#961

NoFreeWill posted:

c_man posted:

.custom252308{}NoFreeWill posted:.custom252163{color:#000000 !important; background-color:#E3E3E3 !important; }Crow posted:class is about the relationship to the means of production. cheap immigrant labor *is* the proletariat. assholes itching to shoot up their cubicle in santa monica are probably not

neither of those people own the means of production, so they're both proletarian according to your own logic.
pls know what you are talking about
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petite_bourgeoisie

they aren't "semi-autonomous peasants" or "small merchants"



Yea theyre not Old Timey Merchants in wizards robes selling cotton looms in Ye Olde fortress. U fucking idiot.

Read. Read for once in your goddamn life:

https://www.marxists.org/glossary/terms/m/i.htm#middle-class

#962
that's interesting, tell me more about how all fascists are petit bourgeois
#963
*whips the tarp off ironicwarcriminal and initiates the thawing process*
#964

NoFreeWill posted:

that's interesting, tell me more about how all fascists are petit bourgeois



Youre incredibly an enormous idiot

Since the 1920s, for instance, there has been general agreement that fascism originates socially in the grievances of the petty bourgeoisie or lower middle class. In the words of Luigi Salvatorelli in 1923, fascism "represents the class struggle of the petty bourgeoisie, squeezed between capitalism and the proletariat, as the third party between the two conflicting sides. "26 This was the commonest contemporary judgment and has been pursued repeatedly by both historians and sociologists, Marxist and non-Marxist alike. Most of the accumulated evidence (and a mountain of continuing research) is assembled in an enormous collection of essays recently edited by Stein Ugelvik Larsen, Bernt Hagtvet, and Jan Petter Myklebust, Who Were the Fascists: Social Roots of European Fascism (1980), and while the aggregate effect of around 800 pages is hard to assess, it seems to confirm the received assumptions. There have been attempts to suggest that other social groups were ultimately more important in the fascists' makeup, or that class was less important than "generational revolt. "27 On the evidence of Who Were the Fascists, however, the fascist movement's social composition seems to have been disproportionately weighted toward the petty bourgeoisie (that is, small-scale owners and producers, together with the new strata of salaried employees, including lower grade civil servants, junior managerial and technical personnel, teachers, clerical workers, and parts of the professions).

At the same time, to call fascism flatly a protest movement of the petty bourgeoisie is clearly an oversimplification. As David Roberts observes in an excellent discussion of petty bourgeois fascism in Italy, the tendency is to "assume that if we can find social categories enabling us to distinguish fascists from non-fascists, we have the key to explaining the phenomenon," with consequences that are potentially extremely reductionist. 29 As Roberts continues, historians of Italian fascism habitually analyze it "in terms of socio-economic crisis and the traumas and frustrations which industrial modernization causes the lower middle class," and the same is equally true of writers on Nazism. 30 As suggested above, this argument conjoins with another popular thesis concerning the relationship of fascism to modernization, where the movement's specificity derives from "its appeal to certain kinds of people who see themselves as losers in modern technological civilization," who rejected "the modern industrial world" and took refuge in an ideology of "utopian anti-modernism. "31 The problem here is that the correlations between fascist ideology, the support of the petty bourgeoisie, and general economic trends are drawn in a way that is too general and mechanical. Though the casualties of capitalist industrialization were certainly prominent among the radical right's supporters, this was by no means the whole story.

As David Roberts reminds us, the deficiencies in this standard view "stem not from the insistence on the petty bourgeois role in fascism, but from the inferences about motiviation that are made from this fact of social composition. "32 Summarizing his own argument in The Syndicalist Tradition and Italian Fascism he highlights a quite different ideological tendency in the petty bourgeoisie: so far from "trying to preserve traditional values and repudiate the modern industrial world," its exponents were firmly committed to a heavily productivist vision of industrial progress, and harboured few "backward-looking" anxieties about the modern world in the way normally attributed. In fact, they were preoccupied less with the socioeconomic problems of declining preindustrial strata than with the long-term political questions of Italy's national integration and cultural self-confidence. Their resentments were aimed less at the bearers of capitalist industrialization than at the representatives of a narrowly based parliamentary liberalism (not forgetting, of course, the socialist left, whose growth the latter seemed irresponsibly to permit). In Roberts' view, petty-bourgeois fascism emerged as a critique of "Italy's restrictive transformist political system" under the radicalizing circumstances of World War I. As "political outsiders," its spokespersons presented themselves as a new populist "vanguard" capable of providing the ideological leadership effectively abdicated (as they saw it) by the old Giolittian establishment. Moreover, their urgency stemmed not just from the shattering experience of the war, but from the ensuing crisis of the biennio rosso, with its alarming evidence of Socialist electoral gains, working-class insurgency, and ambiguous Popolare radicalism. 33 Under these circumstances radical nationalism was an intelligible response to the social dynamics of national disintegration. Affirming the virtues of industrial power, productivism, and class collaboration, its architects offered a program of national syndicalism, which "could mobilize and politicize the masses more effectively and thereby create a more legitimate and popular state. "34

