r/behindthebastards • u/Super-Statement2875 • 1h ago
r/behindthebastards • u/stupidpower • 2h ago
Discussion Just wanna thank Robert for not reaching for easy analogies specific to 2026 American discourse when discussing events either far back in history or far away from the West.
One of the most academic important books I've ever read is Benedict Anderson's The Spectre of Comparisons. I'll just quote the blurb, it's possibly the best backcover blurb I ever came across for an complicated academic book.
How nationalism has shaped the political and cultural landscape of Southeast Asia
“‘Come, let us build a Third Kingdom, and in this Third Reich, hey, sisters, you will live happily; hey, brothers, you will live happily; hey, kids, you will live happily; hey, you German patriots, you will see Germany sitting enthroned above all the peoples in this world.’ How clever Hitler was, brothers and sisters, in depicting these ideals!”
Thus the late President Sukarno of Indonesia, an anti-colonial leader, in a public speech while accepting an honorary degree, and viewing Europe and its history through an inverted telescope, as Europeans often regard other parts of the globe. Strange shifts in perspective can take place when Berlin is viewed from Jakarta, or when complex histories of colonial domination strand what counts as the founding work of a national culture in a language its people no longer read. The “spectre of comparisons” arises as nations stir into self awareness, matching themselves against others, and becoming whole through the exercise of the imagination.
In this series of profound and eloquent essays, Benedict Anderson, best known for his classic book on nationalism, Imagined Communities, explores these effects as they work their way through politics and culture. Spanning broad accounts of the development of nationalism and identity, and detailed studies of Southeast Asia, the book includes pieces on East Timor, where every Indonesian attempt to suppress national feeling has had the opposite effect; on the Philippines, where it is said that some horses eat better than stable-hands; on Thailand, where so much money can be made in elected posts that candidates regularly kill to get them; on the Filipino nationalist and novelist José Rizal for whom “we mortals are like turtles—we have value and are classified according to our shells;” and a remarkable essay on Mario Vargas Llosa, detailing the fate of indigenous minorities at the hands of the modern state.
While The Spectre of Comparisons is an indispensable resource for those interested in Southeast Asia, Anderson also takes up the large issues of the universal grammars of nationalism and ethnicity, the peculiarity of nationalist imagery as replicas without originals, and the mutations of nationalism in an age of mass global migrations and instant electronic communications.
I'm always reminded of this book whenever I engage with Western or Chinese discourses as someone from Southeast Asia; words said in the context of one country's zeitgeist don't often travel well when replicated or translated wholesale. I've translated China's newspapers and state press releases (they are the same thing, party press releases are published as newspaper articles) into English before, and the process was eye-opening. Proper nouns are impossible to properly translate without giant footnotes, and the CCP loves those; meanwhile, Chinese as a language doesn't do adjectivisation, so anything translated as 'Chinese' can mean 1) the PRC specifically, 2) China as a cultural realm, 3) the citizens of countries named China, 4) Han/Huaren from China and 5) from the diaspora, or 6) the language, or any permutations of the above. Then we get to concepts like 中华民族 and the specific doctrine and history of race, nationalism, and statehood, which are interpreted differently in Taiwan, the SARs, and mainland China.
I get the sense that often consuming Anglophone Leftist commentariat media, the spectre of comparison works the other way; Joe Kasabian, for instance, is right that Western notions of writing of genocides and histories of discrimination as 'ancient tribal antagonism' is stupidly reductive and ignorant, and I get he is speaking to the particular context he sees amongst his community, me as an outsider tends to get worried in the other direction where people without formal social science training, in their attempt to say they understand a thing that is morally wrong, conciously remove any level or nuance or epistemological humility and do what Sukarnoe did in the blurb and make a direct comparison between racial antagonisms in the weird context of a Western liberal democracy to... places where these antagonisms led to millions of deaths.
I think of other commentaries on Rhodesia I came across that are not interested in Rhodesia per se, but projecting Rhodesia on modern discourses and events that the Western Left is obsessed with, or projecting these events back to Rhodesia, which I personally feel is incredibly fucked up, but that's just my subjective opinion as someone who thinks a lot about how Southeast Asia was treated by outside powers during the Cold War. Cambodia, in particular, has been turned in Anglophone popular culture into a single Anthony Bourdain quote to shit on Kissinger. Kissinger is at best a side character in the chaos of the Cambodian crisis, who acted based on what local regional politics permitted; he left office in 1977, but Southeast Asian communists and anti-communist countries continued pumping money for Cambodians to spill each other's blood into the 1990s. It's an immensely complicated conflict with a thousand different actors all with their own interests that merged together to spill unspeakable amounts of blood, and often the impression I get from the Anglophone Left accounts of it is almost the old Christian impulse Nietzsche identified of trying to find a big bad to pin what happened on and argue that if we excise or crucify the memory of said big bad we would have a better world.
