• Kaffe@lemmygrad.ml
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    5 months ago

    Lenin:

    Due to settler-Imperialism, USian workers have many transitional ties to the settler-petty-bourgeoisie. The CPUSA is currently speculating on stolen land to fund their retirements, this contradiction runs deep. Inflated wages from Imperialism, to the point where very few workers are exploited for surplus-value, allow workers of oppressor and oppressed nations to speculate on land (“housing market”). Resistance from oppressed nations is suppressed with the world’s largest prison system as well as homelessness and vigilante killings. Mass Incarceration is a jobs program for herrenvolk/settlers (guard wages are into the 6 figures, guard unions are the richest and most powerful in the country). In short, Labor Aristocracy (in the flavor of Settler-Colonialism), it’s not something mainstream USian Communists are willing to talk about, because they have brought with them Revisionism into the workers movement. Also 98% of US agricultural land is owned by white-settler Kulaks.

    More readings:

    Notes on the Lower Middle Class and the Semi-Proletariat in Britain (pic)

    Lenin piece pictured and quoted in above: Marxism and Revisionism

    Amerikans: Oppressing for a Living (prisons are not chasing profits)

    A Polemic against Settler “Maoism” (I don’t agree with MIM on everything, like the PRC, but every crit here hits all flavors of USian Communism)

    Lenin attacking the Economism of the German comrades

    MIM criticizing airline unions (which hits big unions like AFL and Writers Guild in that Communists orgs should be a lot more critical of Labor Aristocratic unions)

    • Muad'Dibber@lemmygrad.ml
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      5 months ago

      Also, zak cope, especially divided world divided class.

      You can find audiobooks for both of these on youtube and torrents.

        • NikkiB@lemmygrad.ml
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          5 months ago

          I highly doubt most local libraries carry a copy of Settlers. Where are you seeing this?

          • ComradeSalad@lemmygrad.ml
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            5 months ago

            At home in Belarus, and my time traveling and living in the Northeast and West Coast of the United States. I spend a lot of time in the political science part of libraries and I see it pretty commonly. Maybe not all small local libraries will carry it, but starting from a medium sized library, to large ones, its pretty common.

            I have also never not seen Settlers in a university library, which are open to the public where I have been.

            • Xavienth@lemmygrad.ml
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              5 months ago

              I just checked my city’s library and my alma mater’s and neither have it, though at least my alma mater recognizes that it exists. But it also says there are no libraries nearby from which to request it.

              • ComradeSalad@lemmygrad.ml
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                5 months ago

                That sucks. Most of the university libraries I’ve been to have been pretty good at collecting a bunch of the more unheard of pamphlets and socialist works.

                Granted, I was in the more left leaning areas of the United States.

  • NikkiB@lemmygrad.ml
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    5 months ago

    You might want to consider World-Systems Theory as a good starting point. Workers in the imperial core do not experience the same kind of exploitation as people in the periphery. The USA is a high-income country.

    And nothing lasts forever. Nothing is necessarily so. We are in the midst of a massive global paradigm shift. Multipolarity is on the rise. Things are changing everywhere fast.

    Settlers by J Sakai is a brilliant expose of American settler-colonial culture and vital history book that attempts to answer this question, but if you decide to give it a read, I would advise you not to draw too many hard and fast conclusions about its contents. Discussions about this book get explosive because they touch on very sensitive racial tensions, and a lot of people get very ridiculous about the whole thing.

  • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    I think bourgeoisification theory is generally correct: the white American working class has largely benefited from the redistribution of superprofits from imperialism and internal colonization, and so the labor movement has stood with the military in all of its adventures and stood with the carceral system and stood for the flag etc etc. Bourgeosified workers have a material interest in maintaining capitalism, at best they might favor some social democratic reforms to help redistribute superprofits more equitably.

    I think the recent labor upsurge and (hopefully!) rise of class conscious in the US is coming from the end of the empire. White Americans are being debourgeoisified and kicked back down the class ladder into the rest of the working class, child labor laws are being rolled back, the NLRB is being defanged even further, the decline of the dominance of USD is causing painful inflation, etc etc.

    Or in other words, all is in chaos under heaven. The situation is excellent.

