Michael Parenti writes: "The moneyed class in this country has been doing class warfare on our heads and on those who came before us for more than two centuries. But when we point that out, when we use terms like class warfare, class conflict, and class struggle to describe the system of exploitation we live under - our indictments are dismissed out of hand and denounced as Marxist ideological ranting, foul and divisive."
A demonstrator from the Occupy Wall Street campaign stands with a dollar taped over his mouth in Liberty Plaza near the financial district on Friday, 09/30/11. (photo: Reuters)
Class Warfare Indeed
03 October 11
ver the last two decades or more, Republicans have been denouncing as "class warfare" any attempt at criticizing and restraining their mean one-sided system of capitalist financial expropriation.
The moneyed class in this country has been doing class warfare on our heads and on those who came before us for more than two centuries. But when we point that out, when we use terms like class warfare, class conflict, and class struggle to describe the system of exploitation we live under - our indictments are dismissed out of hand and denounced as Marxist ideological ranting, foul and divisive.
Amanda Gilson put it perfectly in a posting on my Facebook page: "[T]he concept of 'class warfare' has been hi-jacked by the wrong class (the ruling class). The wealthy have been waging war silently and inconspicuously against the middle and the poor classes for decades! Now that the middle and poor classes have begun to fight back, it is like the rich want to try to call foul---the game was fine when they were the only ones playing it."
The reactionary rich always denied that they themselves were involved in class warfare. Indeed, they insisted no such thing existed in our harmonious prosperous society. Those of us who kept talking about the realities of class inequality and class exploitation were readily denounced. Such concepts were not tolerated and were readily dismissed as ideologically inspired.
In fact, class itself is something of a verboten word. In the mainstream media, in political life, and in academia, the use of the term "class" has long been frowned upon. You make your listeners uneasy ("Is the speaker a Marxist?"). If you talk about class exploitation and class inequity, you will likely not get far in your journalism career or in political life or in academia (especially in fields like political science and economics).
So instead of working class, we hear of "working families" or "blue collar" and "white collar employees". Instead of lower class we hear of "inner city poor" and "low-income elderly." Instead of the capitalist owning class, we hear of the "more affluent" or the "upper quintile." Don't take my word for it, just listen to any Obama speech. (Often Obama settles for an even more cozy and muted term: "folks," as in "Folks are strugglin' along.")
"Class" is used with impunity and approval only when it has that magic neutralizing adjective "middle" attached to it. The middle class is an acceptable mainstream concept because it usually does not sharpen our sense of class struggle; it dilutes and muffles critical consciousness. If everyone in America is middle class (except for a few superrich and a minor stratum of very poor), there is little room for any awareness of class conflict.
That may be changing with the Great Recession and the sharp decline of the middle class (and decline of the more solvent elements of the working class). The concept of middle class no longer serves as a neutralizer when it itself becomes an undeniable victim.
"Class" is also allowed to be used with limited application when it is part of the holy trinity of race, gender, and class. Used in that way, it is reduced to a demographic trait related to life style, education level, and income level. In forty years of what was called "identity politics" and "culture wars," class as a concept was reduced to something of secondary importance. All sorts of "leftists" told us how we needed to think anew, how we had to realize that class was not as important as race or gender or culture.
I was one of those who thought these various concepts should not be treated as being mutually exclusive of each other. In fact, they are interactive. Thus racism and sexism have always proved functional for class oppression. Furthermore, I pointed out (and continue to point out), that in the social sciences and among those who see class as just another component of "identity politics," the concept of class is treated as nothing more than a set of demographic traits. But there is another definition of class that has been overlooked.
Class should also be seen as a social relationship relating to wealth and social power, involving a conflict of material interests between those who own and those who work for those who own. Without benefit of reason or research, this latter usage of class is often dismissed out of hand as "Marxist." The narrow reductionist mainstream view of class keeps us from seeing the extent of economic inequality and the severity of class exploitation in society, allowing many researchers and political commentators to mistakenly assume that U.S. society has no deep class divisions or class conflicts of interest.
We should think of class not primarily as a demographic trait but as a relationship to the means of production, as a relationship to power and wealth. Class as in slaveholder and slave, lord and serf, capitalist and worker. Class as in class conflict and class warfare.
And who knows, once we learn to talk about the realities of class power, we are on our way to talking critically about capitalism, another verboten word in the public realm. And once we start a critical discourse about capitalism, we will be vastly better prepared to act against it and defend our own democratic and communal interests.
Michael Parenti's recent books include: "God and His Demons" (Prometheus), "Contrary Notions: The Michael Parenti Reader" (City Lights); "Democracy for the Few" 9th ed. (Wadsworth); "The Assassination of Julius Caesar" (New Press), "Superpatriotism" (City Lights), and "The Culture Struggle" (Seven Stories Press). For further information, visit his website: www.michaelparenti.org.
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When you think about it, that's what most people do. They try to protect what they have. It is when they harm or take away from others that the game must begin. The question is whether the victims are willing to stand up and participate or simply roll over and take it.
