Opinion How the Left Ditched Class - Diversity is perfectly compatible with plutocracy.

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Article|Archive

I remember where I was sitting when Adolph Reed Jr. and Walter Benn Michaels told the left that it was making a historic mistake. It was a fall day in 2016, at a bookstore on the University of Chicago campus—a room dense with graduate students, academics, and a few journalists, the kind of crowd that fancies itself the intellectual vanguard of a revolution that never quite arrives.

Reed, the political science professor and democratic socialist, and Michaels, the literary scholar who had spent a decade skewering diversity politics, were there to argue that the political left could not simultaneously prioritize race and class. It had to choose. That had been the thesis of Michaels’s 2006 polemic The Trouble With Diversity: The more you emphasize the disproportionate suffering of particular groups, he argued there, the more you end up with a politics that accepts inequality as long as it is properly distributed: a rainbow-hued C-suite presiding over a Dickensian shop floor. In a society where the top 10 percent includes people of every background, anti-racism becomes compatible with, even useful to, the concentration of wealth. Class, meanwhile, disappears.

Progressives denounced The Trouble With Diversity as racist blasphemy, something like The Bell Curve for Marxists. Unsurprisingly, some members of the audience in Chicago, including an editor at Jacobin, pushed back. You can have both, the argument went. Identity and material conditions aren’t in tension; they’re inseparable.

I left that bookstore thinking that Reed and Michaels were probably correct, but too pessimistic about where things were headed. A decade later, they look like prophets.

“When Sanders lost to Clinton, it wasn’t merely a political defeat.”
The intellectual battle in that room at a Chicago bookstore wasn’t just a niche matter for academic Marxists. It was being fought out in the open in the 2016 Democratic primary between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. That mid-aughts version of Bernie entered the race as the closest thing American electoral politics had seen to a class-first candidate since the late Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition in the ’80s.

Bernie’s pitch was simple and consistent: Wealth and income inequality were the defining crisis of American life, and every other social problem—including racial disparities—flowed from that central fact and had to be addressed through it. This wasn’t a popular take among the progressive activist class and the media, especially considering that—disingenuously or not—Donald Trump had conquered the GOP with a right-wing version of some of the same arguments: The system is rigged, the elites have abandoned you, someone needs to fight back. Both campaigns were responding to the same underlying reality: Decades of bipartisan neoliberalism had gutted the working-class communities that once formed the backbone of American democracy.

Meanwhile, America’s professional-managerial class (PMC) was quickly adopting the tenets of race-and-gender-first identity politics. When Black Lives Matter protesters confronted Sanders on multiple occasions during his first presidential campaign, demanding he speak specifically to anti-black violence and racism, he responded by talking about transforming the economy, making public colleges tuition-free, raising the minimum wage, and overhauling trade policy. When one protester pressed him directly on what he would do about racial injustice, he said he would create millions of decent-paying jobs.

Clinton saw her opening. “There are some who say, ‘Well, racism is a result of economic inequality,’” she said. “I don’t believe that.” She went further, inverting Sanders’s causal logic entirely. Income inequality, in her framing, was “in large measure a symptom of underlying racism.” You couldn’t solve racial injustice by creating jobs and expanding opportunity, Clinton argued. Racism came first; it was structural and irreducible; and a politics that folded race into class was, at best, inadequate and, at worst, a dodge.

A hashtag—#BernieSoBlack—went viral among Black Lives Matter activists, mocking the way he invoked his civil rights record while declining to engage in a more explicit racial politics. Some prominent liberal media figures, like New York Times opinion columnist Charles Blow, began criticizing Bernie like it was a full-time job.

So when Sanders lost to Clinton, it wasn’t merely a political defeat. The war of ideas had been won, and it foreclosed certain questions before they could be seriously asked. Obsession with identity and dismissal of class would govern the party’s activist infrastructure, its media, its donor class, and its self-understanding for the next decade.

The anti-Trump #Resistance that emerged after 2016 was an online-driven movement made up primarily of credentialed professionals. Their central question was not who owns what or who works for whom, but who is being harmed, erased, or insufficiently recognized. The economy that mattered most in progressive politics was the attention economy. Even when mainstream leftists talked about capitalism, they did so in the language of corporate HR and therapeutic harm reduction. The critique was not that American elites had presided over deindustrialization, asset inflation, monopolization, financialization, and the shredding of the welfare state. It was that those elites were too white, too male, too straight, too culturally insensitive, and insufficiently “aware of their privilege.”

