If you want to defend the modest claim that colonial modernity hardened and formalized older identity patterns and built a state machinery around them, I’m not fighting you.
And what exactly makes Sudan different then? The scale? The tools? The region? The reason? Come on man. The point was never that the Holocaust is some entrance exam. The point is that the Holocaust shows the modern structure where identity is treated as fixed and elimination is justified inside that framework. Sudan is working off that same logic today. That is why I brought it up. You keep acting like I am saying nothing counts unless it looks exactly like 1940s Europe. I am not. People gave examples and I did not say “it doesn’t count.” I explained why those situations were different. You just keep adding arguments I never made bruh.
In a lot of premodern systems, violence absolutely was about control and rebellion, but there were also identities treated as permanently tainted or inferior in exactly the way you say “did not exist.” Caste hierarchies, slave lineages, “stained blood” regimes like limpieza de sangre in Iberia, despised outcast groups whose status followed descent for generations, all of those involved people being born into a category that was, in practice, extremely hard to escape and carried collective stigma regardless of individual loyalty. Were there margins and loopholes? Of course. But that mix of inherited stigma plus limited, messy mobility is precisely what we see later too.
Here’s where I need to be clear, because you keep attributing positions to me that I never stated. I never denied identity existed in ancient times. I never denied ancient violence was brutal. I never claimed Europeans invented violence. I never said Sudanese groups lack agency. I never said ancient systems were peaceful or morally superior. I never claimed ancient people didn’t kill entire communities. I never said ancient identity didn’t matter. And I definitely never said outcomes could not look similar. What I said, consistently, is that ancient identity was situational and flexible, whereas the identity logic driving modern ethnic cleansing is fixed, racialized, and structured by a modern state order. You keep responding to arguments I never made, twisting my words into a version of my position that exists only in your shit reinterpretation. I’m absolutely done talking to people who keep adding unnecessary nonsense to the discussion. I’d rather go touch grass.
Here’s where I need to be clear, because you keep attributing positions to me that I never stated. I never denied identity existed in ancient times. I never denied ancient violence was brutal. I never claimed Europeans invented violence. I never said Sudanese groups lack agency. I never said ancient systems were peaceful or morally superior. I never claimed ancient people didn’t kill entire communities. I never said ancient identity didn’t matter. And I definitely never said outcomes could not look similar. What I said, consistently, is that ancient identity was situational and flexible, whereas the identity logic driving modern ethnic cleansing is fixed, racialized, and structured by a modern state order. You keep responding to arguments I never made, twisting my words into a version of my position that exists only in your shit reinterpretation. I’m absolutely done talking to people who keep adding unnecessary nonsense to the discussion. I’d rather go touch grass.
Most of what you just listed are claims I never attributed to you in the first place. I’ve never said you denied identity existed in antiquity, or that you said Europeans invented violence, or that you called Sudanese actors puppets, or that you thought ancient systems were peaceful. Those are strawmen you’re knocking down for free.
What I have pointed to, every time, are your own stronger formulations. You wrote: “No I’m treating fixed identity as something that did not exist before colonial modernity.” You wrote that the kind of inescapable identity you care about “simply did not operate the same way in the ancient world.” You wrote that ethnic cleansing is “a modern and European thing,” and that the logic Sudan is using “did not exist in antiquity.” And you’ve repeatedly summarized your distinction as “ancient identity was situational, modern identity in these conflicts is treated as fixed.”
If all you meant was the modest claim you tuck into the last sentence here, that modern ethnic cleansing is fixed, racialized, and structured by a modern state order in a way ancient systems generally weren’t we wouldn’t be arguing. I’ve said more than once that colonial modernity hardened and formalized older identity patterns and built a state machinery around them. Where we disagree is on the extra weight you keep putting on “did not exist before colonial modernity” and “modern and European thing.” That goes beyond “different structure and tools” into “different kind of phenomenon,” and once you say that out loud, it’s fair game for people to push back.
You’re free to go touch grass and leave it there. But you don’t get to walk away saying the only problem was that I kept inventing positions for you. I’ve been quoting your own words and arguing with the implications of those, not with the list of denials you just wrote down.
NHC
And how does any of that relate to the ethnic cleansing in Sudan?
Caste systems and inherited stigma, are oppressive, but they are not examples of groups being targeted for eradication because their identity is defined as permanently unchangeable. Identity in those systems was harsh, but it was still possible to move, convert, intermarry, or be absorbed depending on context. That is not the same logic as modern ethnic cleansing.
The question I’m asking is simple:
Where in premodern history do we see a state or militia trying to kill an entire population because their identity is treated as fixed and inescapable? That is what is happening in Sudan today. That is what happened in the Holocaust. Ancient caste stigma is not the same thing, and it did not operate on that kind of eliminationist identity logic.
