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Counterpunch October 19, 2010
A Drawn-Out Process of Decline
Our Not-So-Great Depression

By SHERRY WOLF

What shall we call this era marked by a jobs desert and a future 
of austerity as far as the eye can see? If the 1930s was the Great 
Depression, is this the Not-So-Great Depression? The Little 
Depression That Could?

I’m no economics guru and I’ve needed the aid of David Harvey’s 
online video school to help me through Marx’s Capital (which 
rocks, by the way), but it strikes me that we may not have hit 
bottom yet. In fact, after my weekend in Rochester, NY, speaking 
at a Revolutionary Ideas of Karl Marx conference I’m beginning to 
think that the Empire in decline may be worse than its ascendance.

Considering that on the way up the U.S. Empire spread racial 
segregation and nuked hundreds of thousands to assert it hegemony 
at the end of a global conflagration, admitting things could get 
worse is really saying something.

Rochester itself is a perfect laboratory of imperial descent. The 
state’s third-largest metropolitan area after NYC and Buffalo, 
with a population of nearly a quarter of a million, Rochester was 
once a boomtown.

It was also home to ex-slave, abolitionist leader Frederick 
Douglass. The airport has kindly given a nod to this historic 
significance by naming a terminal after the greatest American 
orator of the nineteenth century. Somehow leading 4 million 
chattel slaves to freedom ought to earn a man more than an 
unremarkable structure of seats and Dunkin’ Donuts along a tarmac, 
but there’s a certain imperial poetry to it, too.

Kodak, Xerox and Bausch and Lomb—titans of American technical 
know-how—are headquartered here and it seems somehow fitting that 
the company whose name is synonymous with copies built a 
singularly hideous skyscraper known to its employees as “Toner Tower.”

Aesthetics aside, because there really are some charming aspects 
to this town along Lake Ontario, its corporate fortunes, like the 
nation’s, are in terminal decline.

Kodak, which employed 60,000 people worldwide in 1982, today 
employs 20,000, about 7,400 in Rochester. The Association of 
Retired Xerox Employees, who were guaranteed lifetime health care 
benefits, are currently suing the company for stripping 25 percent 
of them of their promised health care supplemental coverage. Keep 
in mind that despite the company’s precipitous decline, it still 
takes in $15 billion a year, $1 billion of which are profits. The 
top suits—led by a Black woman, Ursula Burns—haul in $23 million 
annually in salary and benefits.

Burns’ hairdresser informed me at a party Saturday evening that 
the CEO personally makes $10 million a year, which is a slight 
brag according to the records. The nation’s only Fortune 500 Black 
female CEO actually makes only $9.9 million. I certainly don’t 
begrudge a Black woman of equal pay with the big white boys, but 
really does any executive on the planet work so much harder than 
their chemists and engineers that they deserve 150 times their 
skilled labor’s salaries?

One human indicator of a city in decline is always its crime rate, 
which young workers I met there discuss with an air of fascination 
and fear. Violent assaults and murder are anywhere from twice to 
three-and-a-half times the national average. One resident even 
took an old 1963 Rochester Gas & Electric film of municipal 
boosterism and made a lovely spoof of it showing the boarded up 
homes, crime and general scenes of urban decay.

But if there are signs of hope in this downward spiral, they are 
to be found among the workers of nearby Mott’s who recently waged 
a 121-day strike. As Brian Lenzo, a young socialist at the 
conference who walked the Mott’s picket line in solidarity put it, 
“All they wanted to do was make applesauce without getting a pay 
cut at a profitable company.” Workers did stop the proposed $1.50 
an hour wage reduction and pension elimination, but despite the 
company’s healthy profits management still squeezed a pay freeze 
and other concessions out of their employees.

The turnouts at these socialist speaking events are growing among 
students and young workers, in particular, anxious to discuss how 
to build a fightback. And no wonder. One young woman who attended 
college, Chelsea, mentioned before my talk on Fighting the Right 
that after months of unemployment landing a Wal-Mart job for $8.20 
an hour, 60 cents less than she was making before, seems like a 
relief, but a soul-sucking one.

Nobody who attends these gatherings has any illusions that things 
will bounce back. They don’t imagine themselves ever owning a home 
and most would be thrilled to just score a decent job with health 
benefits—though being able to move out of mom and dad’s place 
would be a great start.

This Not-So-Great Depression is a stage in what is likely to be a 
drawn-out process of decline, but its volatility is not just 
growing a batshit crazy right. It is starting to conjure a left 
into existence as well.

Sherry Wolf is the author of Sexuality and Socialism. She blogs at 
Sherry Talks Back.

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