Another way of saying "I'm a feeble-minded piece of crap". Typically uttered by cringey self-styled wannabe Commies, "Tankie" idiots and autist ANTIFA weaklings whilst they look at their Iphones and sip their soy lattes from Starbucks, taking advantage of the fruits of Capitalism and the free speech (and the Police they despise, usually) which protects them whilst spouting a lot of seditious gibberish and feigned solidarity with the working class, likely out of guilt of being from a wealthy family, notice how few of them work, unlike we of the working class, who are just trying to get by, and actually hate those clowns because we're very patriotic.
Most infamously said by Ash "I'm literally a Communist" Sarkar, a brain-dead aspie who hates this country and thinks we're so bad, yet won't buy a one-way ticket to somewhere like Venezuela, North Korea or Red China and move her sorry carcass there and be amongst her "comrades" over there, even though 98% of Britons would gladly buy the ticket and tell her not to let the door hit her on the arse on the way out. Seriously, Sarkar, from the British working class, FUCK. RIGHT. OFF. we don't want you here.
Most infamously said by Ash "I'm literally a Communist" Sarkar, a brain-dead aspie who hates this country and thinks we're so bad, yet won't buy a one-way ticket to somewhere like Venezuela, North Korea or Red China and move her sorry carcass there and be amongst her "comrades" over there, even though 98% of Britons would gladly buy the ticket and tell her not to let the door hit her on the arse on the way out. Seriously, Sarkar, from the British working class, FUCK. RIGHT. OFF. we don't want you here.
"I'm Literally a Communist" said mongoloidic Guardianista Ash Sarkar, as she enjoyed the fruits of our Capitalist system, such as computers, wealth, having enough to eat, a "smart" phone, the internet, free speech, holidays, whilst at the same crapping all over we, the British working class, GTFO out of our country, you aren't wanted here!
by Wardie1993 August 16, 2023
Get the I'm Literally A Communist mug.The understanding that even the most intimate "community"—your neighborhood, online fandom, support group—isn't a spontaneous organic growth but is actively produced. It's built through shared rituals (book club meetings, forum threads, annual barbecues), defined boundaries (who's in, who's out), and the collective narration of a common identity ("We are the people who..."). The feeling of belonging is the product of this ongoing construction work.
Example: "Our 'tight-knit' downtown wasn't fate. It was built via the Theory of Constructed Communities: a farmers' market organized by a few retirees, a 'First Friday' art walk championed by gallery owners, and a neighborhood watch that turned into a block party. The 'community' was a project. When the main builders moved away, the construction stopped, and the feeling dissolved, proving it wasn't in the bricks but in the doing."
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
Get the Theory of Constructed Communities mug.A more ideologically specific and radical institution focused on the theories of Marx, Engels, Lenin, and later thinkers, with the explicit aim of preparing cadres for revolutionary struggle and the construction of a communist society. Education is rigorous, dialectical, and combines theory with practical organizing skills. It is unapologetically partisan, seeing education as a key front in the class war.
Foundation for Communist Education Example: The foundation's flagship program could be a clandestine, intensive "Cadre School," where students live communally, studying Capital by day and practicing digital security, community defense, and agitational propaganda techniques by night, viewing themselves as future architects of a revolution.
by Dumu The Void February 5, 2026
Get the Foundation for Communist Education mug.A sociological framework that distinguishes communities based on the source of their cohesion. A Concrete Community is bound by direct, tangible, ongoing interaction—a village, a workplace, a neighborhood. An Imaginary Community (building on Benedict Anderson's "imagined community") is bound by a shared idea in the minds of its members, despite little or no personal contact—a nation, a diaspora, fans of a global franchise. The theory examines how the "imagined" can generate very concrete feelings of belonging, obligation, and even sacrifice.
Theory of Concrete and Imaginary Communities Example: Your apartment building residents' association is a Concrete Community; you know your neighbors, argue over garbage, and share a physical space. Your identity as an "American" or a "Bitcoin maximalist" is membership in an Imaginary Community. You'll never meet most fellow members, but you feel a powerful, abstract kinship that can influence your politics, risk tolerance, and sense of self, proving the "imagined" is a potent social force.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 6, 2026
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