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Mcferic's avatar

The Jungle by Upton Sinclair is a book that caught my attention. I read it as a kid living in Chicago where my father worked as a boilermaker.

I knew intimately from watching my father and hearing his stories about how brutal life was for working class men and women in those days. Raw and harsh ~ and that was after working people (many socialists or union types) had struggled for basic concessions.

Needless to say, as a young boy, I was probably a socialists in spirit, without really understanding it. It wasn’t ideology. It was simple recognition of reality. I’m sure that’s what oriented Orwell given his time in the world and his experiences.

Some socialism is good. Too much is definitely bad. And too much ideology in anything is a recipe for disaster.

I say that now as a conservative older man.

Most people on the left today have no real experience with such realities. Instead, it’s mostly a kind of fetish for wealthy and over educated types to wallow in their (current thing) “compassion” and to project their “virtues” amongst their own. That and a giant grift and opportunity to seize power within the institutions in the name of preferred (client groups) who often are facing real oppression.

But little progress comes of it. Millions are spent, while the actual poor remain unaddressed. Instead, funding for the nonprofits and NGOs rolls on, serving only to build resumes and more power for the elect.

Meantime, the actual working class (and less) are demonized for caring about the boarder, crime, and drugs and for not saying the right words or holding the correct opinions about the “rights” of men to get undressed in the lady’s room or to beat the shit out of girls on the basketball court.

Does that sound like fucking progress?

The value of a system should be measured by what it actually does. Not bullshit words.

In any case, thanks Andrew Carnegie for the opportunity to read that book. 😉

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David Long's avatar

Orwell is so often cited as a prescient social/political essayist, it's easy to lose sight of how good a writer of prose he was. I had occasion to mention him in an essay on tone of voice recently:

Orwell does a similar thing in 1984. The Party’s three slogans—War is Peace, Freedom Is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength—help to establish a world where familiar values are turned upside down. Thus, Orwell can invoke a father’s pride in his children with devastating effect:

“Did I ever tell you, old boy,” he said, chuckling round the stem of his pipe, “about the time when those two nippers of mine set fire to the old market-woman’s skirt because they saw her wrapping up sausages in a poster of B.B. [Big Brother]? Sneaked up behind her and set fire to it with a box of matches. Burned her quite badly, I believe. Little beggars, eh? But keen as mustard!

When I think of Orwell, the first thing that pops into my head--oddly, perhaps--is DOWN AND OUT IN PARIS AND LONDON, especially his intimate portrait of life in the "back of the house" of a Paris eatery--or, truly, the underneath of the house; it was my first exposure to the word plongeur, which has found a home in my psyche for what reason I do not know.

Anyway, I just subscribed to your posting. I know we'll disagree at times, for which I'm grateful.

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