scspkr99 wrote:Genevieve wrote:I think most of what we call and perceive as 'class struggle' is the state's attempts to increase its own power, by keeping working class poor and blaming the wealth Talking the working class into believing that the wealthy are a danger to them and only the almighty state has the capability to save them.
But a 'class struggle' as suggested Marx is a myth.
Who is the state?
The state is the self-enforcing monopoly of guns, of course.
But the argument you're implying doesn't hold up since it poses that its a struggle created
by different "economic status", but if you were to remove the state, then the class struggle as you are trying to frame it would go away. I.e, in my anarcho-capitalist wetdream society, the class struggle would not exist, but people would still be "economically unequal";. so then calling it the class struggle would be a misnomer.
Pedro Sánchez wrote:Genevieve wrote:You can look at society, create any artificial distinction in society (such as upper/working class), presuppose a 'struggle' and be correct. But it doesn't really mean a whole lot. I could fabricate a parent/child struggle on the spot and have it work logically as a model, but does it apply in the real world?
I've fabricated a struggle between you and reality but come to think of it logically it works.
Remember that one time you actually had a rebuttal to my arguments? Me neither.
Muncey wrote:You can look at society, create any artificial distinction in society (such as upper/working class), presuppose a 'struggle' and be correct. But it doesn't really mean a whole lot. I could fabricate a parent/child struggle on the spot and have it work logically as a model, but does it apply in the real world?
It depends on information and the quality of information and how its delivered. The media is pretty heavy on promoting the class struggle of the poor so without them there probably wouldn't be class struggle so it could be artificial.. most poor people wouldn't really be blaming the wealthiest without being pushed into that direction by the media. But thats not to say its completely fabricated and there isn't any issues based on inequalities, ask people what they think of the continued income gap growing and what they think of hundreds of bottom level people losing their jobs while the guys that cause the problems leave with 9 figure bonuses and 'unfair' would probably be a popular reply. Essentially class struggle is just that, unfair inequalities and I don't agree they're fabricated.[/quote]
Class struggle theory assumes that class struggle is the product of "economic inequality"; if however its a media creation, then class struggle isn't the product of "economic quality", then it's the quality of misinformation and propaganda, and then it stops being a class struggle.