Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo
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The thing is, compared with the 1920s/30s, when the working class was not so much plied with advertised lifestyle promises as the middle and upper classes who could save, the motivation for living was solidarity. Added to which was the idea, however illusory in many if not most cases, of loyalty to the firm you worked for, provided you knuckled under and behaved yourself, because that loyalty gave access to the promotion escalator. If you were lucky you got to work for a philanthropic concern like the Quaker-owned Baker Pirkins in Willesden my dad apprenticed in after school in the late 1920s, who, because of their philanthropic treatment of the workforce, were exempted from the General Strike by the TUC in 1926. That's largely gone, with through-employment training now required to produce the necessary skilling that means adaptation to perennial technological change without any sense of career security providing the motivator; and at the end of the day capitalism's apologists had to come up with better answers to social and economic injustice and inequality than naked exploitation because the alternatives were socialism and even communism, based on that working class solidarity. Other than the one offered by Hollywood musicals there was no capitalist dream to betray, back then, but there is today, when so many bought the nuclear family ideals and supposed security of home ownership, which for some are the only remaining safety net now that privatised social provision proves inadequate to a nation's basic housing needs. Ironicaly enough, the only thing that kept capitalism wedded to an idea of social betterment for all was the existence of the Iron Curtain: look for yourselves what freedom offers. That had to fall - and I'm sure outspending the E Bloc in armaments - a drain there, a profit here - was part and parcel of bringing back the ideal of the boss being allowed to boss unhindered by unprofitable restrictive practices. No wonder that with the east offering itself as a gift of low wages, whether there or by way of free movement of labour under an extended EU, there is disillusionment and reversion to the mentality of scapegoating and divide-and-rule.
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