It's becoming increasingly clear to me that nothing changes on the economic justice front until there's significant pressure that comes from the bottom up, and that's not going to happen until the culture-war issues that divide us are put to the side.
I'd go farther and say that the upward pressure has to come from a coalition of blue collars for it to have any credibility. It's not something that organized labor can effect anymore; it has to come from a more spontaneous movement of blacks, rural whites, Catholic and Jewish urban ethnics, and Hispanics–people who on the whole tend to be culturally conservative. They have to be at the center of such a movement, and then get support from sympathetic, educated, liberal cosmopolitans.
The Jane Hamshers, Arianna Huffingtons, and Ralph Naders are not going to be the leaders of such a movement. They will have their roles to play, but they'll be support roles, not leadership roles. Leadership has to emerge from the ranks of the Blue Collars, and if influential Liberal elites serious about progressive structural change had any sense, they'd be looking for ways to identify and promote such blue-collar leadership while keeping themselves and their egos out of the limelight.
It's the same as the civil rights movement in that regard. It has to be driven by the people who are feeling the injustice most, not by the rich and educated who, regardless of their progressive opinions, with a few exceptions are not willing to risk anything when push comes to shove.
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