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Andrew Langford's avatar

Thanks - a very helpful summary (I'll buy and read the book) and it fits my own sense that class-first (but with an intersectional view of all divisions) is the most potent way to go. In England, where I come from, we make a distinction in the middle class realm to recognize that most of us, like me, are lower-middle class (working people with college ed like nurses, CPA's, junior managers and so on) who have been split from classic blue-collar working people to become system lackeys, differentiated from the senior managerial/coordinating class who are tightly bonded by aspiration to the owning class. I see the re-unification of the lower-middle class with the working class as the most do-able priority and this mostly means that us lower-middle class need to deconstruct the false sense of superiority that too much education of the wrong kind lays on us ... try rc.org for help with this ...

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James Muncy's avatar

Well, there's goes another famous phrase out the window. You're bustin' up my game here, Andy.

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