this post was submitted on 15 Apr 2026
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Thank you for your perspective!
I think countries with strong labor movements overcame that in a few different ways:
in The United States the labor movement was so violent (e.g. The Coal Wars) that the capitalist class found it beneficial to allow limited unionization to prevent further violence and thus harm to their profits.
In Cuba, China, etc. They had a Socialist Revolution and either liquidated or subordinated their capitalist class to the rule of the workers
European countries developed strong domestic labor movements and welfare states so neighboring Socialist Countries didn't look like an appealing alternative.
The global south struggles to overcome what you're describing because They're developed enough to have a class consciousness proletariat, so you can't as easily stoke a precarious peasantry to Revolution. And they're under the thumb, but only of domestic capital, but also international capital, so resistingbecomes much more difficult. Surveillance tech and weapons used on people in the imperial core are essentially tested on hyper exploited workers in the global south