    • Kaffe@lemmygrad.ml
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      5 months ago

      White Americans are being debourgeoisified and kicked back down the class ladder into the rest of the working class

      Not true, the petty-bourgeoisie and semi-proletariat is always being decommissioned in one area and rebuilt in another, as such is the nature of boom-bust. Incomes for USian workers has been increasing for 4/5ths of the population since WW2. Minimum wage in the US is over twice Mexican industrial wages (and these are good union jobs). Exploitation wages (surplus-value extraction) is practically illegal for most wage work in the US (exceptions exist for undocumented and child labor in the agricultural sector, a tip when reading laws is to look for “customary hiring practices”). There is “cycling” and “shuffling” of property and access to means of production within the white “nation”, but overall it is getting richer yoy.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        Incomes have been “increasing” but when you factor in inflation they’ve been essentially flat since the 70s.

        Now this new inflation and high interest rate environment and loss of USD supremacy is actually eroding wages in relation to the cost of living. The result is white workers being debourgeoisified. Note I’m not saying they’re kicked down into a position of superexploitation. That’s not really possible, obviously, since there’s no imperial core to benefit from superexploitation of white US workers.

        Times are changing.

        I’ll also note that internal superexploitation also exists within the prison industrial complex in addition to undocumented migrant labor.

        • Kaffe@lemmygrad.ml
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          5 months ago

          Women entering workforce + tens of millions of immigrants + not counting benefits = average wage stagnating while total wealth increases.

          losing 3 dollars from 24 dollars to 21 dollars since 1970 when a good union factory job in Mexico (a tariff-free zone for the US market) is 3 dollars total, I’m suspicious in this “debourgeoisification” angle.

          • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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            5 months ago

            Women being forced into the labor force (they were already working before they had jobs!) means that the unpaid work of the reproduction of labor becomes a second job. You know why family size has declined? It’s because everyone has to work and no one can afford childcare while they’re all at work because they’re not bourgeoisified anymore!That’s a sign of the decline of the quality of life for white workers i.e. debourgeoisification.

            It’s like you think nothing has changed.

            • Kaffe@lemmygrad.ml
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              5 months ago

              Family size decreased because more households were created (i.e. people moved out sooner, less multi-generational households). USian consumption has never decreased. Women were not forced to work, work became more available to them and then at a certain point it became a necessity for white women to work for white households to stay competitive and maintain segregation, women of other backgrounds were already working wage labor. Also birthrates are declining in Imperialist nations mostly due to policies that cut down teen parenthood (increased bodily autonomy, contraceptives and sex education, more access to higher education, more things to consume as opposed to raising children).

              “afford childcare”: More and more USians do not live with family or support systems that assist in child-rearing, this is due to their ability not to. Childcare costs a lot in the US because it costs a lot to hire Americans to do anything (globally high wages!). These economic dynamics in reproductive relations are experienced broadly in all Imperialist societies. It’s a matter of class struggle that some other Imperialist states have subsidized childcare (the US does too, through tax breaks and public education, it just sucks). On a global level, it’s very privileged to pay someone to watch your kids, just because it costs a significant chunk of paychecks doesn’t mean it isn’t historically a bourgeois privilege, and less non-white women are forced to take waged domestic labor up since more jobs are available elsewhere. BTW, inflation for USD is due to a surplus of capital in the country, which is turned into novel industries (Hollywood, Malls, Amazon shopping, Silicon Valley, new cars, new guns), housing speculation, and “sin-taxes” (gambling, drugs, lootboxes). USD inflation is the result of the “Clipping Coupons” part of Imperialism.

              No legal US working relationship outside of “customary agriculture” (migrant/child exploitation) is at exploitation level wages. Minimum wage is above Chinese factory wages, you’re going to need to see people getting 2-4 dollars before regular exploitation hits. Super-exploitation is the 60 cent wages seen in Haiti.

              White men have been leaving the labor force since the 50s. Black men have been leaving too, but for different reasons, in different directions. This points to an increase in bourgeois white men.

              “Cost of living” is an obfuscation. Poor Brazilian workers do not live in Favelas because their cost of living is lower, but that their wages are tiny so they can’t afford a well constructed home:

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                5 months ago

                Okay, so I should clarify what I’m hypothesizing.

                I’m not saying that bourgeoisification has already been eliminated or that we have reached the end of superprofits and their redistribution to the US working class, I merely contend that it’s begun its decline and is stratifying into even smaller and smaller subsections of the white working class. It would also be some time before we see the effects on things like air conditioning because of the inertia from previous development. The already installed air conditioners don’t just go away - people just stop running them.

                US inflation used to be something that could be exported onto the rest of the world, but now the chickens are coming home to roost. The surplus of dollars is a poor explanation (kind of libertarian tbh), it only explains half the problem. The other side of the surplus comes from declining demand for dollars. The US sanctions regime has overreached on Russia and is now bifurcating the global economy into “countries that can trade with the US” and “everyone else” which created a boom in non-dollar trade. The high interest rate environment, too, is hurting demand for loans in US dollars as countries look for other sources of capital and deleverage themselves from US loans and debts.

