I have followed your blog for w good amount of time and as a person from the lower class (under poverty line) I really admire your blog and the attention you bring to classism. I was wondering, however, what you think about how to solve the issue of classism? Specifically, what economic system do u think would get rid of, or minimize, classism?
We’ve talked about it before (we’re all leftists of one kind or another) but to continue off the ask about the middle class, I find it interesting that the ‘middle class’ has become such a depoliticized thing, associated with old manufacturing industry and the rise of the office rather than political struggles. I was freaking livid a year ago when Obama said something to the tune of “Our middle class came from manufacturing and that’s not there anymore”.
Because there’s nothing inherently middle class about steel welding, or building cars, or any other manufacturing job. During the early 20th century a hundred and ninety (mostly Eastern European migrant) workers died in the steel works in Appalachia alone, and they were paid poorly if they weren’t paid in company scrip. The transformation of manufacturing into a ‘middle class’ career path didn’t come from something inherent in iron but from political struggles, led almost entirely by the left (and in steel and auto industry by the out-and-out Communist CIO) towards turning those careers into something that could support a family. And the ambition to reignite that struggle is there, and you can see in strikes for living wages in Walmart and McDonalds workers that people are fighting for it. I feel like we need to coordinate more because social media means that these struggles get a couple weeks of focus at best by the broader public but it’s happening, now. And the only way to ‘solve’ classism is through economic and political struggle.
Mod R
I’d also like to point out that getting rid of classism isn’t really the end goal— it’s getting rid of classes entirely. The issue here isn’t “the people on the top should be nice to the people on the bottom,” it’s that there shouldn’t be a top and a bottom. Capitalism and the class system, by definition, require that some portion of the population produce labour that is devalued, that is compensated very little or not at all—that the results of their labour are taken from them, and that their livelihood is constantly at risk. Capitalism is first and foremost a means of artificially creating marginalized populations in order to extract labour from them—just like sexism, racism, etc.
This ties into what Mod R is saying: political struggle is the only way to end this system. There is no way that any kind of equality can exist while this system is in place.
-Najia
Thank the labor movement for: 8-hr work days; vacation and sick days; health care, etc
This post have five notes: this is why the working class can’t have nice things.
biggest fast food strike yet…is happening across the country today…workers in 60 cities…walked out of their fast food (and, in some cases, retail) jobs. The workers are calling for a living wage of $15 an hour and for the right to form a union without intimidation or retaliation…In every strike, workers cite a simple fact: They cannot live on the $7.25 or $8 they are paid, especially with unpredictable part-time schedules that make their paychecks vary wildly from week to week…
more.
They’re crazy if they believe they’re gonna get that.
They're crazy if they think they shouldn't get that.