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#us poverty
workersolidarity · 7 months
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"What you find is, so that where police killings are the most racist, is where poverty is most racialized, and where poverty is least racialized you even find sometimes disparities: in both South Carolina and Tennessee white people are killed at a slightly higher rate by police than their overall portion of the state's population and you see that like, and there's a lot of poor white people in both those states. Which means it's, that's what you're saying, that policing is primarily about class."
"Because yes there's racism, yes there's racist attitudes, you know you got the racial segregation all that this stuff places into, but it's like, if you pull out far enough, what you see is it is fundamentally about class. It's not that race doesn't matter, it's not that immigration status doesn't matter, those matter. But if you pull out the larger thing, the deeper animating thing is class rule and the management of a totally unequal, exploited class society."
"And part of this whole thing, is also you get the thing about the difference between exploitation and oppression right? People get very confused on those things and, you know, counterintuitively, frequently, you know I think history shows that the best ways of overcoming oppression and social pressure is by fighting economic exploitation."
- Christian Parenti on Midwestern Marx
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politijohn · 1 year
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progressivemillennial · 5 months
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psychotrenny · 7 months
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I don't know if such a word already exists or not, but there needs to be a term to describe how inhabitants of the imperial core will treat about those outside of it as sub-human. Like even those who consider themselves "progressive" will frequently talk about people in the third world in terms that disregard their agency, emotional complexity or the very value of their lives
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lastcatghost · 11 months
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batboyblog · 3 months
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Things Biden and the Democrats did, this week #3
Jan 26-Feb 2 2024
The House overwhelmingly passed a tax deal that will revive the expanded Child Tax Credit, this will effect 16 million American children and lift 400,000 out of poverty in the first year. The deal also supports the building of 200,000 housing units over the next two years, and provides tax relief for communities hit by disasters.
The Biden Administration has begun negotiations on drug prices for Medicare. Earlier this year the administration announced it would negotiate for the first time directly with drug manufacturers on the prices of 10 common medications. This week they sent their opening offers to the companies. The program is expected to save Medicare and enrollees billions over dollars over the long term and help push down drug prices for everyone.
The Department of Transportation has green lit $240 Million to modernize air ports across the country. Air Ports in 37 states will be able to get much needed updates and refurbishment.
The Biden Administration announced 10 sites across America as sites for innovation investment. They will receive up to 2 billion dollars each over the next 10 years. The goal is to stimulate economic growth and innovation in semiconductor manufacturing, clean energy, sustainable textiles, climate-resilient agriculture, regenerative medicine, and more.
The State Department reviews options for recognizing Palestinian Statehood. While as of yet there's been no policy change this review of options is a major shift in US diplomatic thinking which has long opposed Palestinian Statehood and shows a seriousness of reported Biden plans to push for Statehood as part of a post-war Israel-Saudi normalization deal.
President Biden imposes sanctions on Israeli settlers who have engaged in violence against Palestinians and peace activists. This marks the first time the US has leveled sanctions against Israelis and sets up a standard that could see the whole settlement movement cut off from the US financial system
the Department of Energy has tentatively agreed to a $1.5 Billion dollar loan to help reopen a Michigan nuclear power plant. This would mark the first time a closed nuclear plant has been brought back online. Closed in 2022 it's hoped that it could reopen in time to be generating power in late 2025. This is part of Biden's plan to decarbonize the electricity grid by 2035.
the Internal Revenue Service launched a program to allow tax fillers file for free directly with the government. In 2024 its a pilot program limited to 12 states, but plans for it to be nation wide by tax day 2025
The Department of Health and Human Services announced $28 million in grants to help with the treatment of substance use disorder, including a program aimed at pregnant and postpartum women, and expanded drug court aimed at directing people into treatment and out of the criminal justice system.
The Department of Energy announced $72 million for 46 hydroelectric projects across 19 states. This marks the single largest investment in Hydropower in US history.
The Senate confirmed President Biden's 175th federal judge. Biden has now appointed more federal judges in his first term in office than President Obama did in his, however still lags behind Trump's 186 judges. For the first time in history a majority of a President's nominees are not white men, 65% of them are women and 65% are people of color, President Biden has appointed more black women to judgeships than any administration in history.