                The US is still superexploiting those workers in Brazil and Mexico; US workers are not going to be living like them in the near future! Yet as worker’s struggle in Latin America brings a new pink tide we are going to see more trade in national currency, more internal development, more investment from outside the US, and ultimately less superexploitation.

                This is a trend, that’s all I’m saying.

                • Kaffe@lemmygrad.ml
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                  5 months ago

                  Surplus capital is not a “libertarian thing”, it’s a Lenin thing, it’s the reason why capital is exported.

                  Where is the money going? Police, judicial, and carceral costs are increasing year over year. Capital is coming in from other Imperialist states and neo-Colonial outposts, which is fueling both housing construction and housing cost at the same time. There has never been more homes to workers in the US than right now.

                  And if you find my other post quoting Lenin, the petty bourgs are constantly being destroyed and refreshed, which is why the workers movement consistently gains new revisionist ideologies.

                  What I contend: The US middle classes have always been in this cycle, ya know many whites have struggles with drugs and drug incarceration (which has softened, drug use charges are getting lighter and lighter). De-Dollarization is still not affecting US workers, but also it’s greatly over-hyped. Surplus Capital will continue to be sent from all over the world to the US housing market and silicon valley.

                  Old homes and old appliances are still signs of total wealth growth, but also, new appliances have never been cheaper for USians and more people in the lower income brackets can afford them. Capital exports bring down the prices of goods. Car ownership is a luxury, it’s at 90+%, but also, the bottom 20% of population owns just 1% of cars:

                  This bottom 20% of USians is 60% Black/Indigenous/Latino. White poverty has been fairly consistent while poverty in other groups has been dropping in approach.

                  And just because someone is low income, doesn’t mean they have no wealth (housing speculation, owner-farmer).

                  It’s clear that wealth is increasing even though incomes are stagnating (because surplus money-capital arrives in the form of globally funded mortgages and historically low interest rates). Wages in 2020 are about as good (but way better for more people!) as the last 50 years, USians are not gonna have a lot of economic smoke for the Imperial regime.

                  Class consciousness is useless if it does not address labor aristocracy, and Communists have been saying “it’s getting worse!” since WW2, but it never has.

                  You should take a larger study of US economic conditions. We are in a much worse position of Economistic practices than WW1 Germans who Lenin railed against, I have linked the text in my other comment in the thread. These aren’t conditions to wait around for! Don’t wait for shit to get worse! There is revolutionary potential now! You have hundreds of national liberation struggles and 100 million oppressed nationals across Black/Indigenous people and Chicanos/Latinos. These struggles could have been turned into revolution in the 60s but revisionist Communists at that time said “wait we need white workers!”.

                  Did I mention that over half of the money spent on incarceration and policing (reaching a quarter trillion dollars every year, chart ends in 04, $261B spent in 2018) is wages for cops, guards, and judicial staff?

                  You say you are noticing a trend, I’m saying there’s always a small amount of losers in a massive petty booj economy, and this accounts for the trend you see, even though it has always been a factor, and adds new petty booj ideologies to workers movements, the state of the movement is evidence as such. The US is “overextended” (with few boots on the ground…), but what will happen when the US needs to ramp up war production to keep global wages low? Another boost in wages and carrot sticks of Opportunism so unions take war contracts (like they are doing right now making bombs that drop in Gaza). The US was able to “defeat Communism” through the height of anti-Imperial consciousness in the 70s, don’t hold your breath that movements that haven’t changed since then will be any different in the future.

                  It’s important to get across that a worker can go from high income ($150k) to low income ($12k, minimum wage), but actually double down on their bourgeois character because they started a business. From Semi-proletarian to Petty Bourg proper. Their total wealth would not have changed.

  • davel [he/him]@lemmygrad.ml
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    5 months ago

    It used to be much higher, before multiple red scares, multiple cold wars, FBI/OSS/CIA chicanery, and massive amounts of propaganda.

    • Che's Motorcycle@lemmygrad.ml
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      5 months ago

      Yep. I was shocked when I first learned how widespread support for socialism once was. Even farmers in Texas and Oklahoma were on board.

  • Vampire [any]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    How has nobody mentioned identity politics yet?

    They’re concerned to.the point of obsession with every way of dividing themselves apart from by class.

    • Kaffe@lemmygrad.ml
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      5 months ago

      you’re right, the problem is that militarized identity politics known as “whiteness”

      that being said idpol is a symptom of a deeper rot (labor aristocracy)