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Lennard Davis

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Republicans Cry "Class Warfare" All the Way to the Bank

Posted: 09/19/11 02:10 PM ET

It's been a tough week for Republicans, and they are crying. President Obama has decided to get tough and go after millionaires, nailing them to the financial cross by having them pay taxes at the rate that everyone else has to. And what exactly are the Republicans crying? "Class Warfare!" The term is being wailed from every Sunday morning television station to every press conference. Stick a microphone in front of a Republican and you'll hear the term accompanied by the tears of outrage that job creation will come to a halt under the grinding oppression of over taxation.

For anyone following political rhetoric, this cry from Republicans is nothing new. George Herbert Walker Bush used it in 1990 when he spoke at the Cowboy Hall of Fame, earning his spurs as a defender of the working-class man when he decried what he called this "class warfare garbage" being slung at high noon by them darned, dandified Democrats. Coincidentally, he was speaking about a stalled budget in which conservatives wouldn't raise taxes and progressives wanted to preserve social programs.

It is ironic that Republicans, who always deny that class exists in the US ("We're all middle-class, right?), should cry "class warfare" in every election. If you don't believe in class -- how could there be class warfare?

What is class warfare anyway? It was a term that predated Karl Marx, probably originating from the French "lutte des classes" first used in 1828. It is used, along with "class struggle" during the tumultuous years of the early to mid-19th century when the worse abuses of capitalism were being revealed to the world in Parliamentary investigations and of course in the novels of Dickens and others. By the time Marx, Engels, and Max Weber used it, it was well established in the European languages.

What it refers to is the division of people into groups, often called classes, that have economic and cultural interests in common. The most traditional division is between people who work for a weekly or monthly wage and those who get their income from investments and capital. The warfare (more aptly "struggle") between these two groups rarely involves any violence, since the most common form of contention takes place in everyday and unobtrusive ways. So when a business owner cuts back on wages or employees, or when a public university or big retailer hires a union-busting law firm to prevent unionization, or when a group of workers legally go on strike -- these are all aspects of class struggle.

And when Republicans in Congress desire to cut programs that benefit workers, or when they reduce the capital-gains tax (which is already so low that Warren Buffet favors raising it) or seek to eliminate the inheritance tax -- they are engaging in class warfare as well. When Democrats want to raise the minimum wage, tax millionaires, and keep Social Security -- they are also engaging in class struggle.

There's a reason it is a struggle -- each side wants to maximize the benefits it gets and knows the only way this can be done is reduce what the other class gets. The economy is a zero-sum game not a backyard barbecue. It doesn't take a degree in economics to understand that the rich can get richer by cutting back on the wages and benefits they provide to workers. And when Democrats try to protect the income of workers, they have to do so by recouping some of the outrageous profits of the wealthiest individuals and corporations.

When the Republican's cry "class warfare," they imply that the struggle only goes one way. They see the rich as "job creators" and think that if they are making lots of money, everyone is making lots of money. But the history of the last few decades has shown us that as the rich get richer and as the gap between rich and poor increases, there has been no improvement of the economy.

It's time to cry "Uncle Sam" instead of "class warfare." We need to get this country running again, and we need to do it together. In fact, millionaires shouldn't pay what others do -- they should pay more. And they used to do just that. Under Reagan the highest tax rate was 50 per cent, as opposed to today's 35 per cent. And under another Republican, Dwight Eisenhower, the top tax rate was 90 per cent.

Let's recognize that class struggle isn't something that Democrats do to ruin a perfectly good get-together. That struggle is a reality caused by the fact that the wealthiest citizens and the workers of this country are linked by common national interests but also by conflicting economic needs. If you call that complex interaction "class warfare" then don't forget that using that term is itself a bomb dropped on the battlefield.

 
 
 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ignacio sanabria
Mirror synapses at work
10:12 AM on 09/20/2011
There is absolutely no class warfare in America. The Constitution clearly establishes that we are all are equal...but...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
surfcityart
Soylent Green is dead people!
09:42 AM on 09/20/2011
The Repubs frame every discussion into war. They are the brand of fear. I think it is time to bring the fact that their subversive war on the middle class is out in the open now. Let the battle lines be drawn.