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sopranoentravesti · 6 days
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Gonna make a controversial statement—people on this webbed site had more compassion for the poor white rural Trump supporters than they do for Jews
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arctic-hands · 1 year
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mapsontheweb · 3 months
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US Counties in Persistent Poverty: 1989 to 2015-2019
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mueritos · 2 months
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i hope we continue to see more protests within the US military. i see a lot of leftists and folks who are anti-military who have such an open disdain for the people who are in the military, yet neglect to considering the conditions this country makes to produce ideology, poverty, and the illusion of choice to make all kinds of people choose to enlist in the military. You ever see those videos of ROTC kids recording each other asking why they joined the military and everyone's like, "healthcare", "it helped me go to college", "I was bored" or "free ptsd lol". I hate to remind everyone but folks who are in the military are people, too, and they are the same victims and perpetrators of violence as the rest of you, we have all been shallowly conditioned to view each other as enemies just because one person is wearing army greens and the other is not.
some of the biggest anti-war advocates are those who engaged in war. Veterans who genuinely believed they were protecting the US against "terrorism" come back with blood on their hands, and they choose to realize that it was US imperialism that forced them to carry out violence, instead of doubling down and shielding themselves from the fact that they too are capable of atrocities... This is a class of people who are intentionally conditioned to be as poor and as ideologically aligned to US imperialism so that the military has a never-ending pool to send their youth to destroy other country's youth. The only people I have ever heard say "do not join the military" are those who ARE military.
This is in no way to ever excuse or explain away any of the atrocious war crimes and violence this industry and its people have committed against others. What I am saying is that we absolutely cannot cast aside the individuals who have been victimized within US imperialism, even if they are wearing army greens. I was speaking with my Palestinian classmate last week and another classmate--a member of the US air force-- walked up to me and struck up a conversation. My military classmate showed me her new bird, bid both of us goodbye, and left. My Palestinian classmate asked me if I was close with her, and I said we talked quite often, and she said, "I never met a person who's in the military. I still hate the military, but I never knew that they did, too. I didn't realize that they were also victims."
If my Palestinian classmate--one who is actively watching her own community die--can understand that it is not individuals who are the problem but it is in fact systems, US imperialism, white supremacy, capitalism...why can't we all? And she has EVERY reason to hate any individual military member. A lot of online activism just creates more barriers. if your optics look bad, complicated, or contradictory, you are cast aside. Everyone has got the be the perfect activist, you can never make a mistake or share a half-baked thought, you should always believe every word from a marginalized persons mouth (because being marginalized doesn't mean you're not entrenched in white supremacy too!) and you should never question what you see...Do you know what you sound like? The very imperialists who are convincing poor whites to vote against themselves. Perfectionism is white supremacy. Black & white thinking is white supremacy.
I'd rather have a military member who genuinely believed in the US imperialism machine but was disillusioned after being deployed as my comrade than some leftist who cherishes the performance of "being a good person". I don't want "good people" in our movements. I want humans who care. I want humans who make mistakes and who learn from them. I want humans who accept the messiness of a person. I want humans who hold others accountable and allow themselves to take responsibility for their actions. I want people who change for themselves and others.
fight systems, not individual people. we can change each other, but if we're too preoccupied looking like the World's Perfect Activists, we will only consume each other alive. Connect to your fellow humans, forever and always.
#muertotalks#a mind dump after seeing so much come out after the self immolation of the us air force member#i know hes not the first one to self immolate for palestine#and he might not be the last#i hate the military#i really fucking do#but i choose to see the people within them as victims within the overall system just like the rest of us#i will never go through what they did to make them choose to enlist#i never struggled with poverty homelessness healthcare or social acceptance#i wont shame them#shame is not productive#i want them to know there are civilians who support their protests#i want them to know that we their allies too#a note on my palestinian classmate#if youre arab or also a colonized person impacted by the us military feel free to hate every member of the military#i dont intend to police yall in how you choose to feel your anger#im angry with you#the point i mean to make is about understanding and compassion#someone who has every right to hate these people still chose to see them as the people they are#yes i even want the best for the “bad” people in the military too#i dont want these people to continue the ideology but we cant stop that without dismantling these systems#and we cant do that without creating spaces for healing and reform and growth#so many thoughts so many thoughts#none of this is easy#i fight daily against impulsively hating the world#everyday is a fight to choose compassion and understanding#but being a leftist and doing leftism is not fucking easy#if you genuinely think it is it isnt#and you may be missing the point of what leftism is#anyway
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workersolidarity · 4 months
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🇺🇲 🚨 FOOD INSECURITY ON THE RISE IN THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
The U.S. State of California's Association of Food Banks released a report Friday detailing a worrying rise in food insecurity in the State.
