But the danger isn’t just who’s pushing it, it’s how the system amplifies it. The same mechanisms can be used by anyone, anywhere, once the conditions are right.
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If we only frame this as a partisan crisis, we miss the structural threat: a breakdown in how truth is recognised, shared, and defended. That’s the deeper fight.
Relative proximity/access to the people that control the levers of political power. Monetary power and the access it grants to material and educational opportunity, same as it's always been.
editors note: American class is most often the product of inheritance + class mobility continues to erode.
I think in the US it's particularly enmeshed in the idea of meritocracy, often in the most corrosive ways. Not only that hard work equals success, but what's considered failure in a meritocratic society is seen as a personal failure, on a moral level.
Such calvinist BS. It's ingrained as a social myth and is as toxic as can be. I don't disagree with you in any way about it being omnipresent and a real problem. "Meritocracy" being mainstream thought doesn't negate materialist definition of class, but it is a common barrier to discussions re:class.
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editors note: American class is most often the product of inheritance + class mobility continues to erode.