the middle class dissapears — Linkey
The female, not the male, determines all the conditions of the animal family. Where the female can derive no benefit from association with the male, no such association takes place. — Robert Briffault, The Mothers.
Some authors state that this trend started when Reagan decreased the taxes for the rich. — Linkey
Strong men make good times.
Good times make weak men.
Weak men make bad times.
Bad times make strong men.
In fact, this means that is some kind of hidden collusion between these candidates. — Linkey
This is explained by the fact that the 1% of richest people control the mass media and are motivated to keep this situation as long as possible. — Linkey
The middle-class female does not need any resources from a male — Tarskian
Ah, a conspiracist and an incel. Well, you boys have fun here. — SophistiCat
It started long before Reagan. Try 4000BCE.One more point: many people say that currently the rich people become richer, the poor become poorer, and the middle class dissapears. — Linkey
Another little byproduct of capitalism: elections cost money.smart people are not allowed to participate in the elections, because a smart president can become a threat fot these 1% richest. — Linkey
And, no, the middle does not disappear; it usually prospers. Gets bigger and smaller, mostly due to the volume of commerce and definition. — Vera Mont
No, it was doing fine, as clerics, crafters and army officers.The middle class became inexistent at the end of the Roman empire and it was mostly gone for almost a millennium. — Tarskian
it declined for a short time. But local trade continued, and soon international commerce was back, mainly by water while the roads were in disrepair.There was barely any international trade in the Middle Ages. — Tarskian
Doesn't matter what they were notorious for. They did trade, build boats, make beer and weapons, craft gold and silver ornaments. Those are middle-class occupations and every civilization has them.The Vikings were indeed arguable also traders but that is not what they became notorious for. — Tarskian
No, it was doing fine, as clerics, crafters and army officers. — Vera Mont
The army officers were the nobility. — Tarskian
Yes, some of them became upper middle class, and a few were gentry.The clergy was also quite privileged and the higher ranks were also part of the societal elite. — Tarskian
What is?That is not the "middle class". — Tarskian
Hidden authoritarianism in the Western society — Linkey
What is? — Vera Mont
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_class
Common definitions for the middle class range from the middle fifth of individuals on a nation's income ladder, to everyone but the poorest and wealthiest 20%.
Terminology differs in the United States, where the term middle class describes people who in other countries would be described as working class.
Friedrich Engels saw the category as an intermediate social class between the nobility and the peasantry in late-feudalist society. While the nobility owned much of the countryside, and the peasantry worked it, a new bourgeoisie (literally "town-dwellers") arose around mercantile functions in the city.
There used to be three layers: the upper - burghers, bankers, owners of enterprise, traders; the middle - professionals, salaried executives, shopkeepers, civil servants; the lower middle class - skilled workers, tradesmen, crafters, office workers. Similarly, the upper class had at least two layers - high clergy and landed gentry below the aristocracy - in modern terms, the top richest 0.01%. At the bottom, labourers, peasants, then serfs or slaves.I don't know what you mean by "middle class". Most people throw the term around with zero precision. — BC
In a conspiracist's world, perhaps. Or perhaps both a controlled by a third, hidden agent? — SophistiCat
Arguably, while we do elect our officials, the stream of information and who ultimately selects the candidates we vote on makes the USA more like an oligarchy. — Philosophim
How could we be a failed democracy with free and fair elections every two years? — RogueAI
If T***p is fairly and freely elected, he'll declare himself emperor and have his name in huge neon letters affixed to the White house roof, have all the late-night talk show hosts shipped off to GTMO and shut down all news networks but his own and maybe FOX, if he's in a good mood.Do you see that going away? — RogueAI
How could we be a failed democracy with free and fair elections every two years? Do you see that going away? — RogueAI
I agree we're in an oligarchy in practice, but that's what the voters want. Every two years, we have the option of throwing all the bums out in the House, but we never do. Even in "wave" years, the vast majority of House members are reelected. The tools are there to radically change the system, and if young people ever get politically active and turn out en masse... but that's a pipe dream. — RogueAI
What the voters want is a fair and free election. With the rigid two-party system, the electoral college, campaign financing, voter suppression, disinformation and trolling, and much amplified lying, a great many voters have already given up on the system.I agree we're in an oligarchy in practice, but that's what the voters want. — RogueAI
I agree with all that except the alcoholic part. I've been an alcoholic for 30 years, but I'm not (I don't think) a slave to my emotions. — RogueAI
I keep it at four drinks a day. My body seems to have handled that pretty well over the decades. Vital signs were good at last checkup. If I was really becoming as self-centered as you claim, I think it would have bled into my marriage or career, but those are going well too. — RogueAI
You're certainly less productive. — Philosophim
This was particularly amusing considering two years ago I was nominated for teacher of the year at my site for the first time. — RogueAI
And yes, everyone I know is addicted to something: booze, food, painkillers, porn, weed, Facebook, smoking, sex, gambling, shopping, etc. — RogueAI
She too thinks her drinking is fine despite downing near a bottle of wine every night. — Philosophim
I keep it at four drinks a day. My body seems to have handled that pretty well over the decades. Vital signs were good at last checkup. — RogueAI
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