http://themilitant.com/2016/8024/802420.html
The Militant (logo)
Vol. 80/No. 24 June 20, 2016
(editorial)
The political war on the working class
“Blame the Trump voter for the drop in the labor force,” declared
columnist Rex Nutting on the news site MarketWatch June 3. “Older,
uneducated whites,” he said, have disproportionately given up looking
for a job, while those with a college diploma do well. “It’s the degree,
stupid,” Nutting concluded.
“The white American underclass is in thrall to a vicious, selfish
culture whose main products are misery and used heroin needles,” sneered
Kevin Williamson in the National Review in March.
Their contempt is typical of the mounting propaganda war against the
working class, from both the left and right of capitalist politics. The
hysterical denunciations of Donald Trump are not aimed at the bourgeois
politician, but rather at the workers who’ve turned out to hear him, fed
up with “politics as usual” and the effects of capitalism’s slow-burning
world depression and non-stop wars.
There is a growing openness among workers to discuss and debate the
broadest social and political questions. This is above all what the
ruling class fears.
The bosses and their spokespeople denigrate workers, trying to convince
us not only to accept deteriorating conditions of life, but to blame
ourselves. If we don’t have a college diploma, unemployment and low pay
are what we deserve. Health problems and addictions are a consequence of
lifestyle choices resulting from our “ignorance.” And on it goes.
Such anti-working-class slanders have long been directed against workers
who are African American. Today they are also aimed at “poor Hispanics”
and “poor whites” — that is, our whole class.
This propaganda war is articulated above all by voices among the
self-designated “meritocracy,” a high-earning professional and upper
middle-class layer seeking to justify its wealth and position.
The new book Are They Rich Because They’re Smart? Class, Privilege, and
Learning Under Capitalism by Jack Barnes, national secretary of the
Socialist Workers Party, explains the rise of this meritocracy and
sharpening class inequality in the United States, and answers the
anti-working-class propaganda war of the mouthpieces for capitalism.
Above all, as Barnes explains, it is about “the battle to throw off the
self-image the rulers teach us, and to recognize that we are capable of
taking power and organizing society.” Workers will find this book a
valuable tool as we discuss and organize along that course.
Related articles:
SWP: Capitalism wastes human ability, potential
Tenn. worker: ‘We sure need something different!’
US socialist candidate joins with striking workers in Quebec visit
Communist League in Australia: Workers need to organize independent of
bosses
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