Mobile version

Social Class and the Tea Party Show Biz

  

by: cassiodorus

Thu Apr 22, 2010 at 17:00:00 PDT


( - promoted by buhdydharma )

You all, I hope, have read Paul Street's and Anthony DiMaggio's piece on MRZine, "What 'Populist Uprising'?", about the actual identities of the participants in "Tea Party" movement.  This actually reveals something interesting about Street himself -- that someone who actually wants to "resist empire" is willing to admit that the only resistance to make it to the TV screen is, in fact, a charade.  

(crossposted at Orange and at Firedoglake)

cassiodorus :: Social Class and the Tea Party Show Biz
Nothing is, in fact, going on.  Do check out Paul Street and Anthony DiMaggio's piece on MRZine, "What "Populist Uprising?"  Facts and Reflections on Race, Class, and the Tea Party "Movement," Part 1."  Now, of course, Street and DiMaggio expose what we already know, that the so-called "Tea Party" movement is comprised of a bunch of ignorant fools.  The question they resolve, however, is a more interesting one: are they anyone we'd want to approach?  The answer is "no."  Here is what the authors say:

Are these "Tea Party" people really motivated primarily by economic issues and problems and just slightly by concerns and sentiments of race, gender, and religion?  Are their grievances really all that legitimate and potentially progressive?  Last but not least, are they really coalesced into anything that deserves to be considered a "movement," much less a "populist uprising" (of any sort)?

Based on recently released national data generated by CBS and the New York Times and our own regionally specific (Midwestern) research and observation of the "Tea Party" people, our answers to each of these questions is a resounding NO.

In other words, despite the authors' disclaimer that the Left needs to build a movement of some sort here, these are the people whom we'd LEAST want to recruit to a movement.  The authors continue:


According to a recent (April 5-April 12, 2010) CBS and New York Times poll of 1,580 persons among the 18 percent of Americans who call themselves Tea Party supporters, they are "wealthier and more well-educated than the general public, and are no more or less afraid of falling into a lower socioeconomic class."  The survey finds that 75 percent of them have college educations; 76 percent enjoy household incomes above $50,000 (including a fifth of them making more than $100,000); 78 percent describe their financial situations as "good" or "fairly good;" 65 percent of them identify as either middle or middle upper class; 59 percent are men; 75 percent are 45 or older; and 89 percent are white.

The authors go on to detail the fundamentally class-biased politics of this group of upper-middle-class (almost entirely) white (mostly) men:

One of their great gripes with Obama, for whom their disapproval is massive (88 percent for Tea Party supporters compared to 40 percent for the populace as a whole) is that his policies "favor the poor."

And God knows we can't have policies favoring the poor.  This piece, then, and the polls upon which it is largely based, ought to put paid to all of the speculation about "talking to the teabaggers."  But, before any of you voice an objection to the "ignore the rich" line of reasoning I'm suggesting here, let's take a look at the authors' disclaimer:


While we agree that the Left should seek to make inroads with those privileged Americans who have been seduced by the culture of greed and buy into Republican-Tea Party propaganda, our first task remains mobilizing the poor and disadvantaged who already support progressive policies but have largely been ignored in and marginalized by the political process.

I agree, of course, but is anyone focusing upon that process today?  Are we really organizing the poor and dispossessed?  As the authors pointed out, Scott Brown's victory over Martha Coakley in the general election represented a fundamental demobilization of the working class.  Do we all seek to make inroads among rich folks at this point?  

Oh, sure, Street and DiMaggio point out that this particular group of rich folks are like white racists in the Jim Crow South.  But the authors of this piece should also bring the readers' attention to the main class-based reason WHY we shouldn't pay attention to "Tea Party" nonsense: the folks who belong to this so-called "movement" seem to know their class interest a lot better than do the "progressives."  The attitudes of the poor, on the other hand, are illustrated in Paul Street's discourse by an anecdote he tells in a previous column:


Here is an interesting message I received from a teacher of black students in the Cincinnati Public Schools (CPS) in February of 2009:      

"Today, I asked a class for which I was subbing (high-school English students, about a dozen, all-black, at one of CPS's actually nice high-school facilities) what they thought of Obama.  Their initial reaction was one of, for lack of a better way to say it, pride and joy."

"But upon closer inspection, this turned out to be a rather shallow sentiment. For when I asked them if they expected any real changes under Obama, they all said no."

Sure, this is just an anecdote.  But remember that this was at the beginning of the Obama administration.  How do you think these teenagers would have reacted if they'd actually had a sense of their own class interests?  Expectations would have been nice.

