Category: Op-Ed

  • I first learned about malnutrition from textbooks and documentaries in my medical school. I followed the scenes of hunger emerging from Somalia and South Sudan. I wholeheartedly felt them — with every sip of potable water I drank while theirs was polluted, with each bite of food I ate while they were reduced to skin and bones. Yet I never imagined that one day, I would be in their place…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • Alfred Marshall’s Principles of Economics, published in 1890, stands as a seminal work that has profoundly shaped the trajectory of what has become to be defined as “basic economics”. It solidified the mainstream concepts of supply and demand, offering a subjective, yet tractable model for explaining how prices and quantities are determined. This model, which posits that market equilibrium is achieved through the interplay of consumer utility and producer costs, became the cornerstone of mainstream (neoclassical) economics.

    Its pervasive influence, however, is problematic, as its simplistic epistemology and ontology leads to flawed conclusions regarding the intricacies of the real world. Marshall’s framework, while elegant in its simplicity, commits a fallacy of misplaced concreteness. The model, presented as a universal truth, constitutes psychological reductionism, reducing complex human motivations and social structures to a narrow set of pseudo-mathematical calculations. The idealistic ceteris paribus assumption isolates variables in a manner that (purposefully) negates the real world.

    Marshallian supply demand curve

    The Demand Curve

    The Marshallian demand curve is derived from utilitarian theory, which posits the pursuit of consumer happiness through commodity consumption within a binding budget constraint. It illustrates the quantity of a good a consumer will demand at various price levels, assuming all other factors (income, prices of other goods, preferences) remain constant. While appealingly demonstrating a straightforward inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded, its analytical use is hampered by its inherent conflation of two distinct effects of a price change, that is, the substitution effect and the income effect.

    When the price of a good changes, consumers are theorized to respond in two primary ways. The substitution effectcaptures the consumer’s tendency to shift consumption away from the now relatively more expensive goods towards relatively cheaper alternatives, while maintaining the same level of satisfaction. This effect highlights the responsiveness of consumer choices to changes in relative prices. The income effect arises because a change in price alters the consumer’s real income or purchasing power. If the price of a good falls, the consumer’s real income effectively increases, allowing them to purchase more of all goods. Conversely, a price increase reduces real income, potentially leading to a decrease in consumption.

    The problem, hence, lies in the inability to disentangle these two effects. It presents a combined effect of price changes on quantity demanded, yet without effectively comprehending the contribution of each individual effect. This conflation renders the Marshallian demand curve less precise for a comprehensive understanding of the actual behavioral responses to price changes. It cannot precisely indicate how much of a change in quantity demanded is attributable solely to a change in relative prices versus a change in purchasing power. This lack of precision complicates accurate consumer welfare measurement.

    For instance, an increase in the price of a good could lead to an increase in the quantity demanded. This paradox occurs primarily for low-income households. When the price of a staple good, like bread or rice, rises, consumers, facing severe budget constraints, may find themselves unable to afford more expensive substitutes (such as meat or vegetables). Consequently, they are compelled to purchase more of the now relatively more expensive staples to meet their basic needs. There is also a scenario when demand increases with price due to the perceived symbolic representation of a commodity, that is, the invocation of a particular social status that manifests itself via luxury appeal. The complexities of consumer behavior reflect particularities that the assumed demand curve cannot adequately disentangle. What exactly then is an effective definition of rationality?

    Moreover, the acute vulnerability of the Marshallian demand curve lies in its struggle to unequivocally establish and theoretically justify a downward slope. While the bedrock assumption is an inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded, the Marshallian framework, in its aggregative form, finds it remarkably difficult to provide a robust and unimpeachable underpinning for this seemingly universal phenomenon. This conceptual ambiguity is not merely a theoretical nuance; it carries significant implications for the model’s practical use. The inability to definitively confirm a downward slope within its own constructs severely curtails the model’s predictive power of consumer choice. If the direction of the relationship between price and quantity cannot be established, forecasts based on the model regarding consumer responses to price changes are therefore unreliable.

