Originally posted by Mr Pee
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The Ministry of Truth
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amateur51
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostDo 'bin-men' really sit on the boards of each other' employers and talk up their rate of remuneration? Do 'bin-men' really get paid a basic and then get paid a performance-related bonus often as much as and frequently far more than their basic salary?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostDo 'bin-men' really sit on the boards of each other' employers and talk up their rate of remuneration? Do 'bin-men' really get paid a basic and then get paid a performance-related bonus often as much as and frequently far more than their basic salary?
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Postexcluding the plutocrats yep lots of low paid proletarian bank workers Mr Pee
but the alienation i refer to is not economically determined; it is social [and i think, unlike marxists, that the social is the determinative structure - certainly of much of economic life]
walk through such space as you can find that is still public in the City of London and tell me how you think that sterile concrete and safety glass canal system they still charmingly refer to as streets reflects and human need other than dominance and control .... its very emptiness is the symbol of its victory; a uniformed jobsworth will pop out and these days taser you if you jabber in any polyglot kind of talk .... they only used to do that at the airports [i am making this up {not the airport} but it could be happening today and certainly tomorrow eh]
walk through any larger city market, Leicester is my current favourite but North End Road in London or Ashington in Northumberland were childhood prototypes, experience the polyglot miscellany, noise, muck, trade &c and feel in the midst of humanity and an emergent 'brit' imperial legacy that is demographic and migrant based [cf the last census data on self definitions]
we have , in our politics, ceded and granted power to organised groups of criminals to act unilaterally in their own interests in any sphere of our lives and to have their interests enforced in and by law and treaty ... and the plod, even the publicly paid enforcers have succumbed to the gangster interest ...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut that's not really the point here, is it? They all "work", which is presumably why they would technically fall into the "working class" description by virtue of having paid work and doing it. I daresay some "bin-men" and women working in the same profession do indeed et performance-related bonuses, actually and some perhaps become directors of the refuse collection companies for which they work.
Yes those who don't belong to the working class (the latter being those who create as opposed to accumulating) comprise a very small proportion of the population - nobody is denying that, nor the disproportionate political and economic power the ruling class's ownership of the means of production and distribution confers, and the wastage in talent resulting from this monopoly of control over an anarchic wasteful system.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostYes those who don't belong to the working class (the latter being those who create as opposed to accumulating) comprise a very small proportion of the population - nobody is denying that, nor the disproportionate political and economic power the ruling class's ownership of the means of production and distribution confers, and the wastage in talent resulting from this monopoly of control over an anarchic wasteful system.
That said, you then use the term "ruling class", by which I assume you to identify most of those who are not "working class" other than those below working age, the unemployed and the retgired, but you do so in the specific context of "ownership of the means of production and distribution"; this is perfectly understandable in the world of large state-owned and run businesses and equally large privately-owned and run corporations, but how does it apply to SMEs, of which in Britain there are vastly more now than there were in, say, the 1970s? Many of these are owned and run by "working class" people (on the basis that they work and get paid for doing so) but the means of at least some if not all of the production and distribution is surely up to them - but you'd presumably not seek to classify owners of such SMEs as members of the "ruling class", would you?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostYes but surely the economic underpins the social - I wouldn't deny that sorting out the economic doesn't automatically sort out the social, but you wouldn't deny the economic as basic to the ensuings of everything else, would you calum?
“…the science of association is the mother science; the progress of all the others depends on the progress of that one.” Alexis de TocquevilleAccording to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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