 

Tags: , , , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email

Everybody knows (4.00 / 5)


"Mientras el trabajo sea una comodidad, un mecanismo de extracción de plusvalía y un arma de alienación, el sistema y sus miserias sobrevivirán."  -Peter McLaren

it's kind of a drag (4.00 / 4)
The fact that many in the TP movement are college graduates is a little depressing. This is what American higher-education does to people? I don't care about the ideology--smart people can be most anything. But the arguments coming out of that movement are markedly anti-intellectual and gruesomely tribal and violent in tone.

They live in largely white, walled off enclaves. (4.00 / 4)
My brother and sister in law talk about this, and the subtext is pretty clear.  The town where they live is like a white suburban fortress -- I'm surprised it doesn't have walls.  And it's filled with Wal-Marts.

They may have college degrees in most cases, but they are disconnected and perceive their relative idyll as entitlement.  They talk about a welfare system that hasn't existed for decades and are defensive, seeing people as trying to take something away from them that they've earned.  And so, yes, they resort to these faux-arguments about legions of poor people taking advantage of them in innumerable small ways, rather than a few huge con artists taking away from them in a very big way.

I believe it has to do with racism and basic insecurity; a perception they will not be able to live that walled off white fortress enclave lifestyle forever.

Tommyknockers, Tommyknockers, knocking at the door


[ Parent ]
Yes, I can see an hear the racism (0.00 / 0)
that is barely beneath the surface--it kind of shocks me that his ugly aspect of American life has raised its head so sharply at this time. I think Obama has really freaked these people out and roused them from their torpor. It really upsets the ones I've listened to.

[ Parent ]
And your evidence for that is where? (0.00 / 0)
You just made that up, didn't you?

I suggest everybody read the NY Times CBS poll, thoroughly, before they step in it some more.

I've started writing a longish post on the subject, but it's not done. In the meantime, I'll just point to Street and DiMaggio's BS claim that the Tea Partiers are "quite affluent", and contrast that with the poll results:

Question 98 asks: "If you were asked to use one of these five names for your social class, which would you say you belong in - upper class, upper-middle class, middle class, working class, or lower class?"

The answers for the TP are:

Upper 3
Upper-middle 15
Middle 50
Working 26
Lower 5
DK/NA 2

So, 81% of the TP respondents said that they are either middle class, working class, or lower class. But that's not the way that Street and DiMaggio spin it. No, they tell us that 65% are upper-middle or middle class, which is mathematically correct, but in their brilliant opinion, this means that the Tea Party isn't really populist.

Well, wikipedia defines populism thusly:

Populism, defined either as an ideology[1][2][3][4] (more rarely and uncommonly), a political philosophy[5][6][7] or a type of discourse[8][9], is a type of political-social thought that juxtaposes "the people" against "the elites", and urges social and political system changes.

To imply that the Tea Party participants can't be populists, as Street and DiMaggio do, is to imply that the 81% who are middle class, working class, or lower class, can't be or otherwise aren't against "the elites".

Which is sheer rubbish, probably as about as true as your claim that the Tea Partiers live in "largely white, walled off enclaves". However, I welcome you to prove me wrong, and produce the evidence for your claim. If it turns out to be true, we can add one more complaint about the CBS-Times poll, which definitely had it's plusses, but also had it's share of crappy defects. Not so much, IMO, as to make it as crappy as the Street and DiMaggio article, but seriously flawed, all the same.

for a FULL COURT PRESS
DemocracyABC.org


[ Parent ]
Now take a look at page 41 (0.00 / 0)
-- here -- 80% may claim to be "middle class" or lower, but more than half are earning over $50K/ year.

"Mientras el trabajo sea una comodidad, un mecanismo de extracción de plusvalía y un arma de alienación, el sistema y sus miserias sobrevivirán."  -Peter McLaren

[ Parent ]
No, the question is for total family income (0.00 / 0)
And if you think making more than 50K takes you out of the middle class, for a family of, say, 2 parents and 2.3 kids, on what basis do you say so? To get 50K, you probably have 2 wage earners (perhaps working more than 1 job). 25K per year is $500/week, or $12.50/hour. Minimum wage is about $7.25, which in this part of the country (NJ), is nowhere near what I'd call middle class. It's probably a livable wage, if you sleep 10 to a room, thus cutting your rent to the bone.  :-)

Natasha Chart recently has a front paged diary on what 50.3K yearly household income will get you. Basically, it gets you a house, under the right conditions, and leaves you with $100-$200 in discretionary income. Gee whiz, $200 dollars! Yippee! If you want to go to the health food store and buy some fish oil, CoEnzyme Q10, and Resveratrol, and you intend to share it with your spouse, better plan on rationing it, carefully.

Here are the assumptions used:

1)    Didn't overpay for his house
2)    Made a 20% down-payment of $45K on his home purchase
3)    Has no debt aside from his mortgage (so no credit card debt, student loans, etc)
4)    Only has one car in the family and drives 15,000 miles per year
5)    Keeps his energy bill reasonable
6)    Does not eat out at restaurants ever/ keeps food expenses moderate
7)    Has no pets
8)    Pays for health insurance but has no monthly medical expenses (unlikely with two kids)
9)    Keeps his personal budget under control regarding cable TV, Internet, and the like
10)    Doesn't spoil his kids with toys, gadgets, trips to the movies, etc.
11)    Doesn't take vacations.