After Trump won the 2016 election, I interviewed Walter Benn Michaels for the Chicago Reader, and he described the shortcomings of this identity-driven politics with characteristic bluntness: You can have a Black CEO and a Latina senator and a queer cabinet secretary and still have an economy in which the bottom half of earners own almost nothing. Diversity is perfectly compatible with plutocracy.

But after Trump got elected, liberals weren’t content with symbolic diversity; they became militant about expanding its logic into all aspects of life. As if to underscore that point, after my interview was published, it prompted a revolt among the Reader’s staff, many of whom have refused to talk to me since. Soon, there was a big push for greater racial diversity among staff. A day after the Reader’s parent company, the Chicago Sun-Times, told our staff that more diversity would have to wait until an opening occurred because there was no new hiring, someone filed a bogus and vague #MeToo claim against me, alleging that I was “making a woman feel uncomfortable.” I was suspended without pay until that claim was investigated, with the Sun-Times editor telling me, “In this political climate, we have to.” The message was clear: diversity was sacrosanct.

A few years later, Reed was scheduled to give a talk to New York City DSA, but the event was cancelled amid backlash to his insistence that the disproportionate effects of Covid on black Americans could not be understood apart from poverty and the health care system. Reed had warned for years that identity politics would not supplement class politics, but supplant it. In 2020, the left made his point for him by treating a black lifelong socialist as a “problematic” obstacle to progress. “The DSA thing,” he later said in an interview, “that was a bunch of stupid kids.”

The stupid kids kept winning in 2020, the year that identity politics triumphed. After the killing of George Floyd, an enormous outpouring of protest swept the country. Corporate America embraced it—not, of course, with sectoral bargaining or wealth redistribution, but with DEI departments, reading lists, and a fresh flood of foundation money. Above all, it was about changing the conversation—and making sure it was about race, not class.

In 2016, when Nancy Isenberg published White Trash, a rigorous history of American class stratification, it was a brief blip. In contrast, The 1619 Project, which arrived three years later, enjoyed the institutional backing of The New York Times and was recognized with a Pulitzer. Both were ambitious and challenging works, but only the race-reductionist version was allowed to reorganize Americans’ understanding of their past.

“There are, perhaps, small signs of a correction.”
The 2024 election capped off a decade of ascendant identity politics with crushing irony. The coalition the Democrats had built on the premise that young, non-white voters would be a bulwark against “fascism” cracked wide open along the diploma divide. Highly educated whites voted more Democratic than ever, while multi-racial working class defectors helped Trump win the popular vote. Despite all the efforts to make it go away, class reasserted itself.

The present should be the left’s moment. Trump’s approval ratings have tanked amidst an unpopular war and tepid economy. The top 10 percent of income earners now account for nearly half of all consumer spending. Meanwhile, the costs of housing, childcare, health care, and education have turned middle-class stability into a period piece.

But the left is perceived by many, not without reason, as nothing more than a vehicle for the interests of highly educated progressives who see the United States as a global service provider—one big USAID—while viewing the actual inhabitants of the country with a mix of pity and suspicion. For this class, the attachments that anchor working-class life—stability, family, community, the quiet dignity of work—are treated as artifacts of a backwards age, if not outright “problematic.”

There are those who argue organized labor can still provide direction to the left, but the outlook is so bleak for the movement that a writer for Jacobin recently described unions as in a “death spiral,” with private-sector union density down to just 5.9 percent of the workforce, and projected that, without radical change, the labor movement could “effectively cease to matter.” The tragedy of the modern left is that it did not build the institutions it needed to matter in 2026. The No Kings marches are a sign of liberal discontent, but not much more.

There are, perhaps, small signs of a correction. The affordability politics of New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani suggest one possible path forward. The newly inaugurated mayor of New York City campaigned on affordability, rent, transit, and wages. In his early months in office, he expanded free childcare, targeted predatory junk fees, and pushed for deregulation to build affordable housing. These steps are promising, but they are not the whole of his record.

Mamdani has also established the first-ever Mayor’s Office of LGBTQIA+ Affairs in New York City history, appointed the first openly transgender director of a city office, and, on Trans Day of Visibility, posted that trans lives are “not a political issue” while making it clear that they actually are. None of this is hypocritical; Mamdani is a sincere progressive, and these are things he genuinely believes. But they are also exactly the kind of pieties that the professional activist class requires as the price of coalition membership.

At the bookstore in Hyde Park a decade ago, Reed and Michaels were accused of forcing a false choice between race and class. But the last decade suggests that the falsehood ran in the other direction: The American left kept insisting that it could center both, and what it actually centered was neither. It got anti-racist corporate HR, therapeutic activist discourse, a thousand prestige battles over language and representation, and a working class, multiracial, fragmented, downwardly mobile, increasingly cynical, left to fend for itself in a country of rising rents, weak unions, and algorithmic upheaval. In the end, class is—once again—dismissed.

