General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: To End Racism and Police Brutality, End Capitalism! [View all]AOR
(692 posts)for an ever increasing amount of the people on the ground. That is the point. It is you that keeps harping on Marx. I simply posted an article from a website that comes from a Marxist perspective. Most likely Trots but that's a story for another day. John Peterson's writing is very easy to understand for anyone Nadin. Try this one... tell me what you disagree with. You don't have to be a Marxist scholar to understand that labor and the majority of the working class are getting their asses kicked by capital. Who cares if "a Marxist" is doing the writing if it hits to the point. People might not agree with the outlook but how is this hard to understand or dogmatic in any way Nadin ?
http://www.marxist.com/the-class-struggle-and-the-american-working-class.htm
Written by John Peterson
(Snip)
"For millions of people around the world, the United States represents the ultimate citadel of reaction: Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush, Hillary Clinton, the CIA, imperialism, sanctions, war, drones, anti-communism, discrimination, and exploitation. The American people are alleged to be a homogeneous bloc of ignorant, indifferent racists who blindly and enthusiastically back the reactionary economic and military policies of their government. Many peopleeven on the left imagine that the US is immune from class conflict, and that life for the majority in the belly of the beast is prosperous and peaceful. However, while there may be an element of truth in some of this, the reality is far more complex. The United States is in fact a society riven with deep class contradictions. It has an enormous and powerful working class and an inspiring revolutionary pastand future."
(Snip)
Class struggle
"So just what is the class struggle? Simply defined, the class struggle is the struggle over the surplus wealth created by the producing classes. Will that surplus go towards further enriching the minority that controls society? Or will it go towards improving the quality of life of the working majority who actually produce the wealth? Or perhaps we can live in a world without exploiters, where society democratically determines what is to be done with the wealth we
ly produce?
The ruling class is that class which controls the state and owns the means of production of societythe land and natural resources, the workshops and factories, the banks. The actual producers of wealth are those who own nothing but their ability to work, and are therefore either owned outright as slaves, tied to the land as feudal serfs, perhaps own a tiny plot of land on which they scrape out an existence while still having to work and pay debts to others, or sell their labor power for a wage to a capitalist. That is the simplified essence of the class struggle. In the modern era, that struggle is above all between the working class and the capitalist class."
(Snip)
Class society
"All of this applies to the US just as much as any other country dominated by capitalismyou cannot have an exploiting capitalist class without a working class that is being exploited. Long before US capitalism entered its predatory, imperialist phase, the ruling class enriched itself on the vast natural resources and labor of millions of people right here on the American continent.
In fact, Americas more than 155 million workers are among the most exploited on the planet. Based on an extremely high level of labor productivity, American workers create vast amounts of wealth for the capitalists, but receive only a small ratio of that back in the form of wages. The effects of a strike of even a small portion of the American workers would be devastating to the profits of the capitalists. For example, just 36,000 unionized dock workers load and unload every ship on the West coast of the United States. This means that every single container imported to the US Pacific coast from Asia and beyond must first pass through the hands of a relative handful of union workers. Even a one-day strike of these dockers would result in billions of dollars in losses to the capitalists. This is a clear indication of the colossal power of the US working class.
The working class is the overwhelming majority of the USA; the wonders of its cities, railroads, highways, mines, industry, and vast tracts of farmland are the result of the workers sweat, tears, blood, and brains. And yet, Americans themselves are rarely taught the truth about their own history. There is a very simple reason for this. If American workers were to understand their true power and their classs repeated attempts to change society, they might be tempted to engage in open class struggle again and againand this represents a mortal threat to the continuation of the capitalist system."