    The Supply Curve

    At the heart of the Marshallian supply curve is the idea that while we examine the relationship between price and quantity for one good, all other factors remain constant. This simplification proves increasingly problematic as we consider significant shifts in production volumes. The “all else being equal” condition unravels. An increase in the production of one commodity can ripple through the entire economic system. If this increased production demands a greater quantity of a specific raw material, the fundamental dynamics of that material’s market—its price and availability—will be concretely altered. This change, in turn, directly affects the production costs of other industries that also rely on the same raw material. Such interdependencies highlight a generality, that is, supply is not merely a collection of atomistic production silos. Instead, it is a complex web of shared resources, elaborate supply chains, and the pervasive influence of technological spillovers, all dictated by the level of effective demand.

    Firms are not price-takers. The notion of perfectly competitive markets where individual firms have no influence over prices is an idealized social construction. Industries, particularly those dominated by a few large players, exhibit characteristics of oligopoly and monopoly. Firms are capable of influencing prices through their production decisions, pricing strategies, and organizational maneuvers. This deviation from the price-taking assumption is crucial because it implies that the supply curve as understood as upward sloping does not accurately represent the firm’s output.

    Collusion and coercion reign supreme. Collusion, whether explicit or tacit, allows firms to collectively restrict output and manipulate prices, effectively creating an artificial scarcity that drives up prices beyond what would prevail in a truly competitive market. Coercion can manifest in various forms, from predatory pricing designed to drive out competitors to the exploitation of market dominance to impose unfavorable terms on suppliers, workers, or consumers. These practices disrupt the vogue perception of the relationship between cost and supply. Significant economies of scale result in decreasing production costs, which contradicts the assumption of naturally diminishing returns. The existence of market power challenges the universal applicability of the upward-sloping supply curve.

    The Takeway

    The assertion that prices are solely determined by the interplay of supply and demand, often referred to as “market forces,” is ad hoc. There is a problem of circularity: if consumer and producer behavior is contingent upon price fluctuations, and price fluctuations are, in turn, dependent on producer and consumer behavior, how does the model effectively capture a market-clearing price? Consumer choices extend far beyond simple utility maximization based on price and income. It is essential to assess broader sociological factors such as prevailing cultural paradigms, social class divisions, deeply ingrained ethical considerations, and even fleeting fashionable trends, all of which profoundly dictate how much consumers are willing to pay for goods and services. Similarly, producer decisions regarding pricing and output are not solely driven by an idealized competitive cost structure; producer behavior is influenced by standardized techniques of production, sophisticated marketing strategies, and ingrained organizational behavior that are heavily shaped by prevailing industry norms.

    The profound significance of power dynamics is an undeniable truth, particularly when observing the behavior of monopolies and oligopolies. These concentrated market structures wield immense influence, leveraging their dominant positions to dictate terms and extract disproportionate benefits. By controlling a substantial share of a particular market, these entities establish prices that far exceed production costs. This extraction of wealth is not a benign process; it is a direct consequence of the exploitation inherent in their dominant market positions.

    One prominent example is the imposition of unfavorable contract terms on suppliers. Faced with a limited number of buyers for their goods or services, suppliers often have little recourse but to accept terms that significantly erode their profit margins, limit their ability to innovate, or even threaten their very existence. This imbalance of power can stifle competition further down the supply chain, as smaller suppliers struggle to compete against those with more favorable terms from dominant buyers.

    By virtue of monopsony, which is emblematic of market dominance, firms suppress wages. With fewer employers vying for labor extraction, workers have less bargaining power and fewer alternative employment options, which leads to stagnant wages, reduced benefits, and a decline in overall living standards. Moreover, beyond direct wage suppression, firms unilaterally dictate working conditions, limit opportunities for upward labor mobility, and impede labor unions as an effective countervailing force for social justice.

