this post was submitted on 16 Jan 2026
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I certainly don't disagree, but I think it's very useful to highlight how this has changed (IMO) in recent decades. I think there was a time when the boomer generation was earning relatively good incomes that allowed them to live comfortably and accumulate wealth (mainly in houses and the stock market). I think this arrangement between capital and the (predominantly white) working class created a situation where even those workers without much wealth could be "bought off" and swear allegiance to capitalism. This wasn't sustainable of course, as the postwar industrial boom and then the gains from neoliberalism were never sustainable. Couple that with the fall of the Eastern Bloc and with it the "threat of a good example", and I would say that this arrangement lasted as late as the GFC at most. I think this helps explain how older people today - even if they are solidly working class - might still be hostile to anything they think is "socialism" while younger generations do not share those opinions, it seems.
Yep, you're referring to the "labor aristocracy." The working classes in the imperial core are bribed by the spoils of imperialism into complacency. What's causing the rise in radicalization is a decline in imperialism, due to global south development (largely due to projects like BRI and trade with China). This is why the US Empire is surging to the right, as imperialism is being brought inward and austerity forced on the labor aristocracy. This is causing radicalization:
So it's important not just to look at the local, but also the international aspects of class. There's also the fact that the US is a settler-colony, and this is the primary contradiction within Statesian society.