On Apr 20, 2014, at 9:20 AM, Louis Proyect <[email protected]> wrote:

> NY Times Op-Ed, April 20 2014
> Marx Rises Again
> by Ross Douthat
> 
> 
> The taproot of agitation in 21st-century politics, this trend suggests, 
> may indeed be a Marxian sense of everything solid melting into air. But 
> what’s felt to be evaporating could turn out to be cultural identity — 
> family and faith, sovereignty and community — much more than economic 
> security.
> 
> And somewhere in this pattern, perhaps, lies the beginnings of a  more 
> ideologically complicated critique of modern capitalism — one that draws 
> on cultural critics like Daniel Bell and Christopher Lasch rather than 
> just looking to material concerns, and considers the possibility that 
> our system’s greatest problem might not be the fact that it lets the 
> rich claim more money than everyone else. Rather, it might be that both 
> capitalism and the welfare state tend to weaken forms of solidarity that 
> give meaning to life for many people, while offering nothing but money 
> in their place.
> 
> Which is to say that while the Marxist revival is interesting enough, to 
> become more relevant it needs to become a little more ... reactionary.

========

With respect to the CM and how the bourgies are undermining ‘the family’, 
there’s this little ditty:

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/04/20/to-reduce-inequality-start-with-families/?rref=opinion&module=Ribbon&version=origin&region=Header&action=click&contentCollection=Opinion&pgtype=blogs


To Reduce Inequality, Start With Families
By JUDITH WARNER
April 20, 2014, 8:21 pm


The French economist Thomas Piketty swept across the United States last week 
with a dire warning: Income inequality isn’t going to go away, and it probably 
will get worse. Only policies that directly address the problem — in 
particular, progressive taxation — can help us change course.

At a panel discussion in Washington of Piketty’s new blockbuster, “Capital in 
the Twenty-First Century,” the American economist Robert Solow, who served on 
President Kennedy’s Council of Economic Advisers, took the long view as he 
formulated his response to the idea of trying to democratize ownership of 
capital in our country.

“Good luck with that,” he said.

The pessimism expressed by Solow, an 89-year-old Nobel laureate who is a 
professor emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is 
well-founded.

Since President Obama declared in his State of the Union address that fighting 
inequality was the “defining project of our generation,” Democrats and 
Republicans alike have seized upon the theme to connect with voters. Their 
dueling campaigns have, predictably enough, devolved into an extension of the 
futile partisan deadlock that characterizes our stillborn political debates on 
almost every issue.

And yet a relatively straightforward and simple way out of our current dead end 
has been hiding in plain sight. President Obama alluded to it in the State of 
the Union when he issued the call “to do away with workplace policies that 
belong in a ‘Mad Men’ episode,” and to update our laws so that a woman can 
“have a baby without sacrificing her job” and to allow people “to care for a 
sick child or sick parent without running into hardship.” It floated to the 
surface again at the Piketty panel, when Betsey Stevenson, a University of 
Michigan economist now serving on the White House Council of Economic Advisers, 
noted the “asymmetry” of early life experiences that increase inequality among 
American children, which plays out, in adulthood, as a gap in income-earning 
potential. “We know that investing more in young children will cause them to be 
more productive,” she said. Later, she pointed out that “high-income people are 
able to make investments in their children that lower-income people aren’t able 
to make.”

However it’s worded, the message is clear: If we want to strike at the roots of 
inequality in America, we’ve got to start at its source, in the family, at the 
very beginning of children’s lives. We have to make it possible for mothers — 
two-thirds of whom are now breadwinners or co-breadwinners for their families — 
to stay in the work force without the sort of family-related job interruptions 
that can greatly limit their lifetime earnings and even push some families into 
bankruptcy. We need to make it possible for all parents to give their kids the 
kind of head start that is increasingly becoming an exclusive birthright of the 
well-off.

Unlike progressive taxation, this sort of focus on the family really ought to 
have bipartisan support. And the good news is that there are decades’ worth of 
shovel-ready legislative and policy proposals that we can draw on: proposals 
regarding family leave, paid sick days, early childhood education, child care 
and workplace flexibility that have been stymied for decades.

In Europe, it’s well-established that legislation aimed at keeping women in the 
work force, and, by extension, helping all families live and thrive amid the 
present-day realities of working parenthood, is one of the most powerful tools 
governments can use to fight the long-term, multigenerational ill-effects of 
income inequality.