For his part, Michaels is relatively unsympathetic to a left which did not heed his warnings in 2006 and again in 2016. Never one to mince words, he told me last month over email: “My current view is fuck ‘em all.”
 
It's honestly kinda funny how leftist labor movements went from coal miners clubbing corporate goons to pencil necked nerds kowtowing to whatever capital wants
 
Honestly a good write up. Diversity isn't just compatible with plutocracy, it's desired. Importing massive hordes of goblins works to suppress wages and weaken labour organization. Adding the political side to it makes it more undesirable to dissent against it. Here is a clip of what they were referencing with Bernie which I consider the perfect in a nutshell rendition of what this article is over. Old leftist ideals getting forced off stage and standing in the cuck corner as a bunch of uppity orcs start chanting incoherent demands. To further add to that story I recall a paper trail linking those BLM agitators to Hilary, whether it's true or not I don't know but that bit of background information adds to the behind the scenes fuckery of the oligarchs injecting this ideological poison to domesticate the left.

For corporate America adopting these stances would be A trying to seem hip to the young crowd and much more sinister B being these social ideas being shoved down the throat of America by Larry fink at blackrock through ESG/DEI/BRIDGE or whatever the acronym was shapeshifted into. The world oligarch gets thrown around a lot now but fink and the other associated financial megacorporations (vanguard, State Street) match the definition to the letter. The reason why he would burn so much money to forcibly change the United states into what he wants could be either application of what I said earlier, wage suppression and prevention of labour organization (Racially diverse workplaces have trouble unionizing) that same theory applies to politics as well. Maybe the oligarch was a true believer and wanted to throw his weight around to change things, remember blackrock owns large amounts of stock in all large media companies so we are past manufacturing consent, we are at private propaganda for any schlock piece that periodically shows up trying to defend him. Honourable mention to mass migration further inflating real estate prices, felt the need to throw another reason oligarchs desire this.

Ignoring the plutocratic special interests who desire this the ideological sickness has spent generations fermenting. Starting with the development of the new left in the 60s and the infestation of academia by the followers of this has functionally indoctrinated entire generations with this shit, the left was poisoned a long time ago. It's the reason why Ted K. Was able to perfectly describe the new left in ISAIF. When he was a professor at Harvard he witnessed it first hand.

Take note at how they erased the legacy of Cesar Chavez literally overnight, the deified labour agitator who correctly identified that illegal over the border labour was poison to the working class as a whole, a fact that has been becoming increasingly more and more commonly known.
 
The sad thing is that nothing about identity politics and plutocracy is new, it has been since the Jews eradicated and cleansed the Hellenes and other Gentile civilizations around the Middle East and Europe.

It's the perfect way to sustain a tyranny for near-eternity and beyond the grave and the Jews happened to master it.
 
There's no "left" in the West. The left was defeated and exterminated. There's bougies (libs), the increasingly-not proletariat, and the lumpenproletariat (aka nogs and noglikes).

The bougies are more racist, classist, sexist, etc than you can possibly imagine without having the Epstein files in front of your eyes. (In Jew York Times today, there's an article on alpine divorce: one elderly scrote boasts about hiring a very young prostitute, another openly wishes to murder his ex-wife. They're not nogs, they're rich whitoids who climb mountains in yurop and pay for the "privilege" of commenting in Jew York Times.) Your nicest states (per everyone's opinion) are libbiest and whitest.

Your working class, values-wise, are MAGA Communists. No gibs to leeches is a Communist policy: he who does not work does not eat. Secure borders is a Communist policy. Enshittification is capitalist, globalization is capitalist, Juche is Communist. About the only non-Communist policy they like is free speech, which works against them because they can't get the government limit the speech of their enemies but get their own tongues chopped off by their corpo slaveowners. They're vastly less racist and more "diverse and inclusive": white-supremacists are working class and therefore include all sorts of brownoids. Meanwhile the "elites" are gays and white pedicure sluts with the stupid haircut that look like the HR department.
 
Bertrand de Jouvenal wrote about the "High+Low vs. Middle" strategy, whereby elites weaponize society's dregs against the middle class, whose relative independence they view as a threat to their power.

Or: communism is great at turning 3 class societies into 2 class ones.
Yeah, this debate amongst marxists has been going on for a while. Gramsci argued that it wasn't enough to appeal to class, you had to capture cultural institutions. Marcuse said effectively the very same thing, calling the failure of the proletariat to rise up after World War II as "false consciousness," and getting so frustrated with them that he argued the revolution was going to have to be carried out by an alliance of bourgeoisie college students and the "ghetto populations."