California produces almost half of the country's fruit and vegetables. However, more than 3.1 million households, including 1.1 million children, currently experience food insecurity, according to a report released by the California Association of Food Banks.
That equates to roughly one in four families that are experiencing food insecurity, and the data shows that Californians are buying and eating fewer meals than they need and relying more on processed foods.
The Food Bank Association says the new data shows a significant increase in food insecurity from pre-pandemic levels, reversing the gains made through pandemic-era federal aid.
Minority communities are especially hard hit, with black and Latino communities suffering disproportionate impacts, according to the report.
U.S. Census data from September showed record high jumps in poverty between 2021 and 2022 across all age groups and household types.
Experts attribute the rise in poverty to the expiration of pandemic-era assistance.
California activists and Food assistance advocates are increasing efforts to expand spending on safety net programs. However, with California's State deficit expected to reach an unprecedented high of $68 billion for fiscal 2024-2025, it will be an uphill battle to expand food assistance.
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@WorkerSolidarityNews
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politijohn · 7 months
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tiktoks-repost · 3 months
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progressivemillennial · 5 months
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chrollohearttags · 3 months
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I just want biden to know that him being a ‘trump alternative’ is not a sufficient enough reason for him to be re-elected and he can stop making that shit his only personality trait.
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queerism1969 · 8 months
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Atrocity created by CAPITALISM
Irish Famine (1845-1852)
Indian Famines during British colonial rule (Various, 18th-20th centuries)
Indigenous Genocide (Ongoing since colonization)
Slavery (16th-19th centuries)
Indonesian Genocide (1965-1966)
Pinochet Dictatorship (1973-1990)
Argentina Dictatorship (1976-1983)
Brazilian Dictatorship (1964-1985)
Pakistan Incident (Bangladesh Genocide, 1971)
The Gilded Age (Late 19th century)
The Great Depression (1929-1939)
Operation Condor (1960s-1980s)
Banana Wars (Early 20th century)
Batista Dictatorship (1952-1959)
Guantanamo Bay (Ongoing since 2002)
Vietnam War (1955-1975)
My Lai Massacre (1968)
Sinchon Massacre (Korean War, 1950-1953)
Kent State Massacre (1970)
Patriot Act (2001)
Red Summer (1919)
Jim Crow (Late 19th-20th centuries)
MK Ultra (1950s-1970s)
1985 MOVE bombing (1985)
1921 Battle of Blair Mountain (1921)
Malayan Emergency (1948-1960)
Mau Mau Rebellion (1952-1960)
Covert war in Yemen (Ongoing)
Stanley Meyer incident (1998)
Genocide in Turkey (Armenian Genocide and others, WWI era)
Congolese Genocide (Late 19th-20th centuries)
Greek Civil War (1946-1949)
Invasion of Cyprus by Turkey (1974)
Washita River Massacre (1868)
Minamata Disaster (1950s-1960s)
Bhopal Disaster (1984)
Kentler Project (1960s-2003)
Thomas Midgley Jr. and leaded gasoline (Early 20th century)
Forced labor in private US prisons (Ongoing)
Collateral murder in Iraq (2010)
Julian Assange and leaks (Ongoing)
US drone strikes (Ongoing)
US sanctions (Ongoing)
US support for dictatorships (Ongoing)
Korean War and civilian casualties (Korean War, 1950-1953)
Nazi funding and collaboration (WWII era)
Hitler and "Judeo-Bolshevism" (WWII era)
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