    The fixation on supply and demand curves as the primary, if not sole, determinant of allocation engenders profound misunderstandings. It simplifies the tapestry of human needs and aspirations into a narrow calculus of consumer satisfaction. It mystifies production, which is a collaborative endeavor shaped by institutional arrangements. By disregarding relational aspects, the ideology of “basic economics” is limited in scope, which makes it exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, to genuinely address persistent patterns of socioeconomic inequity, endemic to an economy whose modus operandi rests on accumulation of wealth at one pole and misery on the other. It constitutes a sanitized depiction of reality.

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Approximately 100 incarcerated Iranian trans people are missing, presumed dead, after an Israeli strike on the infamous Evin Prison. Authorities inside Iran, and political prisoners from inside the prison, are saying these missing individuals were killed in the bombardment. Israeli officials and media have framed the attack on Evin as “symbolic”: Israel wanted to show Iranians that it…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • All it took was a leak in a stormwater pipe. Over the course of one week in February 2014, nearly 40,000 tons of coal ash and 27 million gallons of contaminated wastewater poured from a retired Duke Energy power plant into the Dan River in Eden, North Carolina. Toxic gray sludge coated the riverbanks for miles, and carcinogenic heavy metals contaminated the drinking water for the thousands of…

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  • All we have left is water — and even clean drinking water is becoming nearly impossible to find. Sometimes I wonder: What if they cut that off too? Will I survive just three days? It seems that my death won’t come from an Israeli missile or a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s bullet — it will come from hunger. Slow. Silent. Cruel. And I ask myself: How can a world so devoid of humanity watch such an…

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  • As early as next Tuesday, Congress will vote on two bills that will make it easier for the U.S. government and U.S. arms makers to push weapons out the door to foreign clients more quickly, with less time for congressional scrutiny, and, in some cases, with Congress not even being informed that the sales are happening. At a time when arms sales are a centerpiece of U.S. foreign policy…

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  • The smoke over Iran may have cleared, but the aftershocks of the U.S. and Israel’s unprovoked attack are still reverberating. In one fell swoop, Washington conclusively demonstrated its total unreliability as a diplomatic partner. The lessons of this moment are being metabolized by heads of state across the world, including on the Korean Peninsula, where Donald Trump’s overtures for renewed…

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  • In recent months, nuclear weapons have reemerged in global headlines. Nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan approached the brink of a full-scale war, a confrontation that could have become an extinction-level event, with the potential to claim up to two billion lives worldwide. The instability of a global order structured on nuclear apartheid has also come into sharp relief in the context…

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  • On July 4, U.S. President Donald Trump signed the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” into law, implementing his reactionary policy agenda. This megabill is the most sweeping legislation in modern U.S. history and elevates neoliberalism to a new stage with huge tax cuts for the rich and equally huge cuts to the social safety net, including food programs and Medicaid coverage. Indeed…

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  • Federal immigration agents raided two cannabis farms in California last week, arresting more than 300 workers suspected of being in the United States without documentation. One farmworker, Jaime Alanís, fell 30 feet from a building to his death while attempting to flee the aggressive, chaotic raid at Glass House Farms in Ventura County. Alanís is the first known person to have died during an…

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    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • On a late March morning in 2024 in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, 24-year-old Yasmin Siam felt sharp pain grip her stomach. Labor had begun. Time was slipping away. But there was no way to get her to a hospital. Ambulances had become rare after months of Israeli attacks — too few to answer every cry for help. Airstrikes were ongoing, and Gaza had fallen into total immobility. Cars were gone.

