Alex Foti on Wed, 2 Nov 2011 19:07:22 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> 99%? 66% is more like it |
"We are the 99%" is of course the very effective slogan coined by #OccupyWallStreet and embraced all over the planet, starting with Oakland, where today a momentous general strike will be staged, whose repercussions are national, if not global. It is of course convenient rhetoric portraying a movement as the vast majority mobilized against the monstrous privileges of a tiny elite, which like the aristocracy at the Versailles court must be deprived of its unmerited privileges by the righteous and rebellious masses. Unfortunately, the neoliberal regime is unlike the Ancien Régime, and it has held economic, political, and intellectual hegemony for nearly three decades (from Thatcher and Reagan to the outbreak of the Great Recession) precisely because it has long commanded the consent of the middle classes. Like the German social democratic thinker and politician Peter Glotz used to say in the 1980s, neoliberal society is a two-thirds society, that is, a society where the poorest third (single mothers, minorities, immigrants etc) is effectively disenfranchised, because it is excluded from the labor market and from any hope of affluence and consumerism (in the legal economy, at least) which constitute the tenets of neoliberal citizenship. The bottom third is in effect an underclass to be feared and to be policed, a poverty trap it is hard to escape from. As neoliberalism progressed, precarization and casualization of job relations of course grew and slowly but surely the middle third was affected by stagnating salaries, wages, and incomes, especially for the younger generations, swelling the ranks of the precariat as free-lancers and interns in the service industry. People relied on credit cards or used housing assets as collateral to maintain standards of living. Starting with the summer of 2007 and reaching point of high drama in september 2008, the financial bubble exploded once for all as real estate values plummeted and the myth of market deregulation was exposed in all its nefariousness. The onset of the Great Recession and its aftermath of pauperization and mass unemployment has inverted the two-thirds society of yore. Now there's only one third left to enjoy the benefits of neoliberalism: the upper class is still joined by a sizable upper middle class in enjoying the luxuries of cosmopolitan living and leisurely pursuits. They might be time-starved, but they're certainly not cash-starved like the rest of us. SUVs still sell handsomely and exotic tourism has never been so much in demand, for instance. It's the middle class, especially the children of the middle class, the lower middle class (petty bourgeoisie, if you will), and the working class who are feeling the pinch of the global recession in Europe and America. The underclass sees its suffering brought a notch higher, due to austerity cuts in social spending, but it's been in hell for two decades already. It's the middle third that wasn't ready for this theft of democracy by bankers and investment funds and is hoping to mobilize all of society fallen victim to the demise of neoliberalism against the unwarranted privileges of the elites: these guys have failed badly but they want to retain the lever of economic and political power. This just can't be, otherwise it'd mean we have shifted from democracy to oligarchy, something not even neoliberalism could countenance (free markets in free democracies, was its ethos). Hence the occupy/indignado rebellion at St Paul's and Wall Street. If things go well, we'll be the voice of the 66% that alter the relations of political, economic and ideological power in the west. The big question is if the working class and the petty bourgeoisie will go the way of #ows/#occupylsx, or if they will fall prey to the siren songs of nativist conservatism and xenophobic populism. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org