[blind-democracy] Re: [blind-democracy] RE: [blind-democracy] Re: [blind-democracy] Ocasio-Cortez says ‘glam’ can improve your politics

  • From: "Andy Baracco" <wq6r@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 19 Sep 2020 16:43:45 -0700

I don't think that she is necessarily a socialist, but she wants her party to win the election, and the far left wing of the party is driving the train.

Andy

----- Original Message ----- From: "Miriam Vieni" <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, September 19, 2020 4:22 PM
Subject: [blind-democracy] RE: [blind-democracy] Re: [blind-democracy] Ocasio-Cortez says ‘glam’ can improve your politics


Andy, you're not suggesting that Pelosi is a socialist, are you? If you are, than you must be a little bit confused.

Miriam

-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of Andy Baracco
Sent: Saturday, September 19, 2020 6:10 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: [blind-democracy] Ocasio-Cortez says ‘glam’ can improve your politics

Well, that the problem with socialists, they can always find a way to bend definitions to suit themselves. When you couldn't get a haircut in CA, Pelosi found a way to get one. After all, she's a big shot politician.

Andy

----- Original Message -----
From: "Roger Loran Bailey (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)"
<dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "blind-democracy" <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, September 19, 2020 8:04 AM
Subject: [blind-democracy] Ocasio-Cortez says ‘glam’ can improve your politics


Ocasio-Cortez says ‘glam’ can improve your politics
https://themilitant.com/2020/09/19/ocasio-cortez-says-glam-can-improve
-your-politics/
BY JANET POST
Vol. 84/No. 38
September 28, 2020
Women coal miners from U.S. visit British coalfields in 1987, to learn
about miners’ resistance. As millions of jobs are erased today and
wages and working conditions come under attack, the bosses of the
cosmetics industry come in to try and boost profits off women’s insecurities.
MILITANT/NORTON SANDLER
Women coal miners from U.S. visit British coalfields in 1987, to learn
about miners’ resistance. As millions of jobs are erased today and
wages and working conditions come under attack, the bosses of the
cosmetics industry come in to try and boost profits off women’s insecurities.
“If I’m going to spend an hour in the morning doing my glam … it’s
because I feel like it. … My body, my choice!” U.S. Congresswoman
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says, describing her daily beauty regimen in
a recent film made by Vogue magazine and shown on YouTube. Some 2
million people have watched.

“There’s this really false idea that if you care about makeup or if
your interests are in beauty and fashion, that that’s somehow
frivolous,” she says. “But I actually think these are some of the most
substantive decisions that we make — and we make them every morning.”

Ocasio-Cortez is a member of Democratic Socialists of America and a
Democratic Party politician elected largely by middle-class
professionals in New York in 2018. She promotes anti-working-class
big-government “socialist” reforms that would maintain the capitalist
system. Here she is promoting the profit-driven “beauty” industry —
cosmetic companies, magazines like Vogue and other operations that
rake in billions of dollars. Like Ocasio-Cortez, they present their
products as the answer to women’s insecurities.

The congresswoman has been promoting her “glam” cosmetics routine in a
step-by-step “Beauty Secrets” online tutorial — applying layers of
makeup while discussing her reformist politics. Ocasio-Cortez ends the
session saying, “Let’s go seize the day and fight the power!”

Some 6.9 million women have been tossed out of the workforce since
February, as workers have borne the brunt of the government shutdowns
of production and trade imposed after the onset of the coronavirus outbreak.
Women make up a large majority of workers in child care, clothing
stores, hotels and restaurants that have been shuttered.

Cosmetics industry bosses are looking for ways to rebuild sales that
have shrunk during the crisis. Estee Lauder reported sales fell by 32%
from April to June and said they will cut between 1,500 and 2,000 jobs.

Cosmetics and exploitation of women
The fetishism of cosmetics under capitalism is nothing new. In the
1950s, a debate on the question of the use of cosmetics and its
connection to class relations, women’s oppression and the struggles of
working people unfolded in the pages of the Militant. In 1954, editor
Joe Hansen published an expose of the cosmetics industry and how it
profits off undermining women’s self-confidence. One reader wrote to
complain that his article was an affront to the right of working-class
women to strive for “some loveliness and beauty in their lives.”

This discussion is just as relevant — and fascinating — today. It is
reprinted in Cosmetics, Fashions, and the Exploitation of Women by
Hansen, Evelyn Reed, and Mary-Alice Waters, leaders past and present
of the Socialist Workers Party. “Concealed behind the debate,” Reed
explained in the book, is “a question of class struggle and class ideology.”

“What we have in cosmetics is a fetish, a particular fetish in the
general fetishism that exists in the world of commodities,” wrote
Hansen. “The special power that cosmetics have derives from the fact
that in addition to economic relations, sexual relations attach to
them. That is the real source of the ‘beauty’ both men and women see in cosmetics.”

Working people are inundated by constant advertising, pressuring them
to buy these and other commodities. “Our task, therefore, is to expose
both the capitalist system as the source of these evils and its
massive propaganda machine which tells women that the road to a
successful life and love is through the purchase of things,” Reed
says. “To condone or accept capitalist standards in any field — from
politics to cosmetics — is to prop up and perpetuate this ruthless
profit system and its continued victimization of women.”

When we defend the right of women to use cosmetics “without clearly
distinguishing between such a right and the capitalist social
compulsion to use them,” Reed says, we fall into the trap of ruling-class propaganda.

In the 2010 preface to the Spanish-language edition of the book,
Waters writes that Reed “explained how and why ever-changing standards of ‘beauty’
and ‘fashion’ imposed on women — and men — are integral to the
perpetuation of women’s oppression. How millennia ago, as private
property and class society emerged through bloody struggle, women were
reduced to a form of property. They became ‘the second sex.’”

Waters says that since the 1954 debate, “the pressure to be ‘fashionable — that is to be ‘employable’ and attractive to a potential spouse has penetrated even more deeply into the working class.” But, as Reed points out, that “does not mean that we must accept these edicts and compulsions complacently or without protest.”

Reed says that the fight for women’s emancipation is critical,
explaining, “The class struggle is a movement of opposition, not
adaptation, and this holds true not only of the workers in the plants,
but of the women as well, both workers and housewives.”

This is the exact opposite of what Ocasio-Cortez with her “glam” is
doing today.


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--
___

Robert G. Ingersoll
“Progress is born of doubt and inquiry. The Church never doubts, never
inquires. To doubt is heresy, to inquire is to admit that you do not
know—the Church does neither.”
― Robert G. Ingersoll,







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