Title says it all basically! I have an abstract understanding that heightening class conflict can be managed by creating scapegoats and enemies, but nothing exactly gels with e.g. Roe being overturned.

EDIT:

“Imperialism strives for reaction everywhere” Lenin

On some level people are aware of their exploitation under capitalism which increases as the rate of exploitation increases. This awareness can be revolutionary, it can push people into struggle against their oppressors. However, this awareness can be hijacked by reactionary ideology and fascism which redirects struggle towards racial, ethnic, gender and sexual minorities.

Some analysis from Anuradha Ghandy in 'Fascism, Fundamentalism, and Patriarchy' (2001):

Imperialism faced with its worst ever crisis since the inter-war years is encouraging and promoting fundamentalist forces and fascist organisations and propaganda. And one of the central points of fundamentalist propaganda is a conservative ideology of gender – they proclaim the specific agenda of restoring the centrality of the family and home in the life of women and patriarchal control over her sexuality. Hence ideologues of the New Right even in the US are claiming that there is a moral crisis in American society and this is because of the fact that women are working outside the home. Though they have mobilised actively around opposition to abortion rights for women, they begin by arguing that welfare state expenditures have raised taxes and added to inflation, pulling the married woman into the labour force and thereby destroying the fabric of the patriarchal family and hence the moral order of society.

My main issue is justifying the claim in the paragraph after the Lenin quote.

  • bubbalu [they/them]
    hexagon
    ·
    2 years ago

    This type of third-worldism is defeatist. From Chapter 5 of 'A Critique of Maoist Reason' by J Moufawad-Paul:

    We do not have to (and we should not) deny the super-exploita- tion that develops under imperialism allowing first world workers to benefit from imperialism, to reject this concept of net-exploitation. While the export of capital allows for the first world worker to be less exploited, and thus live a better life than their third world contempo- rary, to claim that the first world worker is not exploited––even in a limited sense––is to make the absurd claim that there is no reason for first world capitalists to maintain a first world work force in any sense and that the only reason they are doing so is because they are fully col- laborating with their counterparts in global exploitation. If first world workers are not exploited, then we need to ask why there is a continu- ous drive of wage-lowering, a consistent cap on the wages of first world workers, and the tendency to casualize labour––not to mention union busting, the use of undocumented labour, assaults on benefits, etc.

    Of course, the limitation of exploitation makes first-worlders more primed towards fascism but being totally defeatist leads to an unactionable understanding of the world stage.

    • Commander_Data [she/her]
      ·
      2 years ago

      This is so on point and why it's really a horrible idea to alienate workers and leftists from privileged nations. There is no switch that takes the world off of the petrodollar overnight, it's a long process and one which the US will absolutely be willing to go to war over. If you think the US atrocities while on neoliberalism were bad, wait for a nuclear-armed US ginned up on fascism. Sure, I am biased because I live here, but in my view, the only way the US goes down without taking the rest of the planet with it is if it is dismantled from within.