Skip to main content

PJAZ (Pro Jew Anti Zionist)

One who is whilst pro Jewish state yet against the continuation of expansion at the expense of the dispossessed in that cause and the disregard for the human right of other
Whilst pro Israel and the cause of Jewish people, I consider myself PJAZ (Pro Jew Anti Zionist)as am wholeheartedly against the dispossession of others to that end
by Mr Consent January 25, 2025
mugGet the PJAZ (Pro Jew Anti Zionist) mug.
An institution that inverts the typical Western memorialization of communism's victims. It documents those killed, persecuted, or whose progressive social projects were destroyed by anti-communist violence: victims of US-backed right-wing dictatorships in Latin America and Asia, victims of the Red Scares and blacklisting, and casualties of wars (like in Korea and Vietnam) framed as necessary to "contain" communism. It argues anti-communism has been a more prolific and less-accounted-for killer.
Victims of Anti-communism Memorial Foundation Example: The foundation's archive would highlight figures like Salvador Allende of Chile or Patrice Lumumba of the Congo, not as failed leaders, but as primary Victims of Anti-communism, assassinated with Western complicity to crush socialist experiments, with the subsequent dictatorships producing millions more victims in their wake.
by Dumu The Void February 5, 2026
mugGet the Victims of Anti-communism Memorial Foundation mug.
The direct argument that the persecution, violence, and human rights abuses committed in the name of combating communism—such as coups, death squads, blacklisting, and repression—were necessary, righteous, or defensive actions. It frames victims (union organizers, leftist intellectuals, peasant movements) as legitimate threats to national security, social order, or "the free world," whose suffering was a justified cost of preventing a greater totalitarian evil.
Justification against Victims of Anti-communism Example: Defending the CIA-backed overthrow of a democratically elected socialist president by arguing, "We had to stop a communist domino effect in the hemisphere. Sure, the dictatorship that followed was harsh, but it prevented a Cuba-style regime and saved the country from total Marxist tyranny." This justification explicitly endorses the violent suppression of a political alternative as a moral and strategic imperative.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
mugGet the Justification against Victims of Anti-communism mug.
The cognitive process of explaining away the human cost of anti-communist campaigns by appealing to the geopolitical anxieties, ideological fervor, or "complexities" of the Cold War (or its modern equivalents). It treats state violence as an understandable, if regrettable, overreaction to a perceived existential threat, removing active moral responsibility by citing the pressures of the era or the provocations of the targeted groups.
Rationalization against Victims of Anti-communism Example: A historian arguing, "While the Vietnam War led to immense civilian casualties, it must be understood within the context of the U.S. policy of containment, which was a rational response to monolithic communist expansion as perceived at the time." This rationalization does not celebrate the harm but drains it of its human horror, transforming burned villages and massacres into abstract outcomes of a "rational" strategic doctrine.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
mugGet the Rationalization against Victims of Anti-communism mug.
The explicit argument that the persecution, violence, and human rights abuses inflicted upon individuals, movements, or nations labeled as "communist" or "socialist" were necessary, righteous, and heroic acts in defense of freedom, civilization, or national security. It frames victims—from political dissidents and labor organizers to entire populations subjected to coups or proxy wars—as legitimate targets in an existential struggle where any measure is permissible. Harm is not denied but celebrated as the cost of victory.
Justification against Victims of Anti-communism Example: Defending the CIA-backed coup in Chile that overthrew Salvador Allende, resulting in thousands of deaths and disappearances under Pinochet, by stating, "We had to stop the spread of a Soviet beachhead in our hemisphere. Sometimes you have to get your hands dirty to save democracy." This justification accepts the atrocity as a regrettable but morally necessary surgical strike in the Cold War, framing victims as collateral damage in a noble crusade.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
mugGet the Justification against Victims of Anti-communism mug.
The cognitive process of explaining away the suffering caused by anti-communist purges, wars, and repression by embedding it within a broader, sanitized narrative of global conflict or historical inevitability. It uses concepts like "containment policy," "domino theory," or the binary of "the Free World vs. Totalitarianism" to create a framework where specific acts of violence lose their moral weight and become logical moves on a geopolitical chessboard.
Rationalization against Victims of Anti-communism Example: A historian arguing, "While the Vietnam War led to immense civilian casualties, it must be understood within the context of the U.S. policy of containment, which was a rational response to monolithic communist expansion as perceived at the time." This rationalization does not celebrate the harm but drains it of its human horror, transforming burned villages and massacres into abstract outcomes of a "rational" strategic doctrine.
by Abzugal February 8, 2026
mugGet the Rationalization against Victims of Anti-communism mug.

Negative Mass and Anti-Mass

Hypothetical forms of matter that would respond to forces in reverse—push them, and they accelerate toward you; pull them, and they accelerate away. Negative mass would violate everything we know about physics while enabling reactionless drives, warp bubbles, and perpetual motion machines. Anti-mass is even stranger, potentially canceling out normal mass and creating all sorts of paradoxical effects. Neither has ever been observed, and most physicists suspect they're impossible. But the math allows them, and where math leads, dreamers follow. Negative mass and anti-mass are the ultimate engineering fantasy: materials that would let you build starships, time machines, and devices that make your commute actually enjoyable. They're also the ultimate scientific cautionary tale: just because you can write an equation doesn't mean you can build a thing.
Negative Mass and Anti-Mass Example: "He claimed to have synthesized negative mass in his garage, proving it with a video of something moving the wrong way when pushed. The video was blurry, the methodology was absent, and the object looked suspiciously like a balloon on a string. Negative mass remained in the realm of theory, where it could be as wonderful as imagination allowed."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
mugGet the Negative Mass and Anti-Mass mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email