In the United States, where virtually no such public policy exists, there’s 
evidence that families that do have access to paid leave and flexibility 
through their employers are faring considerably better than those that don’t. 
In December, a longitudinal survey of more than 100 working- and middle-class 
families published by the Institute on Assets and Social Policy at Brandeis 
University found that the rewards of allowing families to build wealth over 
time went “far beyond the paycheck.” Most important, beyond basic benefits, 
were stable employment and workplace flexibility. (That is to say: flexibility 
that allows workers some choice in where, when and how much to work — not 
“flexibility” that allows employers to play havoc with their workers’ hours and 
schedules.)

The data we have available from California, one of the three states in America, 
along with New Jersey and Rhode Island, that have fully implemented paid family 
leave policies, show real income-stabilizing effects for families. Eileen 
Appelbaum, senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in 
Washington, and Ruth Milkman, a professor of sociology at the City University 
of New York Graduate Center, have found that access to paid leave has kept 
families out of bankruptcy, and kept low-wage workers in their jobs. Other 
research has shown that paid leave has kept women, in particular, in the work 
force and off public assistance and has bolstered mothers’ long-term earning 
potential.

Yet the policies that allow mothers and fathers to maintain consistent work and 
to work in a flexible way that permits some responsiveness to the needs of 
their families remain a privilege, perks that are granted at the will of 
employers to their most valued employees, and are out of reach for the workers 
who need them most. An analysis of the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ American 
Time Use Survey by the economist Heather Boushey found that while more than 90 
percent of high-wage employees report that their employers allow them to earn 
paid time off or to change their schedule if they have an urgent  family issue, 
less than half of private-sector workers in the bottom 25 percent of earners 
can change their schedules under such circumstances. And things are hardly 
better for the middle class; only about half of middle-income workers, Boushey 
found, have the right to those sorts of schedule changes.

Among high-wage workers, according to an analysis by my colleague Sarah Jane 
Glynn, 66.2 percent have access to paid parental leave, compared with 10.8 
percent of those who earn the lowest wages. And while 78.5 percent of the 
highest-paid workers have access to earned sick time, only 15.2 percent of the 
lowest-paid workers have the right to take paid days off if they or a family 
member get sick.

What this all means is that the people who are already in the most precarious 
economic circumstances are the most at risk for a devastating loss of income — 
and assets — when they need to care for their children. And those already in 
the strongest earning position see their earning potential grow, thanks to 
private-sector policies specifically devised to motivate and retain them.

Inequality among families isn’t just about financial means, however. It’s also 
about the care parents can provide, the food they can prepare, and the amount 
and the nature of the time they can spend with their children. But today, the 
ability of parents to make the most basic time investments in their children — 
taking time for parent-teacher conferences or setting a schedule that permits a 
parent to sometimes be home in the after-school hours — is sharply divided by 
income level.

The lack of availability of parental time has serious detrimental effects on 
children’s behavior, ability to learn and emotional development — all of which 
affect performance in school and, eventually, the workplace. In California, 
however, access to paid family leave has allowed workers to better care for 
their newborns and also to make better child care arrangements. And both men 
and women in the state who used paid leave reported a positive effect on their 
ability to care for their children. Such lessons about human resource 
cultivation have not been lost on China, which now includes as part of its 
economic growth policies a provision that women employed in public enterprises 
get 98 days of paid maternity leave.

The idea that investing in children is good economic policy has been for some 
time a rare area in which Democrats and at least some Republicans have been 
able to find agreement. This understanding has led to the growth of the one 
form of family policy that’s been gaining solid ground over the past two 
decades: universal pre-K, an expensive, once highly controversial measure that 
now enjoys solid success in a number of red states, as well as the support of 
the United States Chamber of Commerce.

In addition, polls now show that Americans across the political spectrum want 
their government to get involved in making life work better for working 
families: More than two-thirds agree that the government or businesses should 
be doing more to help fund child care for working parents; three-fourths 
believe that employers should give workers more flexibility in their schedules 
and work locations; and three-quarters support a policy guaranteeing employees 
a minimum number of paid sick days.

The one piece of national legislation now on the books — the Family and Medical 
Leave Act of 1993, which grants some workers up to 12 weeks of unpaid, 
job-protected leave — was passed with bipartisan support that included nearly 
two dozen conservative Republicans (and, for that matter, support from the 
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops). Is it too Pollyannaish to hope 
that, in this pre-election season, a bipartisan “Gang of Six” (or 16, or 66) 
could band together to pledge to fight inequality by creating a more equal 
start for kids? Could they agree that helping families work and care for one 
another is precisely what we need to create opportunity for all?

Judith Warner, a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine, is a 
senior fellow at the Center for American Progress.
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