More people identifying as working-class is a good thing, imo. Professional class people should still provide class solidarity to the working class because their interests are united in opposing the owning class.
More people identifying as working-class is a good thing, imo. Professional class people should still provide class solidarity to the working class because their interests are united in opposing the owning class.
>Professional class people should still provide class solidarity to the working class because their interests are united in opposing the owning class.
Their primary interest is in maintaining a semi-functional post-industrial society. The idea that a socialist revolution would *necessarily* provide a greater than 50% chance of producing something at least not worse than this is unfounded. The absolute certainly that socialists have that a revolution would produce something much, much better is literally a religious view.
More people identifying as working-class is a good thing, imo. Professional class people should still provide class solidarity to the working class because their interests are united in opposing the owning class.
>Professional class people should still provide class solidarity to the working class because their interests are united in opposing the owning class.
Their primary interest is in maintaining a semi-functional post-industrial society. The idea that a socialist revolution would *necessarily* provide a greater than 50% chance of producing something at least not worse than this is unfounded. The absolute certainly that socialists have that a revolution would produce something much, much better is literally a religious view.