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  • The recent 12-day war between Iran and Israel, which started in the early hours of June 13 with an unprovoked attack by Israel on Iran’s soil, has left more than just casualties and destruction. It has also delivered a devastating blow to the already vulnerable belief that diplomacy could substantively guide the region toward peace and nuclear nonproliferation. But if we are willing to listen and…

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  • The largest tract of public land in the United States is a wild expanse of tundra and wetlands stretching across nearly 23 million acres of northern Alaska. It’s called the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska, but despite its industrial-sounding name, the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, or NPR-A, is much more than a fuel depot. Tens of thousands of caribou feed and breed in this area…

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  • A shipment of U.S. wheat intended to feed millions of starving Yemeni civilians has become a stark symbol of how the Trump administration weaponizes humanitarian aid not only to punish geopolitical enemies, but also to stage a hollow performance of compassion while doing so. Earlier this year, a U.S. cargo ship carrying thousands of tons of wheat departed for Yemen…

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  • President Donald Trump traveled to central Texas on July 11, one week after flash floods ravaged the region. With 120 people confirmed dead and another 170 still missing, the Trump administration and Texas Republican state leaders are facing intense scrutiny for management and budgetary decisions that could have potentially mitigated the devastation. Officials at the National Weather Service have…

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  • I used to take my United States citizenship for granted. Don’t get me wrong, I was always aware of the benefits conferred on me by a U.S. passport, but I didn’t give it much more thought than that. My great-grandparents immigrated through Ellis Island, and eventually I happened to be born on a certain tract of land, within certain lines drawn up by men many years ago. It’s hard to know how…

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  • My friend Maren Poitras’ Finding the Money does the vital work of dragging Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) out of academic journals and into the public square; but like a union rep forced to negotiate at a table built by bosses, the film’s framework bends under the weight of capital’s myths. Stephanie Kelton rightly hammers that “currency issuers can never run out of money” (Kelton 2020) while the documentary pulls its punches where it hurts most: exposing how the ruling class weaponizes deficit hysteria to strangle working-class futures. The blame for this shouldn’t be laid at Poitras’s feet; it’s an unfortunate element of many MMT stories. 

    The film brilliantly shows dunces like Treasury officials wringing their hands over “funding” Social Security, as if the government is some broke diner owner counting pennies rather than the creator of the dollar itself. This is where Finding the Money needs Clara Mattei’s razor-sharp class analysis: when she writes that “austerity is not economic necessity but class war” (Mattei 2022), she’s naming the game. That’s the peanut butter to MMT’s chocolate! The documentary lets politicians and bankers off the hook by framing monetary ignorance as mere confusion rather than what it really is: a systemic con job to make workers believe schools and hospitals are “unaffordable” while Pentagon budgets bloat like a corpse in summer. This secondary confusion myth is a recurring hyper-courteous MMTism that sometimes diminishes its own walloping wake-up call. 

    Where the film truly shines is its demolition of household budget analogies – those capitalist fairy tales that pretend the US Treasury operates like a family choosing between groceries bills and rent. Kelton’s explanation of money creation is the sledgehammer this lie deserves. But when it comes to showing who benefits from these myths, Finding the Money treats monetary policy like a faulty appliance needing repair rather than a butcher’s knife held to labor’s throat. It also leaves the viewer with the notion that all private sector savings are the same rather than the class war that can be truly exposed through an analysis of stratification. 

    To add context, consider what’s missing: the footage of Wall Street bankers high-fiving over interest rate hikes that jack up their bond yields while crushing indebted workers. The montage of CEOs blaming “inflation” for price-gouging as they report record profits (Weber 2023). The truth Mattei exposed – that economic “rules” are just class weapons dressed up in math – gets lost in the film’s focus on educating elites rather than arming the working class.  

    The documentary’s biggest blind spot? It doesn’t follow the money all the way to the picket lines. It doesn’t show the folks without teeth skipping dental care because of austerity. The student debtors losing their homes. The broken families. Auto workers striking for wage hikes, CNBC screaming about inflation. When tenants demand rent control, landlords howl about “market fundamentals.” Every time workers fight for more, capital shrieks “we can’t afford it” while amassing profit they didn’t earn but extracted. How much more powerful would the film be if it connected these dots? 

