Re: [Marxism] Cornel West goes ballistic over Obama

2011-05-16 Thread Mark Lause
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This is a superb piece on what I would see as a very important development.

ML

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Re: [Marxism] Cornel West goes ballistic over Obama

2011-05-16 Thread Louis Proyect

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On 5/16/2011 9:59 AM, Mark Lause wrote:


This is a superb piece on what I would see as a very important development.




And here are the material conditions that are driving it:

http://www.theroot.com/buzz/black-unemployment-depression-level-highs-some-cities

Black Unemployment: Depression-Level Highs in Some Cities
By nsenga.burton

Janell Ross is reporting that unemployment rates for blacks have 
remained critically elevated since the Great Recession. She gives 
the example of Wanda Nolan, an educated, gainfully employed woman 
who was essentially living the American dream. Her job was 
eliminated in 2008, and she has remained unemployed since then.


Like Nolan, many members of the black community have seen their 
lives devolve from a model of middle-class African-American upward 
mobility into an example of a disturbing trend: the 15.5 percent 
of African Americans out of work and still looking for a job.


The nation's overall unemployment rate sits at 8.8 percent, and 
the rate among white Americans is at 7.9 percent. For a variety of 
reasons -- ranging from levels of education and continuing 
discrimination to the relatively young age of black workers -- 
black unemployment tends to run at twice the rate for whites. Yet 
since the Great Recession, joblessness has remained so critically 
elevated among African Americans that it is challenging 
long-standing ideas about what it takes to find work in the 
modern-day economy.


Ross writes, Millions of people like Nolan, who have precisely 
followed the oft-dictated recipe for economic success -- work 
hard, get an education, seek advancement -- are slipping backward. 
Even as they apply for jobs and accept the prospect of a future 
with less job security and lower pay, they remain stalled in 
unemployment.


Trading down has become a painful truth for much of working 
America, and the disparity between unemployed college-educated 
whites and college-educated blacks has widened.


Tell us something we don't know. It pretty much sucks to follow 
the blueprint for achieving the American dream and to have it 
snatched away from you. It's even worse when you are qualified but 
can't get a shot at another comparable job because there are so 
few of them.


Some have argued that the concept of the American dream was 
concocted without black folks in mind. Unemployment and its impact 
on all parts of our community -- educated and uneducated -- 
reflects this sentiment



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