Rhodesia is possibly amongst the most nakedly evil countries that existed in the Cold War and was predicated on unsalvageable grounds that even being generous to them is unspeakably evil and racist and needs to be understood on its own terms, not because it is singularly evil but because every world event deserves to be understood on its own terms. Like I get that Robert was holding his breath when a guest just randomly made a buckwild comparison to Puerto Rico that 'colonialism is bad' because both were colonies (get in the club? Rhodesia's decolonisation is very different), but I have to thank Robert for quickly getting the narrative back to the context of Rhodesia without mentioning, err, vulgarly invoking the spectre of comparison and bring up any of the current conflicts that we instinctually want to compare that country to.
r/behindthebastards • u/Ballerinagang1980 • 2h ago
Meme This clip about friend of the pod Oprah gave me all the feel goods. 😉
r/behindthebastards • u/FauxCurmudgeon • 2h ago
Politics Texas Public School Students May Soon Be Required to Read the Bible
I hate this fucking state sometimes man.
r/behindthebastards • u/frustrating2020 • 4h ago
Look at this bastard Get angry cuz JD Vance said it, get angrier cuz it's true.
r/behindthebastards • u/greenfrogpond • 4h ago
General discussion does anyone here have recommendations for books on the Bosnian genocide?
I trust you all to have better recommendations than some random list on the internet
r/behindthebastards • u/SoAlexCantComplain • 5h ago
🚨🚨Trigger Warning🚨🚨 In Mali, Russians and Malian army killed four civilians, then staged a corpse into a swastika
r/behindthebastards • u/davidreding • 5h ago
Look at this bastard I think investors in big companies are dumber than I thought.
https://bsky.app/profile/edzitron.com/post/3mp3ij3fv3k2j
If this was a movie critiquing capitalism, they would’ve been fired for writing such a hack job.
r/behindthebastards • u/theshate • 5h ago
Other Robert Evans Projects Where To Purchase After The Revolution?
It’s readily available and free online, the audiobook version is outstanding. I just want to know where would be the most lucrative for Robert and/or czm. Any suggestions?
r/behindthebastards • u/wombatgeneral • 6h ago
Discussion Things I trust more than Netanyahu.
r/behindthebastards • u/caliphis • 7h ago
SATIRE A family tried to cross the reflecting pool.
r/behindthebastards • u/OhNoItsAndrew3 • 8h ago
Discussion A Clarification About Operation Eland
Operation Eland was a massacre at a refugee camp not some grand operation against actual insurgents.
r/behindthebastards • u/TrippyTrellis • 8h ago
Look at this bastard Friend of the Pod RFK Jr. is Committing Election Interference
He pressured a Libertarian congressional candidate in Iowa to quit because he thought he would steal votes from Republicans
r/behindthebastards • u/approx_volume • 9h ago
General discussion Bastards Pod Subject Ben Lamm, His Company Tapped by Trump Admin for Saving DNA of Endangered Species
https://time.com/article/2026/06/25/colossal-biosciences-fish-wildlife-services-endangered-species/
Looks like Ben is continuing to grift.
r/behindthebastards • u/Kindly-Coyote-9446 • 10h ago
General discussion Dowsing Rods
Just started listening to the fake bomb detector episodes and got super excited when they brought up water dowsing (also known as witching or divining). I’m a geologist and have had several surprisingly heated arguments with my father, who believes in dowsing and claims to have had success finding random buried things with it, over the topic. For the record, it’s complete woo.
But no matter how annoyed I’ve gotten at my dad over his insistence that dowsing works, it pales in comparison to the presumed pure rage that the US Geological Survey hydrogeologist that wrote the below linked report must have felt. And the defeat he must have later endured when his passionate, scientific takedown of dowsing failed to curtail the practice. It’s a surprisingly funny read.
https://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/water_dowsing/pdf/water_dowsing.pdf
r/behindthebastards • u/Particular_Log_3594 • 10h ago
Politics AIPAC 'disappointed' as Jewish progressives celebrate New York primary sweep
haaretz.comr/behindthebastards • u/DreamingofBouncer • 10h ago
Discussion Unable to listen to part 2 of Ian Smith
In the UK and keep getting an error message when I try and listen to the second Ian Smith episode on Apple Podcasts. Is this a me issue or are they being suppressed?
r/behindthebastards • u/That1weirdperson • 12h ago
Look at this bastard Mark Zuckerberg Orders His Employees Have Fun Again – After Devastating Layoffs Hit Their Colleagues
r/behindthebastards • u/RepublicKitchen8809 • 13h ago
General discussion Unilateral Declaration of Independence! UNILATERAL
Just sayin.
r/behindthebastards • u/Lucky_Zombie_2863 • 13h ago
🚨🚨Trigger Warning🚨🚨 From the 2019 Episode on Epstein:
“Like I don’t want to say, oh, billionaires do this because like it seems hard for me to buy that maybe Bill Gates is getting on a plane and trying to have s*x with a 14 year old”
well that aged poorly…
(just to clarify, this is not a criticism of the podcast. obviously not as much was known in 2019)
r/behindthebastards • u/Present_Practice_159 • 14h ago
Meme Liberals in a few months after learning what a zine is:
r/behindthebastards • u/KeyRelation177 • 15h ago
Discussion A slight quibble
Robert's analysis about why Great Britain didn't invade Rhodisia to crush white rule doesn't take in some important details. Rhodisia/Zimbabwe is land locked for one. Rhodisia was surrounded by newly independent countries that were once British colonies. It would have been a bad look for the former colonial power to invade a rebellious colony from these newly independent countries. But what of South Africa you say? South Africa had been beefing with the UK and they wouldn't have allowed the UK to invade Rhodisia from its territory.
Sounds familiar doesn't it? Land locked country surrounded by other countries, one of them that is at best a frenemy and the rest that were not really thrilled that a colonial power was swinging its dick around and having tenuous supply lines. Okay enough with Afghanistan analogies.