    This isn’t just about understanding money. It’s about seizing it. The film could’ve shown Puerto Rican workers building solar grids after privatized power failed them (Rapin, 2023) or Jackson, Mississippi’s solidarity economies (Cooperation Jackson, 2019) – proof that when we stop begging and start building, the “money” magically appears. We get plenty of talking heads but not enough torch-bearing workers marching on central banks which work for, and at the legal behest of, a completely captured Congress. 

    Finding the Money is a good first step, like a union organizer’s introductory pamphlet. But unless it names capitalism boldly and without reservation as the counterfeiter of artificial scarcity, unless it shows workers how to wrestle the decision making and money-creation power from the suits who’ve captured congress and hoarded it like dragons on a pile of gold, it’s only telling half the story. The other half? That’s written in the streets. But the streets need the information in this wonderful but inadequate documentary. Everyone needs to see this film; then start investigating class.  

    Watch Finding the Money for free on YouTube. 

    It is also available to rent or buy at findingmoneyfilm.com 

    References:   
    Kelton, S. (2020), The Deficit Myth   
    Mattei, C. (2022), The Capital Order   
    Weber, I. (2023), Taking Aim at Sellers Inflation  

    Katherine Rapin (2023), The Grassroots Movement That Built Puerto Rico’s First Community Owned Microgrid 
    Cooperation Jackson (2019) The Just Transition, Economic Democracy, and the Green New Deal  

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • Israel’s genocide in Gaza has transformed donkeys from an outdated mode of transportation — once seen mostly in impoverished or agricultural areas — into the only remaining means of transportation for many. With most vehicles destroyed and fuel prices soaring, people have been left with no choice but to rely on donkeys to access basic services and transport their belongings when Israeli forces…

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  • “I must say,” Donald Trump commented, “I wish we had an occupying force.” It was June 1, 2020. The president, then in his first term in office, was having a phone call with the nation’s governors to discuss the ongoing Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests taking place nationwide in response to the murder of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis policeman. He was urging the governors to call in…

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  • In April, Secretary of Education Linda McMahon stood onstage at a major ed-tech conference in San Diego and declared with conviction that students across the U.S. would soon benefit from “A1 teaching.” She repeated it over and over — “A1” instead of “AI.” “There was a school system that’s going to start making sure that first graders, or even pre-Ks, have A1 teaching every year. That’s a wonderful…

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  • Approximately one month ago — after years of harassment and intermittent demolitions — Israeli occupation forces arrived in the Palestinian village of Khallet al-Dabe’, one of the 12 communities that make up Masafer Yatta in the South Hebron Hills in the occupied West Bank. They proceeded to demolish the village almost entirely. In just two and a half hours, Israeli occupation forces reduced…

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  • In the last few months, we witnessed two violent attacks on pro-Israel events organized by American Jewish groups, by perpetrators who shouted “Free Palestine!” as they acted. The attacks — which killed two young Israeli embassy staffers in Washington, D.C., and severely burned participants in a “Run for Their Lives” event in Boulder, Colorado, in support of Israeli hostages — have been roundly…

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  • The last time I tried to get food aid in Gaza, I nearly died. It was early morning in Rafah, and I hadn’t eaten properly in days. I woke before the sun rose, stomach aching, body weak, and met up with my friend Abu Naji. We planned to walk five kilometers to a zone near al-Alam — “the Flag,” as people call it — where humanitarian aid was rumored to be distributed. Word on the street said it…

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  • As the country tumbles towards fascism, some members of the U.S. military have struggled with a choice: defy illegal orders, or participate in the dismantling of American democracy. In June, over the objections of local leaders, including Gov. Gavin Newsom, President Donald Trump called up the National Guard and the U.S. Marines to quell protests in Los Angeles over immigration raids.