Every single time they try to shift the dialectic to shibboleths outside of class, the whole thing falls apart in fairly short order.
 
Liar

The fix was in for Hillary but she never expected John Edwards or Obama to challenge her, which is why Edwards had his affair invoked to destroy his career and while Hillary created birtherism to try and stop Obama. And when it became apparent people would rather have a black man over a white woman if allowed to pick between the two, Hillary went psycho and kept alternating between threatening to use her super delegates to steal the nomination and damn the fact that doing so would burn the Democrat Party to the ground to all but threaten to murder Obama to force the party to hand her the nomination without a fight, with her sabotaging a plain Obama was on to let him know she could kill him at any time and make it look like a random freak accident.
@Jaimas has a fun story about all of this.
 
Lol no one likes the working class, not even the working class themselves.
Like Women.

Anyway,

Old leftist ideals getting forced off stage and standing in the cuck corner as a bunch of uppity orcs start chanting incoherent demands.
I’m not a bong historian but p sure Jeremy Corbyn fell into this trap too. He didn’t shit himself blind about brexit because he knew that importing millions of yuropoors had suppressed wages for the bong working class. For this he received a muted booting.
 
The Bell Curve for Marxists

a niche matter for academic Marxists

The problem is Marxism is retarded. it's not a matter of opinion. Marxists deny how reality works, so nothing they do work, not on the small scale or the large scale, not in economics, education or politics. Leftist ideals are stupid. They do not work, and since they don't work, when they fail, leftists have to move on to something else, whether it's a Five-Year Plan or a Four Pests Campaign or ending cash bail.
 
There's no "left" in the West. The left was defeated and exterminated. There's bougies (libs), the increasingly-not proletariat, and the lumpenproletariat (aka nogs and noglikes)
Sure, maybe, but it's like arguing there are no Libertarians because the LP is hedonistic cross-dressing paederasts instead of rational Ayn-Randian philosopher-CEOs.

Or that Gay Race Communism's hordes aren't ackchyually students of Marxist theory. Or "socially liberal, economically conservative" is the best system, despite having no support or ability to defend itself.

As someone observed: "You can hold economic views from socialism to neo-liberalism and be welcome on the Left. But you cannot refuse to worship black women, trannies, and Third World replacement migration. Therefore, that's what Leftism is."

Edit: found it
HD5RZG5a0AEhf3r.jpeg
 
@Jaimas has a fun story about all of this.
Lots of them, really. Let me respond and I'll get right into a few.
It happened in 2008 as well when Hilary Clinton was clearly ahead in the primaries and was the popular favorite for the democratic nomination until suddenly, Obama was THE candidate.
This shows a complete misunderstanding of what happened in 2008.

What was impossible for her supporters to understand is that Hillary herself was a shit candidate. She represented the triangulating bullshit wing of the Democrats - the one that Gen X fucking despised and the Millenials hated nearly as much. She was the one who gave Jack Thompson a platform. She was the one who pushed for unconstitutional shit like FEPA. My generation fucking despised her, and when given the choice between her and literally anyone else came down during primary season, they voted for literally anyone else - in many cases, as much to spite her supporters as they did to choose the better candidate.

The reason Obama "suddenly was THE candidate" was because Obama won all of the biggest states with the most delegates in the opening fucking salvo - to the point where Hillary was mathematically unable to win mere weeks into the primary season. At that point, even if she won every single state going forward (which she didn't), Hillary would not be the nominee; she'd already lost. The voters had chosen - and what they chosen was not her.

Hillary's supporters had a fucking meltdown over this, and actively called for her using the party's superdelegates to override the will of the electorate - a decision that would have completely burnt the DNC to the ground at the time. If you were on sites like DemocraticUnderground or DailyKos at this time, you would have seen posts by Hillary supporters that you could have mistaken for shitposts on Stormfront.

Hillary herself was little better, threatening to broker the convention if Obama didn't make concessions towards her. This is what led to her being offered the cabinet position and what led to her taking complete control of the DNC afterwards so she could focus on 2016. This was followed by the Crazy Orange Diamond blowing her the fuck out after she went nuclear to stop Sanders from Obama-ing her ass a second time.
 
The "left" never cared about class. Their biggest "civil rights era" victory was actively fucking over White men as punishment for White men being objectively better than everyone else, and beginning the death spiral of America as a result. This has always been complete bullshit, and I am shocked at how many slack jawed buffoons still buy the communist lies that they ever gave a fuck about class. No wonder communists always succeed off of the backs of useful idiots who gobble up their completely baseless nonsense without an ounce of skepticism.