1% vs. 99%
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carl Caroli
I just don't understand people
08:51 AM on 09/20/2011
Class warfare? They have no class that I can see. Their self interest made sure of that.
08:28 AM on 09/20/2011
It is class warfare, against the middle class.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robin Ferruggia
Life - for its own sake
01:21 AM on 09/20/2011
What a bunch of self-serving hypocrites the Republicans are! They must know plenty about "class warfare" the way they've been lying, insinuating and doing all they can to manipulate the middle class against seniors and disabled by lying that Medicare and Social Security are welfare programs, the poor and the unemployed by lying that they're just a bunch of worthless bums who don't want to work and are looking for "handouts," etc ad nauseum. They want attention focused on the most vulnerable people in our society so people won't notice that the wealthy are taking more than their share and don't want to pay taxes. Well, we're noticing - and it's not about class warfare, it's about playing fair, and that's one thing Americans, though clearly not the Tea Party members and their wealthy puppet masters, do believe in.
YOKEL13
Gimme more! - unofficial GOP motto
12:42 AM on 09/20/2011
There is a protected class of recent vintage that one might call "Poor Rich People". Any government action against this class amounts to "class warfare".

"Poor Rich People"! The boy scout in me wants to help them across the street.
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glpur1
reluctant revolutionary
12:16 AM on 09/20/2011
"Class warfare" is to the right what "racism" is to the left. There may be some truth in both cases but the extent and severity of each is grossly over-blown and both are used to intimidate and quiet political opposition.
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Robin Ferruggia
Life - for its own sake
01:27 AM on 09/20/2011
I disagree. I think there's a very powerful overtone of racism in the way President Obama is being treated. We've had disagreements, sometimes very strong ones, between the two major political parties before. But both have always come together and reached some kind of agreement because they put the welfare of the country as a whole and people as a whole first. Only fools go against their own government, and bring their own country to near-worldwide financial ruin to play "chicken" with the President during things like the debt crisis "talks" - because these Tea Party fanatics are blind, blindly attacking someone because of his skin color. Anyone or any party willing to put destroying someone they don't like because he's black or any other reason any way they can even if it puts the entire country and most of the people in it at risk are dangerous fools. And that's true whether they're in the so-called right or so-called left.
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think2times
07:41 AM on 09/20/2011
Well put.
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glpur1
reluctant revolutionary
06:02 PM on 09/20/2011
If you have a shred of honesty and decency you would have to admit that you have absolutely no objective proof that "Tea Party fanatics" or anyone else is attacking Obama "because of the color of his skin". The fact is other presidents have suffered far worse and far more vile attacks than this president will probably ever suffer. Past congresses have refused to increase debt limits and in 1995-96 congress shut down the federal government under President Clinton!
Independents, who more than any group probably elected this man president, are now questioning his competency and leadership as are even many Democrats. Did all these people who voted for Obama suddenly become racist over the last 2 years? Could it possibly be that when they look at any measure of success from housing to jobs to debt to war to trade they see us falling further and further behind? And if these 'fanatics' are indeed the bigots you believe them to be why do they detest far more than Obama that white, male group called "congress"? You shoot from the hip 'racists" are just as dangerous as the shoot from the hip "class warfare" folks because you pit people against each other for unfounded and divisive reasons. Neither history nor contemporary politics supports your "racist" conclusions about the reasons people oppose this Presidents' policies. But you are dividing a people with such unproven assertions.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
raker
08:26 AM on 09/20/2011
That is a view that takes in the world from one's eyeballs to the end of one's nose. And calling a truce by assigning equal weight and validity to both sides in a dispute may work in a kindergarten, but not in the real world. Some things are complete hogwash (e.g., the "class warfare" cries of the greedy rich parasite Republicans), and some things are real even though you do not experience it personally, like the indignity of racism.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mrose001
Only "We the People" can change Washington
11:27 PM on 09/19/2011
The same GOP talking points and rhetoric we have endured for years now. The Bush Tax cuts did not create jobs in the USA and I am sick of hearing that. The wealthy have become wealthier and used the money saved to create jobs and factories overseas. So yes, it did create jobs but not in America.

The GOP and Tea Party want war, they will have war with more than the President if they don't take some action to get this country moving and leave their pathetic mandates behind. Waiting until the election is not an option unless they want a march on Washington the likes of which has never been seen in history. The GOP can hate Obama all they want but their actions show hate for America and American's and if they think we are going to take anymore of their political theatrics they are wrong.

I continue to write the GOP leadership with emails and hope you will too, but the best we can do is get rid of them and vote carefully come 2012. Don't let their money buy the next election with media campaigns that steam roll the little guy who really is for America.
serena1313
Condemnation w/o investigation is hgt of ignorance
12:37 AM on 09/20/2011
I agree. Our Congresspeople need to hear from us -- the more the better.