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  • Prep time: 2 minutes 

    Yield: 1 sandwich 

    Ingredients: 

    • 1 loaf French bread, sliced in half 
    • Mayonnaise or ranch dressing 
    • 6 oz cooked meat (I recommend fried shrimp) 
    • 2 slices American cheese 
    • Shredded lettuce 
    • Tomato slices 
    • Pickles 

    Spread the mayo or ranch dressing on both halves of the bread, then place the meat on the bottom half, followed by the cheese. Pile on the vegetables and top with the other half of the bread. 

    ___________________________ 

    That’s the recipe for a dressed po’boy sandwich – a quick yet filling meal that’s perfect for lunch. It’s a great way to use leftovers. Notice there’s no “skip to recipe” button needed – just a list of ingredients followed by instructions. In other words, a recipe. If I can put the cooking procedure first, why do we always need to read a dissertation just to get a simple recipe? 

    Online food blogs don’t approach it this way. They usually start with some kind of personal story (how I discovered this dish; why my family loves this dish; favorite ways of eating this dish), then a brief explanation of each ingredient. 

    Search engines respond to buzzwords like “shrimp” and “sandwich.” And it’s easier to copyright a story and specific technique than it is to just copyright a list of ingredients. This explains why every recipe needs an essay, but the real driving force behind bloated internet recipes is ad revenue. The more you scroll, the more ads they expose you to, and the more money they make. Attention is currency in the age of advertisements. Showing up in searches and copyrighting our work doesn’t matter if there isn’t any money being made. 

    Commercials have infected every single online space we view, unless we’re paying a subscription fee. Wherever we go – the movies, shopping, sporting events – we are bombarded with advertisements. Even if we’re going somewhere commercial-free, the radio on the way there is trying to sell us something. And it works; businesses wouldn’t spend so much money for no reason. When media reaches large numbers of people, it influences society. Maybe you won’t go out and buy a product, but seeing an advertisement for a brand legitimizes that brand. Groups with access to large amounts of money have the power to influence society. This is power the average worker will never have. Abstract power like this helps give the capitalist class its strength. 

    Collecting money off property one owns gives an individual privilege over people who must sell their labor to make money. Marxists use the term bourgeoisie to describe this private property-owning class. We don’t use this jargon for fun; we do it because it’s important to distinguish the abstract political and societal power that comes with the privilege of owning private property. 

    gorilla playing drums

    Being able to occupy space in people’s minds is an astonishing thing. Useless knowledge about the “Betty Crocker Bake’n Fill” will forever live rent-free in my brain. Whenever anybody says the words “Old Spice,” I can hear whistling in my head. When In the Air Tonight by Phil Collins plays, I can’t help but imagine a gorilla playing the drums. Commercials have dominated media our entire lives and are always there trying to squeeze everything they can out of us. The bourgeoisie don’t just control media; they use it against us. They use all the influence they have to suck wealth away from the working class. 

    All value is derived from labor. Raw materials aren’t worth much until they are gathered and prepared. There are plenty of shrimp in the sea, but no one can eat them until they are caught. There’s plenty of wheat but refining it into flour is tedious and time-consuming. The ingredients themselves do not make a meal. You need to coat the shrimp in seasoning, then drench them in flour and fry them in oil for a few minutes – I throw in diced onion and red pepper for some extra pizzazz. A po’boy only has value once its fixins have been assembled. We generate value every time we do something socially necessary. Anytime we cook a meal or make art, we’ve generated value. 

    shrimp po'boy sandwich

    All the capital in capitalism was created through labor. Not only are we the driving force behind history, but we will also outlast the bourgeoisie. This historical significance is why we Marxists call the working class the proletariat. The latter includes the abstract force that comes with generating society’s value. This is why labor strikes hurt the bourgeoisie: because they need our labor. The bourgeoisie need us, but we don’t need them. The most powerful thing we can do as workers is withhold our labor. Union organizer Big Bill Haywood understood this; as he put it: “If the workers are organized, all they have to do is put their hands in their pockets and they’ve got the capitalist class whipped.” 

