They had one thing in common with the old aristocrats: they hated capitalists and capitalism — frank
If they both hated capitalism, their reasons for doing so were quite different. Laborers were toiling in the 'dark, satanic mills' [William Blake's term]; long hours, dangerous working conditions; low pay; hard work. Aristocrats may have disdained the capitalists rapidly accumulating wealth, but they probably also envied it. Land-rent based aristocrats weren't poor, of course. — BC
The Left (socialists, Marxists, communists, anarchists (IWW), et al did indeed help workers organize, unionize, and resist capitalists' exploitation. I don't see a parallel between aristocrats and leftists or workers. What are you reaching for in making that comparison? — BC
As the forerunners of capitalists appeared, it was out of the serf class. — frank
In what context are you writing, thinking? — BC
Academic leftists are perhaps somewhat analogous to a superannuated aristocracy. Most of them have just about zero connection with working class organizing or working class life. Struggling to explicate post-modern understanding within English Departments (et al) could just as well be taking place on Mars as at the local University. Some academics have risen from the ranks of the working class, but my guess is that most of them have been launched from the more favored middle class of professional families (or better). — BC
Sure, because in the early medieval period there weren't any capitalists. The local Lord had the income of land rent (from peasants, yeomen, etc.) so didn't need to invest. — BC
The point is that profit-making, as a European profession, did not pop into existence in the 1800s. — frank
I was playing with the idea that to the extent that there is any leftism in America, it's a pose, like a poster of Che Guevara makes your meaningless life more worthwhile. — frank
Without the power of labor unions, American leftists just strayed off into nowhere. — frank
Just trying to figure the world out. Why all the angst toward "wokeness" and elitists? — frank
A medieval history scholar said we know more about ancient societies (2000 - 3000 years ago) than we do about medieval society. That was several decades ago and historians have made progress, but whenever I read medieval history I am usually very surprised by what all was going on. It most definitely was not 'the dark ages'. — BC
I plead guilty (but the statute of limitations has expired). Back in the late 60s, a poster of Che, maybe Mao or Lenin, seemed meaningful. Now I'd call it virtue signaling. For roughly a year (1969-70) I received leftist instruction from a roommate who had been involved in Trotskyist groups at the U of I in Champaign Urbana. I picked up some of the names, and some of the lingo.
In the 1980s I had a real encounter with union organizing by participating in the Hormel Strike support group. The Hormel strikers lost, despite the heroic efforts of the support group to be supportive (tongue in cheek). But that was my first close encounter, at age 40 with an actual strike by actual blue-collar workers. They were all replaced at lower wages and worse working conditions. By that time I had become "a leftist" (sic). — BC
Lots of leftists do not, in fact, have such consciousness -- not because we are fakes and hypocrites, but because our education and experience has taught us to think of ourselves as professionals and managers--even if we are still clock-punching workers doing white collar service labor. Workers who do not see the larger picture are at a major disadvantage. — BC
Just trying to figure the world out. Why all the angst toward "wokeness" and elitists?
— frank
It's insubstantial social media chatter seeping into real life. Were one so inclined, one could do a history of social media trends, fads, and obsessions: Who started it on what platform; how it spread through various channels; where did it begin to be referenced as important; and so on. I think one would find that the hot issue of the moment (or year) owes little to real life, though it may have an effect on real life. Memes such as "the 2020 election was stolen" are UNTRUE, but have turned out to be quite powerful and/or destructive. "Stop the Steal", "Lock Her Up", "Sleepy Joe" and so on. "Racist", "homophobic", or "Transphobic" become clubs to bludgeon opponents (even though racism, and so on, are real).
In a word, "It's epiphenomenal". (Maybe that's the right word...)
I avoid paying much attention to all that crap. — BC
I guess, but the guys who attacked the capital on Jan-6 organized on-line. I think the internet helped Trump get elected. Maybe some of it seeps into real life? — frank
Frequency illusion is related to memory. Now that you know about something, it appears to pop up more often. In reality, your new favorite song may have always been around. But because it's on your mind, you might start to notice it everywhere and, in turn, think that it's somehow become more popular.
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