I've heard that sending handwritten letters and making personal phone calls to their offices get noticed, whereas emails are generally ignored and/or discarded.
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Robin Ferruggia
Life - for its own sake
01:33 AM on 09/20/2011
Given that polls showed 70% of the people were against the proposed changes in Medicare and that the Republicans voted for them unanimously anyway indicates to me that they're not listening to their constituents, period. They may be put on the spot if you call, and they'll tell you what you want to hear, where it's easier to ignore emails, but in the end you go unheard. President Obama is not perfect, no one is, but he listens to people and he is open to new ideas. Someone should explain to the Republicans that the word "Representative" means that they're supposed to be representing the will of the people, not the will of the Koch brothers or their own self-serving interests. Send them a copy of Webster's dictionary for Christmas or something with the word "representative" underlined, in case they can't find it for themselves, just like they can't think for themselves and let the Koch brothers do all their "thinking" for them.
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grainysmith
I heart worms
10:34 PM on 09/19/2011
It's a class war when taxes for the wealthy are raised but when they are lowered it's another story all together.
YOKEL13
Gimme more! - unofficial GOP motto
12:44 AM on 09/20/2011
I guess your second scenario is "class detente".
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Jerry Vasquez
A Unapologetic liberal
06:45 PM on 09/19/2011
If republicans get their way, they will turn the greatest example of a free democratic society into
one huge steaming pile where anything goes. Truly a country with NO CLASS.
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Robin Ferruggia
Life - for its own sake
01:39 AM on 09/20/2011
So far everything they've done and the way they've behaved and George W. before them it looks like the ultimate goal is to turn it into a dictatorship. As for having no class, you're absolutely right, they don't. Look how they handled the debt crisis "talks," trying to hold the country at "gunpoint" to get their own way in everything, playing "chicken" with the President of the United States, the leader of the free world, showing their contempt and disrespect for him and the office of the presidency, and putting on a show for the whole world as they watched us, to show them what a bunch of divided fools we all are in this country. They were willing to bring this country to worldwide financial ruin to get their way, they were willing and remain willing to see most of the people in it suffer so their wealthy pals and puppet masters don't have to pay taxes. They want to destroy the Affordable Health Care Act because it wasn't written all their way, even though that will prevent millions of Americans from being able to get health care they need. "Class"? The Tea Party has no concept of what that is.
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CommodoreP
Darn the torpedos, full speed ahead!
05:16 PM on 09/19/2011
Good scholarly article on a talking point that is completely false.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gurukalehuru
cwtc7
04:49 PM on 09/19/2011
Be careful what you wish for or you just might get it. See www.gurukalehuru.com
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thoreau101
03:28 PM on 09/19/2011
I refuse to believe that corporations are people until Texas executes one.
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BrianPK80
Wisdom is having more questions than answers.
04:38 PM on 09/19/2011
Wow! That is one of the best one-liners I heard all day. Love it. TY.
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Robin Ferruggia
Life - for its own sake
01:40 AM on 09/20/2011
Ditto!
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Evan Pritchard
Relax, in 200 years we'll all be wrong anyway.
04:51 PM on 09/19/2011
Well played, well played indeed.
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ThomasMc
Christian morality is an oxymoron.
03:08 PM on 09/19/2011
How is it we never hear about the non-stop Republican Class Warfare on the Middle Class?!?
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Robin Ferruggia
Life - for its own sake
01:42 AM on 09/20/2011
Or the non-stop class warfare they instigate against the poor, elderly, unemployed and disabled people in this country, as they try to manipulate the middle class into making these people their scapegoats so they won't notice how the wealthy are getting corporate welfare and ripping us all off.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OneManRoaring
Tech specialist, former educator & active citizen!
02:59 PM on 09/19/2011
Would this be a workable plan? Let's figure out how much $$ the government needs to run without all the waste and other "fluff" and then determine what percentage of tax would be needed if EVERYONE except the poorest “x” percent paid the same percentage on all EARNED OR ACCRUED income during any given year and let's use that as the basis for a TEMPORARY tax system.

During the following three years, let the government (I would enlist Elizabeth Warren) put together a completely NEW tax code that has a minimum number of deductions (if any) and no more than let's say four tax brackets. The forms should be so simple that anyone with an 8th grade education could complete them and know exactly how much they should pay in taxes (sorry accountants)! The temporary plan stays in effect until the new plan is passed by Congress.

Support Fairness and the Common Good in Government­. Follow One Man Roaring on Twitter: http://twitter.com/omroaring
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emmanuel kalu
information is knowledge, knowledge in power
06:25 PM on 09/19/2011
one big problem with your plan. it depends on congress to pass it and the reason we have all the deductions, credits and tax break is because congress is paying off people. here is a simple solution. if someone making 50k can't get the tax benefits like someone making 1 million dollars, it should be removed. if i can't tell my employer to pay me in stocks or dividend, so that i can pay only capital gain taxes, then no one should have it, or least it should be equal to income tax rate. yea this is simple, but we can start from there and build on it.
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OneManRoaring
Tech specialist, former educator & active citizen!
08:28 PM on 09/19/2011
No argument here! I am always for a level playing field for EVERY AMERICAN!