- cross-posted to:
- antiwork@lemmy.ca
I was talking to my fiance’s dad about this type of stuff recently and he’s absolutely convinced that the working class doesn’t exist anymore lol
Not Antiwork and one of them is not like the other (hint: think about where coffee is grown).
Depend do he own the plantation? Work it himself? Do he employ other people? Context points on labourer, not the owner.
Sure, but I was also referring to the fact that the other three are directly benefitting from the post-colonial exploitation scheme that is deeply embedded in the coffee trade.
Yes, it is capitalism feature though, it don’t take anything from their being the working class in their conditions. There could be of course more to say about said conditions, but the meme is accurate.
The problem is that reducing such dynamics to class struggle is an over-simplification that is IMHO doing more harm than good.
It’s a lens of analysis and a very useful and interesting one at that. People who need to sell most of their waking hours to survive have a lot in common, whether they benefit from post-colonial exploitation or not.
The problem is that this kind of class reductionist analysis is completely blind to the negative and exploitative results of the work of these workers. Painting then as victims of capitalism, when they are the same time also active perpetrators of it is actively detrimental to fighting global capitalism.
Every kind of analysis has strengths and weaknesses. I don’t disagree with what you’re saying and I was never opposed to your point.
It’s a meme. Not even a wall of text meme, but a chad one.
Yes and a terrible one as I pointed out 😑