Gustavo Castro, Coordinator of Otros Mundos, a small NGO based in Chiapas, clarifies the real goal:
“Enter the governor of California, saying, ‘We’re going to approve a law in which California, the fifth largest economy in the world, is obliged to reduce its CO2, so we need to buy the fresh air from the forests of the South.’ When a natural function like forest respiration becomes a product with a price, it’s easy to see who’s going to end up with control of the forests.” (Jeff Conant. “Turning the Lacandon Jungle Over to the Carbon Market”.
(http://www.zcommunications.org/turning-the-lacandon-jungle-over-to-the-carbon-market-by-jeff-conant)
Humanity can only hurtle towards oblivion unless we base our actions on the proper distinction between wealth and riches. Wealth is Abundance; Riches, based in private property and exchange value, are an abomination!
Steven Miller
nanodog2@hotmai l.com
They own the media, the means of production, the financial institutions and, to an unprecedented degree, the legislative, judicial and executive arms of government.
To think they will willingly cede any of their wealth and power is ludicrous. They are largely amoral (personified by the likes of Dick Cheney and Karl Rove) and are willing to lie, cheat, steal, and even murder to maintain their exalted status.
However, they are few and we are many.
Through unrelenting non-violent demonstrations and civil disobedience, we the many have the opportunity to regain the mantle of a free people.
Stand up and resist or bend over and comply. The choice is each of ours to make.
I suggest that they have been very cunning and clever and very short-sighted and, therefore, stupid.
Why? Because we will fight back. If they do not recognize their fundamental mistake in time and reverse course, the result will not be pleasant for anyone.
The greater issue is whether the vast majority will wake up and stop relying on the rich and powerful to do all the thinking and scheming. It is time for self-government to actually mean something. It is time for "government of the people, by the people, for the people" to mean something real.
The current corporate model is a command economic model and is a top-down hierarchy. We need a democratic model that is bottom-up participatory, one that does not hire "employees" but rather brings in new people as "owners" with a voice in operations.
One such model is the Mondragon Co-operative Corporation. Others also exist. But most co-ops that people are familiar with do not qualify because few to none of the floor level "members" are owners or make any organizational decisions.
This tactic has been used in foreign policy to proliferate threats that do not exist-in order to continue the expansion of the military/industrial complex. One can imagine the propagandists behind their bunkers creating new "'evil doers" to replace the Soviet Empire that fell in the late 80's.
Along came "terrorists" and the replacement of a "cold war" for real "hot" ones. A tragic turn of events.
On the domestic front "they" have always demonized the working man who became the middle calss with the help of labor unions. The unions were then made out to be the "evil doers" who were responsible for all those high salaries and benefits that resulted in the closing of factories and the eventuality of outsourcing.
Now the new devils are those greedy government workers..like teachers, firemen, policemen, and..yuck!civil servants! All that high pay for doing nothing but sucking up the middle class tax dollars that could go to more....military spending!
Parenti mentions the realities of "class power" and how it can lead to talking critically about capitalism. Can we change the discussion from the bottom up? Maybe the "occupy Wall Street" bunch will lead us to a new realistic national conversation.
He is, in my 'umble opinion, the closest of the top speakers on the left University-speaker and alternative radio circuit gets to pushing out in public the terms "Working Class ((actually soberly defined recently as > 62% of what's left of the US working public but you wouldn't know it, especially on PBS/NPR!).
Sadly, how many of the PBS/NPR listener "Sooo middle-class" demographic, never mind the "Owner-Media" corporate commercial captives, have ever even heard of Parenti in their delusional world, or Amy Goodman, or Chomsky, or---and so on?
The Koch Brothers sponsored Tea Party people remind me of "Democracy for the Few"'s definition of Libertarians as "right wing anarchists". More apt today than ever.
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When they accuse us of class warfare, I say "Damn right it's class warfare!" You started it, it's commenced, now let's get it on." It's classic doublespeak. They act as if - when the victims of cruel economic policies and corporate greed acknowledge an awareness of the source of their suffering and complain about it, that they - the victims, are the perpetrators of class warfare, and the avaricious beneficiaries of it all are the injured parties.
They dictate the debate when they can dictate the very definition of words and concepts. I think we lose when we go on the defensive every time they misuse and twist our language to make neutral words mean something negative, and we accept their terminology.
http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=2206382013560
The U.S. must renounce its role as an empire of capitalist rule & its accompanying imperial foreign policy. While I would prefer to see a peaceful idealogical change, I'm afraid this won't happen & the result could well be serious blowback.
PERIOD.
"The Obama administration appears to have delayed (deferred, suspended, or slowed) prosecution and civil litigation against executives of banks, mortgage companies, and other financial entities presumably until the economy recovers sufficiently so as not to interfere with that recovery.
"Do you, sir, plan to reinstitute and/or reinvigorate these deferred investigations, prosecutions, and civil litigations against financial executives and entities implicated in causing the economic collapse when the economy recovers?"
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