I didn't study Natasha's references, but I can't help but notice that there's absolutely nothing about saving for children's college education (even if it does mention that there's no student loans; that could be the parents' student loans). So, if you want to help your kids get beyond a future flipping burgers, and want to minimize student loan debt for the children, you better forget about the fish oil, CoEnzyme Q10, and Resveratrol.

Do you seriously consider making 10 or 20K more than this, for a family of 4 or 5, to be beyond the middle class? If it helps you make up your mind, I'll point out that a relative of mine told me that he's paying 43K per years for his daughter's college.

for a FULL COURT PRESS
DemocracyABC.org


[ Parent ]
I would love to earn $50K/year (4.00 / 1)
Don't think it's going to happen any time soon, but 'twould be great... as for having kids, sounds fun, except for the enormous expense and the fact that you'd have to spend the rest of your life apologizing to them for the world they'd been brought into.  And as for buying property laughs yeah right.  Maybe in South Dakota or somewhere with no housing bubble.

"Mientras el trabajo sea una comodidad, un mecanismo de extracción de plusvalía y un arma de alienación, el sistema y sus miserias sobrevivirán."  -Peter McLaren

[ Parent ]
Shorter version: to you, 50K seems like upper middle class (0.00 / 0)
Meanwhile, there are people - say, the newly homeless people sleeping in their cars, who have a part-time job at McDonald's - who would look at you as relatively rich.

Nevertheless, 50K is just middle class for a family of 4, with very little margin for error. And you don't have be a member of the Tea Party to feel that way. Therefore, demonizing them as hypocritical, at least on that fantastical basis, is a disgusting smear. I mean, one could easily discover that by talking to liberal families of 4 that are trying to get by on 50K! I've never seen a store that charges one price for liberals, and another for conservatives....

This demonizing is not helpful at all, at least from the perspective of citizens like myself who are looking for voters to form voting blocs, that will then still have to wrangle with each other, but at least be able to do so having cut the plutocrats and their lackeys out of the process.

As for where this is all heading, unless it's checked by citizens who stop being dupes for plutocratic forces, a depressing scenario was discussed on Gary Null's show, here and here.

A final point - if you were socking away all of $200 per month, and had dreams of your children finishing college within 4 years of their senior high school year, and with little family debt - you'd naturally be less amenable to having your taxes increased, even if you were sympathetic to using them to help poor people. $200/month is 2.4K per year. That means that you are capable of saving all of 4.8 percent of your income. If the government now raises your taxes by 3 percentage points, and one of your kids breaks his leg, and your car has an accident, what's to prevent you and your family from entering a downward spiral of credit card debt?

The Tea Partiers tended to be conservative. IIRC, they were mostly Protestant, but as for the evangelical ones, a lot of them fork over 10% of their income to their church. So, they're not even going to have a $200 per month margin of 'safety' to play with. They will be looking at, e.g., dropping medical insurance for the parents. Of course, with the wonderful Romneycare - oops, Obamacare - now the law of the land, they'll even lose that option (unless they want to pay the fine.)

for a FULL COURT PRESS
DemocracyABC.org


[ Parent ]
At least in my high school, (4.00 / 2)
and I would imagine in at least some colleges, you don't need to know anything to get through the toughest classes.  You just need to know how to game the system and if you're shallow enough you'll do that and get a good enough grade and do just well enough that you yourself are taken care of.

Vote for yourself at www.ni4d.org!

[ Parent ]
Yeah, (0.00 / 0)
See all those people on CBS yelling their heads off at SEC/ Big Ten/ Big Twelve/ Pac-Ten football games four months out of the year?  They're college students.

"Mientras el trabajo sea una comodidad, un mecanismo de extracción de plusvalía y un arma de alienación, el sistema y sus miserias sobrevivirán."  -Peter McLaren

[ Parent ]
Thus we see... (4.00 / 2)
How do you think these teenagers would have reacted if they'd actually had a sense of their own class interests?  Expectations would have been nice.

the soft bigotry of low expectations in action.


I pretty much agree (4.00 / 1)
But I had some doubts when Noam Chomsky said those recent things about how we're on the path to fascism and he hasn't ever seen the amount of anger in politics that he sees today, and that people on the left would be mistaken to mock tea partiers.

Vote for yourself at www.ni4d.org!

Well OK. (4.00 / 1)
I don't want to "mock" the Tea Partiers -- I just think that it's pathetic that a certain fraction of the so-called "Left" apparently wants to recruit anyone who's angry.

