Thanks for posting the article, it was quite interesting.
In fundamental and strategic terms, it is necessary to choose where the weight and the essence of your efforts is going to go: into fighting the effects and the symptoms, or getting to the cause and uprooting and getting rid of that cause? And that’s why you become a revolutionary—when you realize that you have to seek the full solution to this, or else the suffering is going to continue, and get worse.
I do not like this notion of viewing one's life "strategically," as if one was a pawn to be moved on a great chessboard. This reeks of danger involving devaluing human life - individual life and meaning - and treating individuals as props in a play, to be used for the 'greater good.'
Furthermore, it seems contradictory to adopt this viewpoint when arguing all the while that one ought to reduce 'suffering.' Much suffering comes from lack of meaning and purpose in one's life. This sort of morality being espoused here does not change this suffering, but only bandages it and creates a new form of suffering - namely, the suffering externalizing one's condition into a greater framework and losing one's grounding.
- August
If we have no business with the construction of the future or with organizing it for all time, there can still be no doubt about the task confronting us at present: the ruthless criticism of the existing order, ruthless in that it will shrink neither from its own discoveries, nor from conflict with the powers that be.
- Karl Marx