Keywords
male 1,184,441, horns 21,277, black 13,456, hat 11,687, green 9,415, badge 7,783, uniform 7,103, flag 1,767, not 1,129, pentagram 644, nazi 591, armband 286, quo 52, zelox 39, quite 37, goatblarg 12
Details
Type: Picture/Pinup
Published: 7 years, 4 months ago
Rating: General

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Stumpycoon
7 years, 4 months ago
I think that some of the white-supremacist movement people carrying around Nazi flags and people saying they are Nazis on their web pages and during media interviews might be one reason some others are calling them Nazis.  

Doesn't mean that any non-Nazi's in the same movement are Nazi's of course.  Always best to check first, not assume.

Still though, it is funny seeing people at protests wearing a Nazi armband or carrying a Nazi flag complaining about all the people calling them a Nazi.  


P.S.  A bit like Satanists I guess, Satanism is a terrible name for a religion that is not actually about following Satan.  If you don't want people to think you worship Satan, why would you call yourself a Sataniat?  Similarly, if someone doesn't want to be called a Nazi and isn't a Nazi, they really shouldn't go to a white-supremacist rally with a Nazi flag.  
Stumpycoon
7 years, 4 months ago
In more general news great work combining the Confederate flag inspired Zelox Quo flag and the uniform there.  It came together nicely.
ZeloxQuo
7 years, 4 months ago
Thanks?

Kinda.

Well, the ZQ flag isn't inspired by the Confederate battle flag. That is why I redesigned it. Wanted to move away from that accusation. It is more inspired by traditional English city/town flags and traditional German flags than any other flags. Oh, also the Kekestani flag drew some inspiration as well.
Stumpycoon
7 years, 4 months ago
The ZQ flag was not inspired by the confederate flag?  What about doing it on the car like the confederate flag is on the Dukes of Hazard car?
ZeloxQuo
7 years, 4 months ago
The car came after, as a separate artistic work. I wanted an excuse to draw the flag again, because I enjoyed making it.

The flag isn't even in the same position as the Dukes of Hazard.
ZeloxQuo
7 years, 4 months ago
The reason why some people are wearing that is due to two reasons:
1) They are actually a neo-nazi.
2) They are a proponent of freedom of speech and expression doing something extreme for the purposes of demonstrating that all speech is important.

And yes, there were definitely some actual neo-nazi folks at some of the latest rallies. Unfortunately the overuse of the word, and false accusations of others as being a nazi, has resulted in their ability to head into the spotlight and actually be listened to.

Similar to the buildup to nazi Germany. Where antifa pushed the public to hate them, due to the violence and destruction of property, winning more support for the nazi party.
Stumpycoon
7 years, 4 months ago
1) Yes.
2) If they become Nazis, then they are Nazis.  Why they choose to become Nazis is interesting, but does not change the fact that they have become Nazis.  

>And yes, there were definitely some actual neo-nazi folks at some of the latest rallies.

Eeyup.

But it is not "overusing the word" if the word is the correct descriptive word.  When the movement and the leaders of the movement are literal Nazis and waving flags and so on...it is not overusing the word to say "hey, look, what a bunch of Nazis".

Wouldn't it have been awesome if even one person at the protest had said "woah, hey, what are you Nazis doing here?  F$ck off!"  That would have been sweet.

>Similar to the buildup to nazi Germany. Where antifa pushed the public to hate them, due to the violence and destruction of property, winning more support for the nazi party.

That is exactly what did not happen in history.  The truth was the original Nazi movement used fake news and false accusations against their opponents.  Any group that stood up to them was demonized, then persecuted, then eliminated.  Peaceful protesters were accused of violence, falsely charged, and hauled off to prison or to the camps.  Exactly the tactics of the current neo-nazi movement in the USA.  

I see a lot of people doing the same thing, justifying the violence of the alt-right by spreading false accusations and fake news against anyone they can get the mud they sling to stick to.
ZeloxQuo
7 years, 4 months ago
1) Yep agreed.
2) Still unrelated to nazis. Just using the icons as a message of free speech and pushing the boundaries of it. Especially in the wake of false calls of others as 'nazi' incorrectly.

But it is not "overusing the word" if the word is the correct descriptive word.

That would be good. If it was true. Unfortunately it isn't. I have been called both a nazi-apologist and a nazi, lately. This is just because I believe in freedom of speech and expression and disagree with using violence to push a political point (unless needed for self defence).

When the movement and the leaders of the movement are literal Nazis and waving flags and so on...it is not overusing the word to say "hey, look, what a bunch of Nazis".

SURE! For actual nazi groups. Sure. For non nazi groups that happen to have some nazis. No.

Wouldn't it have been awesome if even one person at the protest had said "woah, hey, what are you Nazis doing here?  F$ck off!"  That would have been sweet.

That would have been great. Too bad that the far left has overused the term nazi, and now nazis can actually stand with regular folks and if/when they are called it, everyone laughs because it has been overused so much to the point of not really meaning anything any more. Essentially allowing them to be in plain sight with the rest of the normal folks. Unfortunately.

I see a lot of people doing the same thing, justifying the violence of the alt-right by spreading false accusations and fake news against anyone they can get the mud they sling to stick to.

Would be good if the far left could accept that they have been horribly violent for months now as well though. That might have helped.
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