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Searcher08 wrote:Is that no longer post in this thread, or in R.I.?
Searcher08 wrote:Because I think it is a real shame and a big loss if someone of his intelligence is 'constructively dismissed' for having views that are not popular, but which he has put a great deal of effort and consideration into.
barracuda wrote:Searcher08 wrote:Is that no longer post in this thread, or in R.I.?
I wasn't privvy to the specifics of the message, but my impression was that Stephen had cashed in his chips. Which I view as a mistake on his part, because I don't feel that the guideline as it's composed necessarily imposes a negation of the vast swath of his indominable polemic. Also because I happen to like Stephen, and would miss his voice on any number of subjects which he has always managed to address with his singular confidence and perspective.
I don't mean to be mean much anymore.
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“Culture is linked to class power,” Parenti said. “Class is a neglected concept, and when the term ‘class power’ is dismissed as itself ideological, it’s easier to dispose of other inconvenient concepts like ‘class struggle’ and ‘class war.’ A lot of academic research on class exists, but it deals with it simply as a matter of income level. Social scientists and media pundits have perfected the art of looking at class without looking at capitalism. There isn’t any analysis of the most important class, the owning class.”
Parenti cited the heirs of Sam Walton, the founder of Wal-Mart, as the richest and most influential family in the worldwide capitalist owning class. “They invented and developed nothing,” he said. “They’ve made their money by working people to death. Of the 50 richest people in America, five are Waltons. Their total fortune is $78 to $91 billion. Not only that, but not much is said about their class power, about how this enormous wealth is translated into political power. The New York Times, Los Angeles Times and TV won’t talk about class the way I am now. They never talk about social power. They give attention to every class except the owning class, and to every power except corporate power.”
One commonplace Left idea Parenti particularly scorns is the one about how oppression based on race, gender, sexual identity or any other factor can somehow replace class in explaining how an hierarchical society functions. In his speech, he particularly ridiculed the “identity politics” that ruled much of the American Left in the 1970’s and 1980’s, by which people picked up ideological brownie points based on how many oppressed groups they were members of — which led to the joke at the time that the perfect identity-politics Leftist was a blind Native American Lesbian (female, person of color, disabled, Queer). Parenti’s position on identity politics is classically Marxist: racism, sexism and other similar prejudices are important, but mainly as ways the owning class keeps the working class internally divided so groups within the working class fight each other instead of coming together to challenge the owning class.
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Plutonia wrote:I'm a woman,
Plutonia wrote:Questioning feminist orthodoxy is not the same thing as attacking a woman or hating women, or being misogynistic.
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