The problem with that mindset is that you will never win at violence with nazis. They are much more skilled and ruthless.
You will never be able to match them and if you try you will lose the very thing you wanted to protect.
What you need to focus on is a pragmatic action like in an RTS or game of chess. Strategic thinking.
How can you turn the tides of this Cold Civil War or at least contribute to its, desirable for us, outcome.
The current issue is that the left cannot agree what the desired outcome is and hence cannot effectively act if they cannot agree on what they want.
Right have simple agenda and thus it is simple to rally people around it. Good old times. Can there be something more straightforward?
Left have some several nebulous proposals no one quite fully understands. Of course enemy capitalised on these mistakes creating their own simple narrative what left intends to do that is clear and easily digestible therefore much more vocal and viral.
As if this wasn’t bad enough the left then proceeded to furiously engage with this false narrative trap bait.
Democrats have ~45% in spite of their actions not thanks to them. Just because conservatives are so insane that even their incompetence seems better for many
1. Violence is a Losing Game Against Nazis/Far Right
Attempting to out-violence or out-escalate hardened extremists is futile. The far right often thrives on street fights, militarized posturing, and martyrdom. Engaging them on their terms risks legitimizing their narrative (e.g., "leftist mobs") and alienating the broader public.
Alternative: Focus on asymmetric tactics—legal, cultural, and institutional strategies that undermine their influence without playing into their strengths. Examples:
Deplatforming: Removing their access to social media, financial systems, and public spaces (e.g., what worked against the Proud Boys post-January 6).
Counter-mobilization: Mass nonviolent protests (e.g., labor strikes, voting drives) that dwarf their numbers.
Intelligence and preemption: Monitoring and disrupting extremist networks (e.g., antifascist research groups like Bellingcat).
2. Strategic Thinking Like an RTS/Chess Game
The left often gets bogged down in reactive, emotional, or ideological purity battles instead of long-term strategy. The right, meanwhile, plays a patient game (e.g., Federalist Society stacking courts, decades of libertarian/religious think tanks).
Key Moves:
Localism: Focus on school boards, county elections, and state legislatures (where the right has dominated).
Narrative Control: Stop engaging with bad-faith right-wing framing (e.g., "defund the police" was a gift to the right). Craft simple, positive messages (e.g., "Healthcare for All" beats "Medicare Expansion").
Coalition Building: Prioritize shared goals (e.g., abortion rights, labor rights) over divisive internal fights. The right unites evangelicals, libertarians, and oligarchs despite contradictions; the left can unite labor, minorities, and youth.
3. The Left’s Messaging Problem
The right’s narrative is simple: "Restore traditional values/glory." The left’s messaging is often fragmented (e.g., "Abolish ICE" vs. "Immigration reform") or easily distorted (e.g., "CRT" panic).
Humor/Memes: The right dominates meme culture; the left needs its own (e.g., "Dark Brandon" worked because it was playful and resilient to backlash).
Pre-bunking: Actively define your terms before the right can (e.g., "DEI = Fairness for Everyone").
4. The Right’s Insanity is the Left’s Only Advantage
The left often wins by default (e.g., Republicans nominating unelectable extremists). But relying on this is dangerous—it’s how Hitler rose (the center-left assumed no one would vote for Nazis).
Proactive Steps:
Electoral Pragmatism: Support the least-worst viable option (e.g., mainstream Dems) while building progressive power locally.
Discrediting the Right: Amplify their extremism (e.g., Project 2025’s unpopular policies) without seeming hysterical.
Alternative Institutions: Unions, co-ops, and community networks can build left-wing power outside electoral politics.
5. Cold Civil War Dynamics
The U.S. is in a "cold" conflict where the right seeks to exploit democratic systems to end democracy (e.g., gerrymandering, voter suppression). The left must:
Play the long game: Focus on voter registration, judicial appointments, and constitutional safeguards.
Deprive the right of oxygen: Economic policies that reduce despair (e.g., student debt relief undercutting incel/white supremacist recruitment).
Final Thought:
The left’s biggest weakness isn’t policy—it’s discipline. The right marches in lockstep; the left overthinks. To win:
An individual can have a meaningful impact by focusing on consistent, strategic actions that plant progressive seeds in their community, shift narratives, and build long-term power:
1. Shift Mindsets (The Battle of Ideas)
Talk to people outside your bubble.
Most political change happens through personal relationships. Have calm, empathetic conversations with coworkers, family, or neighbors—focus on shared values (e.g., "Everyone deserves healthcare" vs. "Medicare for All").
Use the "deep canvassing" method: Ask questions, listen, and share personal stories (studies show this changes minds better than facts).
Combat disinformation passively.
Share positive progressive content (e.g., worker victories, policy successes) rather than endlessly debunking right-wing lies (which spreads them further).
Use humor/memes (e.g., "Dark Brandon," "Unionize Your Starbucks")—emotion beats logic in viral messaging.
Be a "bridge" for normies.
Avoid jargon ("abolish ICE," "ACAB")—reframe issues in accessible terms (e.g., "Accountable policing" or "Fair immigration rules").
2. Build Institutional Power
Join or support an existing group.
Local: Unions, tenant unions, mutual aid networks, DSA chapters, progressive religious groups.
Key: Consistency matters more than bursts of activism. Attend meetings, volunteer skills (writing, design, organizing).
Disrupt right-wing networks.
Support/watchdog groups (e.g., Bellingcat, Accountable Tech) that expose extremism.
Pressure platforms to deplatform hate (e.g., mass-reporting violent content).
Run for something—or help someone who does.
School boards, city councils, and state legislatures are where the right gained power. Groups like Run for Something train progressives to win locally.
3. Daily Actions (Small but Scalable)
Voter work:
Register voters (especially young people) at concerts, fairs, or campuses.
Volunteer as a poll worker (critical to combat right-wing "election fraud" narratives).
Money as a weapon:
Donate to progressive candidates in swing districts (even $5 helps).
Boycott/support businesses aligned with your values (e.g., unionized stores).
Skill-sharing:
Offer your professional skills (coding, graphic design, legal help) to grassroots groups.
4. Psychological Warfare (Against the Right)
Deny them attention.
Stop quote-tweeting Tucker Carlson or Ben Shapiro—it feeds their algorithm. Mock or ignore instead.
Starve their propaganda: Share alternatives (e.g., left-wing podcasts, Substacks).
Flip their tactics:
Use their nostalgia against them (e.g., "Real patriots tax the rich like FDR").
Co-opt their symbols (e.g., "Make America Kind Again").
5. Protect Your Mental Health
Avoid burnout. The right thrives on outrage exhaustion. Limit doomscrolling; focus on actionable wins.
Celebrate small victories. Every union formed, every voter registered weakens the far right’s grip.
Most Important Rule:
Be the "water" (persistent, adaptable, everywhere), not the "rock" (rigid, easily avoided).
The right wins by being relentless; the left must out-persist them.