• swim@slrpnk.net
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      6 months ago

      Or what’s more, “middle class” has always been a concept in capitalism apologia wherein a social group which represents moderation prevents the establishment of a social consciousness of the true strata: rich and poor.

      The statistic that the US “middle class” has shrunk 11% in 50 years is a milder one than saying that income inequality is the highest it’s been since 1928.

      Wealth inequality is much worse. https://mkorostoff.github.io/1-pixel-wealth/

      Thomas Piketty’s book “A Brief History of Equality” made it clear to me that a mobilization of educated, class-conscious voters (or guerillas) is necessary, but is capable of making painless policy decisions which immediately ameliorate suffering.

  • ASaltPepper
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    6 months ago

    The economy is booming, and yet many Americans are still gasping for air financially. They simply don’t have the breathing room to plan beyond their present needs

    I have a feeling that the economic news is maybe put of touch with what people are actually dealing with.

    At least if you’re told it’s not doing well you can see space for improvement. But if it’s sold as doing well and you’re not then you get…well this.

    • Hildegarde@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      If the economy is booming and the median american is struggling, your metrics for analyzing the economy are faulty.

    • SoylentBlake@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      It’s been that way since 2008, that’s the source of so much of the distrust in the media. Constantly being fed bullshit we all know might be technically true but that’s only because the upper 10% have usurped not only the entirety of all profit, but theyve sequestered away, or legislated roadblocks to, the means to generate profit. Small business has been destroyed and no one can afford to reanimate it’s corpse. Legislation has been passed to protect these dragon hoards for the the dragons, on the people’s dime no less. That can be re-read as government weaponized. Against the people.

      For the simplest example, that’s what permitting is exactly, and it gets much worse and more entrenched from there. Permitting is nothing less than the hall mark of antidemocratic tyrrany. I mean that 10,000% and will die on that hill, you can call it benign cuz it doesn’t effect you - you think, and I guarentee you ever tyrant to ever exist has had a massive bureaucratic nightmare machine behind it. It’s where they employ rich peoples families members, to keep them a part of the stste. Gengis Khan had this shit. It is text book tyranny. I posit there is nothing more damaging to the relationship between the citizenry and the office. No longer a resource, now an obstacle, and like all positions with just enough power to fucking ruin a life’s work on a whim, it’s a candle flame to every karenmoth born.

  • Lexam@lemmy.ca
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    6 months ago

    Having all of your economy sucked up like a hoover by private equity firms is not a good economy!

  • DontRedditMyLemmy@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    It really feels like this can’t continue forever (or much longer), but I can’t anticipate how the correction could go down? There rich have the power, and it’s never been easier to turn a blind eye to a revolution, or to extinguish one with a quick flex.

  • snekerpimp@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Not without grabbing it with our hands and teeth and wrenching it from those ass holes taking it from us.

  • Obinice@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I’ve never been entirely sure if I count as poor or middle class. I have no money generally and have to be careful how much electricity I use, but I have a smartphone and some nice things, so.

    Anyway, yeah. I’m not saying there’s no hope at all for the future, but it’s over for my generation. Our chance to get out of this hole disappeared long ago.

    Even if we vote out the Tories right now and bring in sweeping reforms, even if we begin the long slow process of rejoining the EU and repairing our position within the global community, I’ll only start seeing the benefits around the time I die of old age, assuming I make it that far at all.

    Which is a bold assumption, given our dead national health service. Heck, I’m on a waiting list for simple quick surgery right now to cure a debilitating condition, and even that is a years long waiting list these days with no end in sight.

    Everything is broken. It can be fixed, but realistically even if we suddenly shifted focus towards fixing it right now, instead of continuing to crumble under late stage capitalism, it won’t be fixed in my lifetime.

    :-(

    • JakJak98@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      It could be fixed. Just a societal collapse or two will put the economy right back in its rightful place!

      The ground.