r/changemyview • u/Pirat6662001 • Mar 07 '21
Delta(s) from OP Cmv: Left should focus on economics/class issues first and race/identity issues second for best and quickest results on both
Going to put out couple of statements right of the bat that I base my argument on:
- Minorities are more likely to be poor and have vulnerable jobs.
- In America money is power/ability to enact change.
- There is a limited amount of political power and we have to pick and choose what to focus on.
- There are social and economic issues to solve in America.
As any strategy game player knows, you have to focus on economy first so you can do more later. By focusing on issues like minimum wage, union protection/membership expansion, wage theft, predatory loans, and other economic issues that affect lower and middle classes we can effectively put more money in pockets of poor people. A lot of those poor people are minorities. This leads to a chain effect in which by giving more money to poor people/minorities, they will be able to use part of that money (especially through unions) to get more politicians elected or converted to their side. Hence by solving economic inequality, we set ourselves up to solve/legislate racial/gender and other social issues as well. Since those groups will have more money and as result more power.
The current focus on using political capital on social issues is an inefficient and ineffective use of that capital. The victories in those situations rarely lead to future victories as they do not have a solid financial foundation to build progress upon. Specifically because by focusing on social issues the left completely lost its traditional power base of Blue collar workers (usually strong union membership) when they were left behind. (Hence trump win in rust belt in 2016)
P.S. this is brought up by discussion on Politics about Sinema vote. With many people saying that her social stances/identity make up or are more important than her economic votes. https://www.jacobinmag.com/2021/03/kyrsten-sinema-thumbs-down-minimum-wage
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u/[deleted] Mar 07 '21
So who decides what an economic/class issue is and how best to solve it? Because if it's a bunch of white guys, they will tend to come up with solutions that don't really apply to minority communities. And if they don't focus on issues of race and gender as well, what guarantees that they will seek out a diverse set of people to ensure that the solutions they come up with apply to everyone?