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Kampfhelikopter

A popular german gender, often used by men.
It roughly translates to "fighting-helicopter".
The pronouns are unknown.
I identify as a Kampfhelikopter
by Username1511 November 30, 2023
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kampfzwerg

A small person who always has aggression problems
Coco=kampfzwerg
by Kjcccc February 15, 2024
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kampfzwerg

combat dwarf. A small person who has aggressive problems. A angry dwarf.
The person shouting must’ve been a kampfzwerg.
by Aka.ss7 February 20, 2024
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Kampfing

Reading Mein Kampf in a crowded form of public transit, such as a metro or plane
He got kicked off the plane for Kampfing
by Z-Dict July 7, 2024
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Kampfism

A variant of Boghossianism-Lindsayism-Pluckroseism emerging from the "Feminist Mein Kampf" incident, where the core tactic is changing words to subvert meaning—and then using the acceptance of the resulting text as proof that a field is intellectually bankrupt. Kampfism is not limited to any particular field or political position; it can be deployed against anyone, anywhere, by anyone. The technique is simple: take a text, replace key terms with their opposites or with politically charged substitutions, and submit it to journals, blogs, or publications associated with the target group. If accepted, declare victory: the field is exposed, the ideology is hollow, the critics were right. The classic example involved replacing "National-Socialism" with "Israel" and "Jews" with "Hamas" and submitting to Zionist publications. But Kampfism is infinitely adaptable: replace "white supremacy" with "cultural preservation" and submit to conservative magazines; replace "capitalism" with "freedom" and submit to libertarian journals. The point is not to engage with ideas but to demonstrate that with enough word-substitution, any text can be made acceptable to any audience—and that this proves something about the audience, not the text.
Example: "He took a passage from a Marxist tract, replaced 'workers' with 'entrepreneurs' and 'capital' with 'opportunity,' and submitted it to a libertarian magazine. When they accepted it, he declared Kampfism victorious: libertarianism was just Marxism with different words. His critics pointed out that this proved nothing about libertarian ideas, only about editorial sloppiness. But Kampfism had done its work: sowing doubt, provoking outrage, generating content."
by Abzugal March 8, 2026
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Kampf Bias

A version of the Boghossian-Lindsay-Pluckrose Bias emerging from the "Feminist Mein Kampf" incident, where the existence of a successful word-substitution hoax is used to dismiss entire fields, ideologies, or publications as intellectually bankrupt. Kampf Bias assumes that because a journal or blog accepted a text with politically charged word substitutions, the entire enterprise it represents is fraudulent. A Zionist publication accepting a passage originally from Mein Kampf (with names changed) proves that Zionism is Nazism. A feminist journal accepting a passage with gender terms swapped proves that feminism is intellectually empty. A conservative magazine accepting a passage with political terms substituted proves that conservatism is just a rebranding of its opposite. Kampf Bias ignores that such hoaxes reveal weaknesses in editorial processes, not the worthlessness of entire fields; that acceptance reflects the judgment of a few editors, not the validity of an entire tradition; and that the hoax itself is a performance, not a proof. But for those who want to dismiss without engaging, Kampf Bias provides perfect cover: one hoax, one acceptance, and an entire domain of inquiry can be written off forever.
Example: "He'd never read a word of feminist theory, but he'd heard about the Mein Kampf hoax. Kampf Bias meant that was enough: if a feminist journal could be fooled by a word-substitution trick, feminism itself was fraudulent. He never considered that the hoax revealed editorial failure, not intellectual bankruptcy; that one acceptance didn't invalidate decades of scholarship; that his dismissal was itself a form of bias. Kampf Bias had given him permission to stop thinking, and he took it gladly."
by Abzugal March 8, 2026
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Mein Kampf

I think it's some stupid Lego game or smth I dunno I don't play Tetris.
guy 1: Hallo Bruder, möchtest du ein bisschen Mein Kampf spielen?

guy 2: Ja Bruder Mein Kampf ist mein Lieblingsspiel
by Eyyyyyyyylmao July 18, 2021
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