Political Ideology Catgirls Ep. 15

This is the first of what's going to be a 12 or so episode story arc all about Nazbol.

I don't think I can regularly make two a month. I'll post them on the first of every month and maybe sometimes another on the fifteenth as a bonus.

Based on these two pictures. Thanks to user for inspiring this by making the second picture.

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bump

I kek'd, I think I prefer the idea of peddling the comic with the unfinished Nazbol explanation, since one is pretty much never given.

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This.

Good job OP. I'm proud of you.

did it

I got you fam

Yeah, the joke is that Rodina says the same thing no matter what you put there. Asking to fill it in was only rhetorical, I didn't specifically want anyone to do it, though they can.

I would be interested to see an unironic nazbol actually try (if such a thing exists)

Dumb question: Why does Rodina ask Nazbol-catgirl what happened to Rodina?

tfw your internet is so slow that this takes years to load

It is said in the comic. "Rodina" means homeland, so she asks Nazbolcat what happened to the homeland.

have a pallette cleanser anyways

Why is this Rodina so much cuter than the rodent one?

what if i like them both and wish mommy and daddy would stop fighting over something so silly

Y'know, I've wanted to complete this, but we still don't have enough non-lewd Rodina art.

There is no reason because you are wrong

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This is horribadorable.

>This is the first of what's going to be a 12 or so episode story arc all about Nazbol.
Please don't. I don't think Nazbols have enough in them that could works for a story arc, and catgirl comics work better for self-contained short gag thingies.

I was just kidding. It'll actually be 24 episodes long.


It's really not socialist though. I did research for making this comic and the most socialist things about Nazbols I could find were the aesthetic and the fact that S_trasserists frequently misidentify themselves as Nazbol.

It's literally just tankieism with a more realistic view about what the USSR was actually like.

It's that too, but Nazbol is too inconsistent to be anything exactly. The only common strand I could find is radical anti-liberalism. Maybe it could be called a real ideology in Russia in the 1990s, but since then there are too many people calling themselves Nazbol with divergent ideas to pin it down. People who like Limonov and those who like Dugin are both trying to claim Nazbol for themselves, besides all the others too, but they disagree on too much and you can't go back to some writing saying exactly what Nazbol is. I came to the conclusion that Nazbol is only an aesthetic and not a political ideology at all.