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Justincade 

A social soirée consisting of the movers, shakers, and great minds of the greater Bismarck/Mandan metropolitan area, where they make plans that guide the destiny of the nation.
I got sucked off at Justincade
Justincade by SHAD Mcgrimgravy January 5, 2024

Justincade 

A social soirée where the movers, shakers, and great minds of the greater Bismarck/Mandan metropolitan area create plans that ultimately guide the destiny of nations.
I got sucked at Justincade
Justincade by SHAD Mcgrimgravy January 5, 2024

Justinian 

One of the greatest Roman emperors, wrote the corpus juris civilis, built the Hagia Sophia, and reconquered the lost provinces.
Did you hear? Emperor Justinian just liberated North Africa! The Vandal king Gelimer is going to be paraded through the streets of Constantinople today!
Justinian by Ioustinianos March 8, 2025

Justification against Victims of Capitalism

The direct argument that the harms suffered under capitalist systems—poverty, alienation, exploitation—are necessary, deserved, or noble. It frames victims as willing participants in a fair game (“they chose that job”), as beneficiaries of growth (“a rising tide lifts all boats”), or as unfortunate but acceptable casualties of progress and efficiency.
Justification against Victims of Capitalism Example: A politician arguing against a living wage by stating, “Low wages are what give young people the hunger to climb the ladder. Struggle builds character.” This justification against victims of capitalism transmutes systemic economic coercion into a moral virtue, suggesting that being underpaid is a beneficial rite of passage rather than exploitation.

Justification against Victims of Western Colonialism and Imperialism

The argument that the violence, extraction, and cultural destruction of colonialism were ultimately beneficial, necessary, or outweighed by introduced “gifts” like infrastructure, borders, or religion. It positions the victimized societies as primitive beneficiaries of Western intervention, framing conquest as salvation.
Justification against Victims of Western Colonialism and Imperialism Example: “Yes, the colonial period was harsh, but it ended tribal warfare and gave them modern states and Christianity.” This justification acknowledges harm only to immediately discount it by asserting a superior alternative was provided, framing the violence as a difficult but necessary education.

Justification against Victims of Neoliberalism

The explicit defense of policies—austerity, privatization, deregulation, financialization—that cause precarity and inequality, by arguing they create overall growth, discipline, and “flexibility.” Victims are portrayed as regrettable but necessary sacrifices to global competitiveness and fiscal responsibility.
Justification against Victims of Neoliberalism Example: “We had to privatize the water supply and raise rates to attract investment and ensure long-term efficiency. Yes, some can’t pay, but vouchers are available. The old system was unsustainable.” This justification frames a loss of a public good as a tough, responsible choice, painting victims as casualties of progress against backwardness.