• NABDad@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My dad switched from saying it isn’t real to saying he’ll be dead soon so he won’t have to experience it.

    Jokes on him: it’s happening faster than he thought. He’s getting to experience it anyway.

    • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      My dad switched from saying it isn’t real to saying he’ll be dead soon so he won’t have to experience it.

      Ask him if he cares about the world that his kids and grand-kids will have to live in, or is he just a selfish asshole.

      • NABDad@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I did ask that, and it took the conversation to a bizarre place.

        When I asked if he cared what happened to his kids or grandkids, he asked if I believed in God.

        I said no, and asked what that had to do with anything. He said, if I believed in God, I’d go to heaven.

        So, that’s his suggestion: suffer through a miserable, doomed existence, and then go to heaven when you die.

        Things that I found interesting from that:

        1. He pretends to be a Christian, but he is filled with hate and just wants to pick fights with everyone. I think he doesn’t actually know anything about what being Christian is, other than if you’re not, you burn in hell for all eternity.

        2. My mom, whose beliefs generally align fairly closely with his, does not want to cause trouble, unlike him. So, while he immediately tries to start shit, she’ll avoid topics that will result in argument. She will certainly avoid asking questions if she doesn’t want to hear the answer. So, she visibly cringed when he asked if I believed in God, because she knew what was coming next.

        Lots of teenagers dramatically accuse their parents of being fascists, but in my case, he’s the real thing. He’s not quite a Nazi, but if they came to power in the U.S. he’d be goose-stepping along with them. He idolizes Nazi Germany, but pretty much considers modern Nazis to be pathetic losers.

        In the strange, twisted world of child/parent relationships, I’m stuck. I know what he is, but he’s also my father. I’m twisted up. I know he loves me, and I love him, but I hate what he is if that makes any sense.

        My wife and my kids can’t stand him, but everything I have and most of what they have comes from him. He knows that I disagree with him about almost everything he cares about, but if I go to him for help, he’ll help without question and without strings attached.

        He wasn’t always this bad. He had been better for years, but then as he has declined physically and can’t pretend he’s young anymore, he became more miserable, and I think he wants everyone else to be miserable too.

        • sgtgig@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          That’s a pretty frightening belief. Earth is just some bus stop your soul sits at waiting for heaven, so why take care of it and why fret about all the suffering that takes place on it.

          For all we know, death may be total end of your soul/consciousness/whatever and Earth may be the only place with complex life in the universe. And we’re trashing it.

        • Jazzy Vidalia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 year ago

          The best thing we can do with parents like that is don’t even bother to out them in a home. Let them work themselves to death or die on the streets. They get what they earn.

        • steltek@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Not sure how you can idolize Nazi Germany without being a Nazi. As for the rest, any good faith attempt in debate will be met with skepticism at best. The Rights propaganda machine is too strong.

          • Stovetop@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            There’s this myth in the modern day that there were somehow “noble Nazis” like Rommel who only cared about making their country great and giving it their all. They take the “Hitler turned Germany from a bankrupt country to a world power in 10 years” perspective, look at all of the fancy gadgets and buildings the Nazis made and their fancy Nazi uniforms, and they think it somewhat excuses the atrocities they committed.

            There are too many people out there who think it’s possible to learn from Nazi Germany’s example and make America great again without all of the “bad Nazi stuff” that led to their downfall, without seeing any of the parallels to their stances on LGBTQ+ people, racial and religious minorities, foreign policy, workers rights, etc.

            If there had been another significant Islamic terrorist attack in the early part of Trump’s administration, I honestly believe he would have pushed for Muslim concentration camps considering his early campaign promises about banning them from the US. Having a minority scapegoat to blame for America’s problems would have inspired more MAGA sycophants without losing the Jewish vote.

    • atx_aquarian@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      First person that uses that argument with me, I’m going to tell them, in no uncertain terms, to stop voting since the same argument applies.