    The po’boy sandwich gained popularity during a 1929 boxcar strike. Sympathetic cooks would fill some bread with whatever cheap ingredients they could afford to give away. When a union striker would order, the cashier would tell the cooks, “Here comes another poor boy,” so they would know to load up the sandwich. Then they’d write “Po’boy” on the order. Those po’boy sandwiches might be the only thing those striking workers ate that day, the cooks knew how badly those strikers needed a meal and they were happy to help. That level of working class solidarity is what we need today.  

    1920s Martin Brothers sandwich shop on St. Claude and Touro  “Originators of Poor Boy Sandwiches”
    Martin Brothers on St. Claude and Touro “Originators of Poor Boy Sandwiches”

    Class solidarity is something we see all the time, but usually, we see bourgeois class solidarity. Bourgeois media, be it fiction or news, tends to reward those who reinforce the status quo while delegitimizing any voices calling for change. Even when their influence as individual brands is limited, their collective influence as a class gives them strength. Commercials are the bourgeoisie promoting its own interests. They exist to reinforce the convention that proletariat solidarity shouldn’t exist. 

    Proletariat solidarity is why we have the advantages we have today. Eight-hour workdays and five-day workweeks became the norm after union strikes gave the working class bargaining power. Employee health care and paid time off exist only as long as workers fight to maintain those privileges. The bourgeoisie would rather have us work every day with no benefits and little pay, but they don’t because they fear proletariat organization. 

    The bourgeoisie constantly exert control over the proletariat. While at work, they dictate where we go, what we wear, and for how long. When we’re not working, they interrupt our free time to manipulate our spending habits and even our thoughts. Advertisements don’t exist just to make money; they exist to influence society. Any time we aren’t fighting for ourselves, we are losing. There are plenty of ways to fight back: educating yourself is the first step. Knowledge is power, and it is power we need to make changes in society. Organizing with like-minded people – whether politically-minded or just coworkers – is another. And class solidarity? This is the easiest one for sure. Don’t cross the picket line when there’s a labor dispute. And if you have the opportunity, give a striking worker a sandwich.

    Zeta Mail

    This post was originally published on Real Progressives.

  • At last week’s NATO summit, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced that his country would be buying a dozen F-35A fighter jets from the U.S., each one capable of carrying a payload of tactical nuclear weapons. It marks the first time since shortly after the end of the Cold War that U.S. nuclear weapons capable of being dropped from aircraft are to be stationed in the U.K.

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  • The Supreme Court issued a wave of opinions last week, wrapping a 2024-25 term filled with major victories for Donald Trump’s agenda. Amid high-profile decisions on nationwide injunctions, LGBTQ books, trans health care, and more, the court made the unusual choice to delay a ruling on Louisiana v. Callais: a redistricting case that could alter the future of voting rights across the country.

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  • The Senate is on the verge of passing the distinctly misnamed “big beautiful bill.” It is, in fact, one of the ugliest pieces of legislation to come out of Congress in living memory. The version that passed the House recently would cut $1.7 trillion, mostly in domestic spending, while providing the top 5% of taxpayers with roughly $1.5 trillion in tax breaks. Over the next few years…

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  • Pride month was established in June to acknowledge a pivotal event in queer American history — the Stonewall Uprising. On June 28, 1969, a popular gay bar in New York City was targeted by a police raid, as it had been countless times before. But on this occasion, the patrons fought back. The story is common knowledge to most queer people in the U.S., but some details bear retelling.

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  • In the years since our now-Vice President J.D. Vance published his disingenuous memoir Hillbilly Elegy — which many Appalachians criticized as “poverty porn” designed to launch his political career — Appalachians have continued our tradition of “talking back.” We published books like What You’re Getting Wrong About Appalachia (2018) and Appalachian Reckoning: A Region Responds to Hillbilly Elegy…

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