{"id":91987,"date":"2021-03-25T01:19:48","date_gmt":"2021-03-25T01:19:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/realprogressives.org\/?p=41105"},"modified":"2021-03-25T01:19:48","modified_gmt":"2021-03-25T01:19:48","slug":"an-intersectional-working-class-freeing-identity-politics-from-neoliberalism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/03\/25\/an-intersectional-working-class-freeing-identity-politics-from-neoliberalism\/","title":{"rendered":"An Intersectional Working Class: Freeing Identity Politics from Neoliberalism"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

Neoliberalism has been one of the prevailing political-economic theories in US domestic and foreign policy for the past 50 years. It is a word we hear all the time, but what is it really? A neoliberal worldview<\/a> says deregulated, free-market societies – societies in which governments have minimal control over the corporations operating within them – create the most freedom for citizens. Neoliberal ideology has gone to great lengths to run cover for the inevitable injustices of a corporate-capitalist mode of production.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Among the essential ways neoliberalism mystifies these injustices is through its exploitation of identity politics. This exploitation has given rise to a major point of contention within the American left.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

To begin, it is important to acknowledge that identity politics are not inherently fraudulent, as suggested by certain factions of the left. What is fraudulent is the neoliberal bastardization of identity politics to divide and subdue the working class.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

\u201cIdentity politics” in the true sense means merely the acknowledgement that identity factors such as race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and ability inform one’s class position within a neoliberal marketplace. This means that identity impacts a person’s ability to access the resources they need to survive, which include housing, healthcare, food, and clean water. People with marginalized identities suffer disproportionate violence and oppression under capitalism, and therefore face greater barriers to securing their material necessities. This is not to imply that such barriers are not extreme for all working-class people, but rather they are even more intense for those outside the anglicized patriarch<\/a>y.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

So, neoliberalism takes that reality of stratified access to means of survival, and strips it of its larger context, masking the fact that capitalism creates and requires such oppression and violence for cheap labor, market competition, and to shield.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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#neoliberalism<\/a>'s emphasis on identity politics is the financial strategy of the 1%'s class war (Michael Hudson). This way of thinking has also affected segments of the Left, particularly the Frankfurt School, critical theory postmodern marxist segments. pic.twitter.com\/ahZlrlRiWs<\/a><\/p>— Smythely (@mrshadyshadow) February 24, 2020<\/a><\/blockquote>