In other words, it is worth considering the possibility that fascism was linked as much to the "rising" as to the "declining" petty bourgeoisie.

#965

NoFreeWill posted:

that's interesting, tell me more about how all fascists are petit bourgeois


tell me more about being a philosophy student who cant be bothered to read books about philosophy

#966
you should be like, humble and inquisitive instead of, aggressively stupid and wrong
#967

NoFreeWill posted:

that's interesting, tell me more about how all fascists are petit bourgeois



just look at the lives of the fascist leaders, mussoloni sold newspapers and hitler sold paintings. petite-bourgoeois.

stalin on the other hand was a clerk who robbed banks, mao was a teacher who worked out for the proletariat. and lenin was also a teacher who worked with peasants

#968

Crow posted:

you should be like, humble and inquisitive instead of, aggressively stupid and wrong


#969
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#970

Crow posted:

.custom252330{}NoFreeWill posted:that's interesting, tell me more about how all fascists are petit bourgeois

Youre incredibly an enormous idiot

Since the 1920s, for instance, there has been general agreement that fascism originates socially in the grievances of the petty bourgeoisie or lower middle class. In the words of Luigi Salvatorelli in 1923, fascism "represents the class struggle of the petty bourgeoisie, squeezed between capitalism and the proletariat, as the third party between the two conflicting sides. "26 This was the commonest contemporary judgment and has been pursued repeatedly by both historians and sociologists, Marxist and non-Marxist alike. Most of the accumulated evidence (and a mountain of continuing research) is assembled in an enormous collection of essays recently edited by Stein Ugelvik Larsen, Bernt Hagtvet, and Jan Petter Myklebust, Who Were the Fascists: Social Roots of European Fascism (1980), and while the aggregate effect of around 800 pages is hard to assess, it seems to confirm the received assumptions. There have been attempts to suggest that other social groups were ultimately more important in the fascists' makeup, or that class was less important than "generational revolt. "27 On the evidence of Who Were the Fascists, however, the fascist movement's social composition seems to have been disproportionately weighted toward the petty bourgeoisie (that is, small-scale owners and producers, together with the new strata of salaried employees, including lower grade civil servants, junior managerial and technical personnel, teachers, clerical workers, and parts of the professions).

At the same time, to call fascism flatly a protest movement of the petty bourgeoisie is clearly an oversimplification. As David Roberts observes in an excellent discussion of petty bourgeois fascism in Italy, the tendency is to "assume that if we can find social categories enabling us to distinguish fascists from non-fascists, we have the key to explaining the phenomenon," with consequences that are potentially extremely reductionist. 29 As Roberts continues, historians of Italian fascism habitually analyze it "in terms of socio-economic crisis and the traumas and frustrations which industrial modernization causes the lower middle class," and the same is equally true of writers on Nazism. 30 As suggested above, this argument conjoins with another popular thesis concerning the relationship of fascism to modernization, where the movement's specificity derives from "its appeal to certain kinds of people who see themselves as losers in modern technological civilization," who rejected "the modern industrial world" and took refuge in an ideology of "utopian anti-modernism. "31 The problem here is that the correlations between fascist ideology, the support of the petty bourgeoisie, and general economic trends are drawn in a way that is too general and mechanical. Though the casualties of capitalist industrialization were certainly prominent among the radical right's supporters, this was by no means the whole story.

