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- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (misc.activism.progressive co-moderator)
- Subject: CHOMSKY: Excerpts from "The 3rd World At Home" (III)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.015632.15046@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Organization: misc.activism.progressive on UseNet ; ACTIV-L@UMCVMB
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 01:56:32 GMT
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- [From Z magazine, Nov. 1992; see bottom]
-
-
- =======================
- The Third World at Home
- =======================
- By Noam Chomsky
-
- [...]
-
- The press was not alone in taking up the cudgels for the
- suffering businessman. The highly respected Reverend Henry Ward
- Beecher denounced "the importation of the communistic and like
- European notions as abominations. Their notions and theories
- that the Government should be paternal and take care of the
- welfare of its subjects [sic] and provide them with labor, is
- un-American... God has intended the great to be great, and the
- little to be little." How much has changed over a century.
-
- After its victory at Homestead, the company moved to destroy any
- vestige of workers' independence. Strike leaders were
- blacklisted, many jailed for lengthy periods. A European visitor
- to Homestead in 1900 described Carnegie's "Triumphant Democracy"
- as "Feudalism Restored." He found the atmosphere "heavy with
- disappointment and hopelessness," the men "afraid to talk." [..]
-
-
- [...]
-
- We cannot really say that the current corporate offensive has
- driven working class organization and culture back to the level
- of a century ago. At that time working people and the poor were
- nowhere near as isolated, nor subject to the ideological monopoly
- of the business media. "At the turn of the century," Jon Bekken
- writes, "the U.S. labor movement published hundreds of
- newspapers," ranging from local and regional to national weeklies
- and monthlies. These were "an integral part of working class
- communities, not only reporting the news of the day or week, but
- offering a venue where readers could debate political, economic
- and cultural issues." Some were "as large, and in many ways as
- professional, as many of the capitalist newspapers they
- co-existed with." "Like the labor movement itself, this press
- spanned the range from a fairly narrow focus on workplace
- conditions to advocacy of social revolution." The socialist press
- alone had a circulation of over 2 million before World War I; its
- leading journal, the weekly _Appeal To Reason_, reached over
- 760,000 subscribers. Workers also "built a rich array of ethnic,
- community, workplace and political organizations," all part of
- "vibrant working class cultures" that extended to every domain
- and retained their vitality until World War II despite harsh
- government repression, particularly under the Wilson
- Administration
-
- [Note especially $3 for sample issue -- e.g. this Nov 92 issue --HB]
- [Tell them you've heard of them electronically/UseNet so they wise up!]
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- "Z is an independent, progressive monthly magazine of critical thinking
- on political, cultural, social, and economic life in the United
- States. It sees the racial, sexual, class, and political dimensions
- of personal life as fundamental to understanding and improving
- contemporary circumstances; and it aims to assist activist efforts to
- attain a better future."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- Subscriptions: One Year $25; Two Years $40; Three Years $55
- $18 student/low-income // Sample issue: $3.00
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- Z Magazine, // 150 W Canton St., // Boston MA 02118 // (617)236-5878
- [Some 100 pages per issue, no advertisements]
- [Z is a project of the nonprofit Institute for Social & Cultural Change]
-