If it was easy everyone would know how to do it. But we can approach this from a jaded cynical perspective, or a more hopeful one.Raphael wrote: ↑Tue Jun 04, 2024 7:59 amOh shit. I never thought about it this way, but you make a really good case for what you're saying. If only anyone had a good idea for how to solve this problem...hwhatting wrote: ↑Tue Jun 04, 2024 7:53 am
This. Wherever you have a Middle Class with a stake in the system, people are generally more willing to support those who promise them to protect their status from whatever outsider*) threat they see - whether real or imaginary, i.e., supporting conservative authoritarians and fascists, than supporting change that would threaten their status. As people mostly are more concerned about relative status than absolute status, this makes them averse even against changes that lift others up to their level, even if that wouldn't change their wealth or material conditions of living.
That is why succesful communist / socialist revolutions only happen in states where a substantial Middles Class hasn't been formed yet, but takeovers by authoritarians can happen anytime when people feel sufficiently threatened.
One proven solution is to let the bad guys have their way, and when they inevitably fuck everything up badly, a more rational path can be chosen. So, the US had to be divided in half and have a war before slavery was abolished; capitalists had drive the world into a huge depression before the US got a social safety net; Germany had to lose WWII before fascism could be beaten back.
Obviously this 'strategy' is a bit risky. On the other hand, it can be said to have worked in minor cases: e.g. Trump just had one term (and just 2 years of legislative majority), Bolsonaro got kicked out; the UK Tories are very likely to be sent packing.
Another way of putting it though: don't we want the middle class to grow? do we prefer revolutions?
The overall liberal idea, which also has history behind it, is that people forget historical quarrels when their life is improving. A lot of the divisions that once seemed dire and eternal, and led to wars and very nasty politics, are now remembered only by scholars.
This is why I've made such a big deal about the US turn toward plutocracy since 1980. For nearly 50 years everybody's life was getting better-- all classes, all races, all sexes. Now only the 10% get better off. It's not just a bad deal in economic terms: it turns out that under those circumstances, the majority knowing that they are not getting the fruits of prosperity and not understanding why, that right-wing authoritarianism flourishes.