As David Roberts reminds us, the deficiencies in this standard view "stem not from the insistence on the petty bourgeois role in fascism, but from the inferences about motiviation that are made from this fact of social composition. "32 Summarizing his own argument in The Syndicalist Tradition and Italian Fascism he highlights a quite different ideological tendency in the petty bourgeoisie: so far from "trying to preserve traditional values and repudiate the modern industrial world," its exponents were firmly committed to a heavily productivist vision of industrial progress, and harboured few "backward-looking" anxieties about the modern world in the way normally attributed. In fact, they were preoccupied less with the socioeconomic problems of declining preindustrial strata than with the long-term political questions of Italy's national integration and cultural self-confidence. Their resentments were aimed less at the bearers of capitalist industrialization than at the representatives of a narrowly based parliamentary liberalism (not forgetting, of course, the socialist left, whose growth the latter seemed irresponsibly to permit). In Roberts' view, petty-bourgeois fascism emerged as a critique of "Italy's restrictive transformist political system" under the radicalizing circumstances of World War I. As "political outsiders," its spokespersons presented themselves as a new populist "vanguard" capable of providing the ideological leadership effectively abdicated (as they saw it) by the old Giolittian establishment. Moreover, their urgency stemmed not just from the shattering experience of the war, but from the ensuing crisis of the biennio rosso, with its alarming evidence of Socialist electoral gains, working-class insurgency, and ambiguous Popolare radicalism. 33 Under these circumstances radical nationalism was an intelligible response to the social dynamics of national disintegration. Affirming the virtues of industrial power, productivism, and class collaboration, its architects offered a program of national syndicalism, which "could mobilize and politicize the masses more effectively and thereby create a more legitimate and popular state. "34

In other words, it is worth considering the possibility that fascism was linked as much to the "rising" as to the "declining" petty bourgeoisie.


you're right and i'm wrong. thanks for posting a good source.

#971
lower middle class is considerably different than bankers tho
#972

c_man posted:

.custom252330{}NoFreeWill posted:that's interesting, tell me more about how all fascists are petit bourgeois
tell me more about being a philosophy student who cant be bothered to read books about philosophy


i'm not a philosophy student and what book are you talking about?

#973
oh idk why i thought you were then. and any books that describe the things we are talking about, there are lots of books on marxist theory
#974
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#975
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#976
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#977

roseweird posted:

so now that i've learned and agree that the petty bourgeois are generally Fascists/the source of Fascism, where should i look for evidence to support the location of the source of anti-immigrant sentiment among the middle class business owners and managers who employ immigrants at low wages rather than among the propertyless workers (ha ha well not workers anymore but you know) who are displaced by those hires ? keep in mind that in this scenario, i know that the problem is really Capitalism, but the workers are not like me, they are stupid and they don't know about Capitalism


it makes more sense to think about the cost of reproducing the average middle-class american worker, including the expected lifestyle. this is much higher than similarly reproducing labor outside of the first world (think here the outsourcing of tech support to india, or moving factories to mexico because nafta) and these threaten the position of the first world worker

#978
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#979
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#980

NoFreeWill posted:

lower middle class is considerably different than bankers tho



i was talking about mark paslawsky, who was a retired banker. not all bankers are billionaires. and this says petty bourgeoisie AND the lower middle classes.

roseweird posted:

so now that i've learned and agree that the petty bourgeois are generally Fascists/the source of Fascism, where should i look for evidence to support the location of the source of anti-immigrant sentiment among the middle class business owners and managers who employ immigrants at low wages rather than among the propertyless workers (ha ha well not workers anymore but you know) who are displaced by those hires ? keep in mind that in this scenario, i know that the problem is really Capitalism, but the workers are not like me, they are stupid and they don't know about Capitalism



the point i am trying to make is that the interests of owners and managers, as a class, necessitates terrorizing immigrant labor, wipping up fascist sentiment, and dividing the working classes against each other. obviously that doesnt mean that members of the proletariat cant be fascist, but that the proletariat, as a class, are not fascist, and fascism does not serves their interests besides a small sliver of their general makeup (the contours of which would have to be calculated on a world scale, at this point). really you have to conceptualize classes in the political economy. why would racist attitudes be propagated by the propertied class? well, to keep labor costs down. why would proletariat seek to abolish racism. well, to unite all progressive forces and to seize power. people find common language among their class, you might underestimate it. they generally understand what Bosses do