I’m not going “beyond different structures and tools” by pointing out where the modern identity framework comes from. You can’t talk about fixed, inescapable identity categories operating inside a modern state without acknowledging the historical processes that created those categories in the first place. Who built the census systems, the racial classifications, the border regimes, the colonial administrative identities, and the bureaucratic machinery that the modern Sudanese state inherited? Those structures didn’t fall out of the sky. They were produced through colonial modernity, and the current actors are using them with full agency
You're focusing on outcomes rather than the identity logic behind them. The Holocaust absolutely treated identity as fixed and inescapable. That is exactly what the Nuremberg racial laws did: they made Jewishness a hereditary and permanent category that no amount of conversion, assimilation, or loyalty could change. People survived because the Nazis lost the war, not because the ideology allowed mobility or escape. Survival does not negate ideological intent.![]()
And this is where the asymmetry creeps in. When you talk about the Holocaust or Sudan, you say, ignore the fact that some people survived or were absorbed, look at the intent to destroy a group whose identity is treated as fixed. But the moment someone points to premodern campaigns that look similar at the level of intent and targeting, you flip around and say, since some people were absorbed, enslaved, or folded into the conqueror’s society, it doesn’t count as the same identity logic, it’s “just” conquest or stigma. You’re happy to read modern cases by their ideology even when outcomes are messy, but you refuse to read older cases the same way.
Historians of Rome, Persia, and imperial China all describe conquest plus incorporation as a standard pattern: conquered peoples could be absorbed, given graded citizenship, or Sinicized if they submitted. Assimilation was a built-in imperial strategy, not only a desperate side effect of survival. By contrast, Nazi racial law explicitly defined Jewish identity as hereditary and inescapable and rejected assimilation as a solution. That’s the difference I’m talking about when I say ancient identity systems were situational and modern ones, like the Holocaust or Sudan’s current ethnic cleansing, treat identity as fixed & inescapable.
Quote were I claimed anything was soft or harmless or STFU about it.in some soft, harmless sense
The fact that some were upgraded to “citizen” or “Sinicized” is not evidence that the underlying identity logic was fluid, it’s evidence that the conqueror reserved the right to decide who was killable, who was enslaveable, and who was convertible.
You keep trying to fold everything into one “identity logic” so you can claim the ancient and modern cases are basically the same, but that is not what the historical record shows. Ancient empires absolutely had categories, hierarchies and brutal conquest. None of that is in dispute. What I am talking about is how identity functioned, not whether the violence was harsh.
In ancient systems, identity was not a sealed category. Rome, Persia and China did not treat conquered groups as biologically unchangeable. People shifted categories through marriage, service, language, adoption, class mobility or allegiance. Even when the violence was extreme, the identity boundary itself was not locked. The whole reason assimilation existed as a built-in imperial strategy was because identity was a thing you could move between.
Modern ethnic cleansing operates differently. It treats identity as fixed and non-negotiable. You cannot marry out, convert out or “earn” your way out of the target category. You are marked because you are defined as something permanent. That is the shift I am pointing to, and that shift required the modern state apparatus and the racialized identity categories that come with it. Sudan today fits that pattern: groups are being targeted because their identity is treated as inherited and inescapable. That is not how ancient systems worked.
You keep collapsing intent, method and identity logic into a single bucket so you can claim there is no distinction. But the distinction does not disappear just because you want to frame every empire as using the exact same identity model. Ancient systems combined elimination, absorption and conversion because the boundaries were not rigid. Modern ethnic cleansing uses fixed categories defined by the state, and the violence enforces those categories. That is not “the same structure with different paperwork.” It is a different identity framework entirely.
That is the point you keep sidestepping.
Quote were I claimed anything was soft or harmless or STFU about it.
The fact that ancient systems had assimilation built into them, while modern systems involved in ethnic cleansing and genocide do not, is exactly the difference I’m pointing out.![]()
Right, big empires absolutely used assimilation as strategy and had ways for some people to move “up” over time. But that doesn’t mean they had no serious version of fixed, inherited identity.
“Soft, harmless” was my description of how narrow your revised claim is, not a quote from you.
I never said ancient societies didn’t have inherited identity. I said they didn’t have anything like the modern system, where identity is treated as fixed, inescapable, and enforced by a state apparatus. That’s the difference you keep flattening, and it’s the only point I’ve been making the entire time.
You keep cherry-picking isolated phrases and turning them into claims I never made. Every time I clarify what I actually said, you sidestep it and go right back to “well, that’s not what you wrote.” I don’t care what you imagined I meant. Respond to the argument I actually made.
Those aren’t “isolated phrases,” they’re the spine of your position. They go beyond “modern systems add a state apparatus” to “this kind of fixed, inescapable identity didn’t exist before colonial modernity and that’s why ethnic cleansing is a modern and European thing.” You can’t now say your “only point” was about the apparatus when you explicitly framed the identity logic itself as something that “did not exist” in earlier periods.