It's no coincidence culture war politics were pushed so hard by both parties in the US during and shortly after the Great Recession, as well as during the COVID lockdowns. It's also no coincidence both of these crises led to enormous upward transfers of wealth at the expense of the young and the working and middle classes.
Yeah, I must have imagined niggers rioting for half a year and assaulting the working class because nigs worship evil. I must have imagined tens of millions of criminal shitskins invading the nation and undercutting White workers' wages, while also raping and murdering Whites. I must have also imagined that most that money went to rich Jews so they can continue to fund international child rape rings that target White children.

Man, it's almost like you're lying through your teeth about class solidarity in order to protect evil non Whites from accountability!
 
The "left" never cared about class. Their biggest "civil rights era" victory was actively fucking over White men as punishment for White men being objectively better than everyone else, and beginning the death spiral of America as a result. This has always been complete bullshit, and I am shocked at how many slack jawed buffoons still buy the communist lies that they ever gave a fuck about class. No wonder communists always succeed off of the backs of useful idiots who gobble up their completely baseless nonsense without an ounce of skepticism.


Yeah, I must have imagined niggers rioting for half a year and assaulting the working class because nigs worship evil. I must have imagined tens of millions of criminal shitskins invading the nation and undercutting White workers' wages, while also raping and murdering Whites. I must have also imagined that most that money went to rich Jews so they can continue to fund international child rape rings that target White children.

Man, it's almost like you're lying through your teeth about class solidarity in order to protect evil non Whites from accountability!
"Left" is what brought us weekends. Insulting leftists whilst enjoying all the benefits "the left" has fought for makes you look retarded.

Jews will always be richer than average population, conspiracy or not. IQ is correlated with income.

Our problem is homegrown. Blacks are simply not as evolved as other humans. I'm not saying this to protect other non-whites but you can never convince me they are as far removed from whites as blacks are. Whites and Asians are different, but blacks are basically alien compared to them.
 
Anything on the supposed death threats/attempts on Barry from Killary, or any shit like that?
During the campaign trail for 2008, in July, Obama's plane was forced to make an unscheduled landing due to one of the evacuation slides activating and inflating inside the tail cone. This forced him to land in Saint Louis. There was no injuries and the TSA found no evidence of sabotage, just a mechanical fuck-up.

But it's funny how things work out. At the very time this happened, some of Hillary's closest supporters in the activist circuit were intoning that if Obama didn't get out of the way, he'd be dealt with accordingly. Needless to say, the timing on this shit could not have been worse, and it probably would have been more of an issue on the campaign trail if Obama wasn't so thoroughly crushing Hillary already. As it stood, Michele Thomas, one of Hillary's campaign managers, basically tried to deflect the whole thing.

Amusingly, it's a rare case of Hillary's meme circling around and topping itself. Bill Gwatney (the Arkansas DNC Chair) and Ohio Representative Stephanie Tubbs Jones both died soonafter supporting Hillary's challenge of Obama; Tubbs died due to a stroke, but Gwatney was assassinated, seemingly at random, by a Target employee. The assassin, Timothy Dale Johnson, was shot and killed by police.

If there's additional drama to be mined here, Mirrornoir probably knows more than me.
 
During the campaign trail for 2008, in July, Obama's plane was forced to make an unscheduled landing due to one of the evacuation slides activating and inflating inside the tail cone. This forced him to land in Saint Louis. There was no injuries and the TSA found no evidence of sabotage, just a mechanical fuck-up.

But it's funny how things work out. At the very time this happened, some of Hillary's closest supporters in the activist circuit were intoning that if Obama didn't get out of the way, he'd be dealt with accordingly. Needless to say, the timing on this shit could not have been worse, and it probably would have been more of an issue on the campaign trail if Obama wasn't so thoroughly crushing Hillary already. As it stood, Michele Thomas, one of Hillary's campaign managers, basically tried to deflect the whole thing.

Amusingly, it's a rare case of Hillary's meme circling around and topping itself. Bill Gwatney (the Arkansas DNC Chair) and Ohio Representative Stephanie Tubbs Jones both died soonafter supporting Hillary's challenge of Obama; Tubbs died due to a stroke, but Gwatney was assassinated, seemingly at random, by a Target employee. The assassin, Timothy Dale Johnson, was shot and killed by police.

If there's additional drama to be mined here, Mirrornoir probably knows more than me.
Really interesting, thank you.

Do you think Hillary is still pulling strings in the DNC? Seems like that sort of influence wouldn’t just disappear, though Ol’ Fiddling Bill’s continued links to Epstein makes it almost impossible for her to play any sort of publicly visible role.
 
Back
Top Bottom