#981

roseweird posted:

c_man posted:

it makes more sense to think about the cost of reproducing the average middle-class american worker, including the expected lifestyle. this is much higher than similarly reproducing labor outside of the first world (think here the outsourcing of tech support to india, or moving factories to mexico because nafta) and these threaten the position of the first world worker

this doesn't apply to a lot of agriculture, service, and transportation industry within the u.s., after all outsourcing killed north american manufacturing decades ago the way it is now killing a lot of white collar tech and communications. obviously if you decide to stop hiring americans, from unskilled farm workers to trained engineers, they will be displaced from work whether their replacements are employed through outsourcing or through immigration. different populations are being affected by different labor market shifts. i just don't really get how american petty bourgeois business owners are likely to be threatened here.



petty bourgeois owners are threatened when their big bourgeois competitors operate economies of scale across multiple continents. you can say oh well we can always offshore but there are few industries where small players can offshore and compete effectively against the big bourgeoisie without eventually either ascending to the big bourgeoisie or falling by the wayside. many 'mom and pop' shops are generally being subsumed by global chains and basically only operate on the basis of boutiques and bohemian oddities, increasingly catering to luxury and upscale markets.

#982
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#983
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#984
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#985

c_man posted:

oh idk why i thought you were then. and any books that describe the things we are talking about, there are lots of books on marxist theory


marxist theory ain't philosophy and Hegel sucks.

#986
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#987
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#988

roseweird posted:

alright, i'm with you, and agree that there is plain truth truth in what you're saying. but maybe i do underestimate the common language of class... because i see people to adhere much more strongly to the common language of their culture and nation. i understand the provisional and local power of class language, but i also think that it is hard for people to subordinate their culture to their class. maybe that's because i'm a gay fascist jew, i will let you decide, in any case i would love to change my mind.



well then how are culture and nation produced?

roseweird posted:

basically what i'm saying is yes business owners exploit racist/xenophobic rhetoric but it works because people genuinely hate and fear each other


yeah so

#989
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#990
class warfare sweeps aside all false ideologies and roars the flame of revolutionary justice, all the hard work which the oppressed and neglected of society have put themselves under is finally realized to have been for nothing, for this awful society, and then the harmonic order will be overturned in a brutal day of reckoning. suffering is not to be accepted as necessary, we communists bow our heads to no truths of life
#991

tpaine posted:

don't say anything bad about the human race here or you'll get accused of being 1/2/3/4/5/6/7/8/9/10/11/12/13/14/15/16/17/18 years old and fat and atheist. nobody likes you when you're 23



#992
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#993
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#994
What interests do you have aside from basic needs and wants along with having the time and means to pursue creative endeavors as you so desire? The only thing that should be incompatible with Marxism is a desire to own and profit from somebody else's labor.
#995

Crow posted:

roseweird posted:

so now that i've learned and agree that the petty bourgeois are generally Fascists/the source of Fascism, where should i look for evidence to support the location of the source of anti-immigrant sentiment among the middle class business owners and managers who employ immigrants at low wages rather than among the propertyless workers (ha ha well not workers anymore but you know) who are displaced by those hires ? keep in mind that in this scenario, i know that the problem is really Capitalism, but the workers are not like me, they are stupid and they don't know about Capitalism

the point i am trying to make is that the interests of owners and managers, as a class, necessitates terrorizing immigrant labor, wipping up fascist sentiment, and dividing the working classes against each other. obviously that doesnt mean that members of the proletariat cant be fascist, but that the proletariat, as a class, are not fascist, and fascism does not serves their interests besides a small sliver of their general makeup (the contours of which would have to be calculated on a world scale, at this point). really you have to conceptualize classes in the political economy. why would racist attitudes be propagated by the propertied class? well, to keep labor costs down. why would proletariat seek to abolish racism. well, to unite all progressive forces and to seize power. people find common language among their class, you might underestimate it. they generally understand what Bosses do


this is all true, but i think it's a mistake to gloss over the genuine racism of the bourgeoisie. anti-immigration sentiment is certainly useful enough for purely economic reasons, but historically it is the product of the eugenics movement and the idea of 'national hygiene'. of course these ideas reinforce the class structure as natural and inevitable - moreover, as the result of a quite literal evolutionary progression, which i guess explains why liberals lap up the benevolent version of the story, as delivered by new york times science journalists, etc.

#996

roseweird posted:

so i think a class-based materialist analysis is insufficient to explain these animosities or locate their beginning



how is it insufficient. are you saying that scientific research is insufficient to explain historical grievances and current pressure bearing down on communities

#997
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#998
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#999
I think shes saying people have always been xenophobic fuckheads.

NoFreeWill was probated until (Oct. 25, 2014 05:24:30) for this post!

#1000