fyi, here's another article about the reinforcement of class difference. this time the focus is on how the (often working) poor are affected by the inaccessibility of even basic dental care. of course, as i should have mentioned the other day, class stratification and racialization articulate together in the u.s., to produce our society's hierarchical structure along both of these axes.
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Date: 2007-01-31 05:07 pm (UTC)in this post, i wasn't trying to make an argument about what should be done, only putting "out there" the observation about one of the ways that class stratification works, how it persists. as for how class stratification should be addressed...that's a matter for a much longer post. but you know i'm a big pinko, so i'm sure you can guess where i'd go with it.
but what i think about how it should be addressed is kind of moot anyway. in the communist manifesto marx and engels say that "capitalism creates its own grave diggers" (not a verbatim quote--sorry, i can't go look it up right now). in other words, as the contradictions of class stratification intensify--which they have been, and will continue to do if left unchecked (look at the statistics on the difference between CEO salaries vs. the salaries of people working for those companies)--the lower classes will rebel against the structure that keeps them in the lower strata, whether anyone's telling them they should or they shouldn't. it's the phenomenon of immanent critique: when you have a society structured in dominance, that structure produces its own opposition, and that opposition can grow into a violent revolution, not just a peaceful reform movement. it's not fully predictable...
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Date: 2007-01-31 05:10 pm (UTC)