"Mientras el trabajo sea una comodidad, un mecanismo de extracción de plusvalía y un arma de alienación, el sistema y sus miserias sobrevivirán."  -Peter McLaren

[ Parent ]
Did you read what Chomsky wrote? (4.00 / 1)
I'd be interested to hear your reaction.

Vote for yourself at www.ni4d.org!

[ Parent ]
Yeah -- (4.00 / 1)
I suppose I could imagine some Republican idiot using the Tea Party protests as some sort of faux "populism" to promote a really screwed-up agenda.  End public education and put the children back to work as child laborers, or something like that.  This quote, though, is from Matthew Rothschild's piece on Chomsky in the Progressive:

When farmers, the petit bourgeoisie, and Christian organizations joined forces with the Nazis, "the center very quickly collapsed," Chomsky said.

The differences between now and then, though, are this: 1) there's already no "center" NOW, just two right-wing parties and a bunch of obedient sheep, 2) the Tea Partiers ARE the petit-bourgeoisie, or at least part of them, 3) the US and the world are the beneficiaries of a cultural revolution which occurred (for the most part) in the 1960s and 1970s and which promoted tolerance beyond the bounds of what was acceptable in the 1930s, and 4) the material conditions for the resurgence of fascism aren't there because the resource base for the technologies (given the current state of the forces of production) is much closer to exhaustion than it was in the '30s.

So I would agree with Chomsky that the whole trend looks headed for a bad end; I'm not sure, however, that we can call that end "fascism."

"Mientras el trabajo sea una comodidad, un mecanismo de extracción de plusvalía y un arma de alienación, el sistema y sus miserias sobrevivirán."  -Peter McLaren


[ Parent ]
I'm not sure how I feel about all of this (4.00 / 1)
but it's interesting to me that the man who seems to be most able to get past the media's smokescreens looks like he is getting caught in one.  Hopefully he's wrong.

And what do you mean by #4?

Vote for yourself at www.ni4d.org!


[ Parent ]
As I said in my previous diary: (4.00 / 1)
"Big Tent Anticapitalism," there's an oil limit upon the recovery, wherein if the recovery starts to roar, so also will the price of oil.  

Now, you might be able to get around this problem with some sort of crash program to develop thorium breeder reactors for world energy needs or some great solar power installation stretched across the Mojave Desert or a vast increase in the exploitation of deep hot rock geothermal power.  Put aside, if you will, the scientific doubts about the efficacy of any of these approaches in substituting for the enormous energy diet of contemporary capitalism: 85 million bbls./day of crude oil and an equal carbon-equivalent of coal.  As long as the world's political systems are in the grip of hucksters, it's not even going to be tried.

And that's just the energy end of it.  Take a look if you can at the enormous ecological costs of our dependence (for the most elementary tasks of survival) upon processes of corporate exploitation.  How much of the Amazon genepool is destroyed each year through deforestation, thus reducing it as a source of future medicine etc.?  What part of oceanic ecosystems is brought to ruin through the wide nets cast by the world's fisheries, thus impeding their future "economic value"?  And so on.

The idea of fascism was that a partnership between government and corporations would stimulate productivity and advance the Italian cause as regards "development."  This was promoted in an era in which the exploitation of global coal, oil, metal, and agricultural resources was relatively young.  Today "development" has proceeded to the point where it undercuts its own natural "resource" and "ecosystems" basis for proceeding -- this is what James O'Connor calls the "second contradiction of capitalism."  We are, to be sure, in another era of collaboration between government and corporations -- but in this era the elite group task has more to do with the milking of Ponzi schemes than "development."  "Development" lumbers onward, to be sure -- the average global economic growth rate decreases each decade without ever fully reaching zero.  But it's only a matter of time.

The era of "development" was always fueled, regardless of the ideologies promoted by each nation-state for the sake of "development," by the global spread of capitalist discipline.  Whether the people at the top are corporate owners or government planners, the process has always been the same: pay the worker a wage and accumulate the capital resources produced by the worker.  We are entering into an era in which the failure of the system to deliver upon its promises has attained a basis in EXHAUSTION.  The Nazi regime applied a massive Keynesian stimulus to the German economy in the 1930s.  In any future "fascism," however, the cops are likely to consider themselves lucky to be paid, and will probably just make a living by stealing from "suspects."

"Mientras el trabajo sea una comodidad, un mecanismo de extracción de plusvalía y un arma de alienación, el sistema y sus miserias sobrevivirán."  -Peter McLaren


[ Parent ]
 

Menu

- Create New Account
- Lost password
- Contact Us

Username:

Password:




- Mission Statement
- FAQ
- YouTube Posting
- HTML Help

Seek




Advanced Search


Contribute to Docudharma
 

 
     

 

Action

WikiLeaks Mirror Sites
 

Powered by: SoapBlox