Posted on 05/04/2020 5:59:06 AM PDT by Kaslin
When half the working class is facing economic devastation and the other half still has to show up to work, are we really all in this together?
Im a lawyer in New York City, currently working from home due to the coronavirus shutdown. For me its working quite well.
Almost all of my work was done on computer, internet, and phone even when I was doing it in an office, so doing it from a home equipped with a computer, internet, and phone is not really much of an inconvenience. In fact, comparing the distance from my home to my old office and the distance from my bedroom to my living room, one could reasonably argue it is more convenient.
However, I dont think its quite that simple. I am only able to work remotely so well because of a vast infrastructure of people who cannot work remotely. Gov. Andrew Cuomos stay-at-home directive excludes people in essential jobs. What are those?
My apartment building staff still comes to work every day, as before. When I go to the grocery or drug store, they are all fully staffed with greeters, stockers, counter workers, check-out people, and so forth. Contrary to images of New York shown on TV, the streets are full of people delivering groceries and online food orders to my neighbors.
Behind all those is a vast network of truck drivers, warehouse staff, factory and agricultural workers, and untold more keeping the goods flowing so my neighbors and I can carry on with our income-producing remote work.
Thats not all. Construction crews work regularly outside my building maintaining the water and power I need to work remotely in comfort. Police, fire, and other safety workers carry on, as do the drivers of all the FedEx, UPS, and other delivery trucks daily bringing every manner of goods to my remote working neighbors.
Also, of course, when I walk to the grocery store, I pass a great hospital full of hard-working people. The large majority of these heroic medical staff are not well-paid physicians, but nurses, paramedics, cafeteria and custodial staff, and the like.
What do all these folks who cannot work remotely have in common? One term can cover almost all of them, a term nowadays usually only found in the rhetoric of aged lefties like Bernie Sanders or Jeremy Corbyn. These folks are working class.
As an odd byproduct of our strange circumstances, they can readily be distinguished from my class, the class of professionals and managers. My class can work remotely. The working class generally cannot.
This new working class, like their pre-computer counterparts, is more numerous and makes less money than those who can do their work on a computer. A recent study at the University of Chicago concluded that only 37 percent of jobs in the United States can possibly be performed remotely. It also found that these remote jobs account for 46 percent of wages.
Of course, there are exceptions. Physicians are well-paid, but are working shoulder-to-shoulder with the working-class nurses and orderlies on the front lines of combating the pandemic. But by and large, this class divide is as much about wealth as working by computer.
It is a divide between those with investment accounts, and those who live paycheck to paycheck. It is a divide between those who have never been on unemployment without knowing where their next job will come from, and the securely employed, such as government bureaucrats, tenured professors and the golden-parachuted, for whom working remotely is just an inconvenience (a term Ive heard Dr. Anthony Fauci use to describe the shutdowns).
This distinction between those who can do their work on a computer, and those who must directly interact with people and things to do their work, has been developing for a long time. But the current crisis has highlighted it more starkly than ever. Indeed, the current crisis has all the marks of a classic class conflict.
On one hand there is a managerial and professional class that can work remotely, or has financial resources to weather a long-term shutdown. It is among this class that one finds the advocates of maintaining the shutdowns until a vaccine is found, such as media talking heads, politicians, and career public health experts.
On the other hand, a large part of the working class has been driven out of work entirely as numerous working-class-staffed industries have shut down. These folks largely do not have the wherewithal to go a year or more without income until a vaccine is developed.
This effect has been well-evidenced by the massive unemployment numbers. Less noted so far are all the working class people described above, who must go to work and face continuing risk of COVID-19 exposure. It is these people who enable the managerial class to successfully and profitably continue their remote work in isolated self-protection, all while promoting a shutdown of indefinite duration. Is this not a scene from a Sinclair Upton or John Steinbeck novel waiting to be written?
Now, a temporary shutdown may have been justified so hospitals were not overwhelmed. And while we cannot wait an indeterminable time for a vaccine, we do seem to have quick tests available now. However, we need to vastly expand the testing infrastructure, with the goal of giving everyone access to regular testing.
That said, to those deciding the difficult balance of factors required to phase out of our current restrictions, please remember that the shutdowns are affecting the working class far more severely than the decision-making class. Also, to those crying for the shutdown to continue until we have a vaccine, can we ask this?
Sitting in your home office, well supplied with all the necessities by untouchable delivery people, please spare us the were all in this together pablum. You are sitting in comfortable self-protection only because the delivery people and their brothers and sisters of the new working class are out on-site at their jobs, working to fill your and your fellow elites every need.
How many high school seniors and college students will course correct to a more secure job future? Too many college majors that cost a fortune with no prospect of comparable income....
There are tons of jobs around here delivering stuff, stocking stuff etc. going unfilled.
The majority of corporate white collar workers are able to work at home.
The impact of this thing is actually rather complicated.
I have not seen an article that gets into the weeds on who is working and who is not—and I suspect it varies wildly by industry.
In addition, many industries are open in some “locked-down” states but not others.
The headlines make great talking points, but reality often does not match them.
My definition of an essential worker: anyone paying income and/or property taxes.
I meant it was the combination of rich and stay-at-home that kicked it into overdrive.
I thought I was a professional all these years but no, I’m just plain old working class....but at least I know I’m essential and not just a paper pusher....
I’ve been telling people to get out of Red England for YEARS...
oh my oil well inherited sil just loves the lockdown....but then again she doesn’t really do anything ever....
That $600 government check weekly looks awfully attractive compared to delivering stuff, stocking stuff etc.
he also believes he’s in the “decision making class”....BS...people like him couldn’t find their way out of a paper bag....
When you have a job of actual work like building things it’s kind of hard to do it from home.
Maybe some rich feel that way, but I’d say it’s more a political divide.
I’m thinking it’s the Plantation owners vs. their slaves...
The most heated arguments that I have gotten in with the more liberal, Trump-hating members of my family are over this issue. It absolutely amazes me that they don’t understand that some people have to work to live - physically go to a location (not work remotely) and do work. And the risk of getting COVID-19, as bad as it may be, is much, much less than the risk of becoming homeless and starving to death. That is a really risk that Liberals don’t want to acknowledge. Or if they do, they simply say that government should hand out checks (what a pathetic statement that is - do they really think the government can support half the country for months?). Or they scream about how its all Trump’s fault. This issue, more than any in this pandemic, really gets my blood boiling.
Good article. I recently wrote to a city official urging that the public schools be reopened....not because I have a high opinion of them educationally, in fact quite the reverse...but they are essential as daycare to the part of the population that couldnt work from home or stay home and supervise their kids on-line lessons every day.
There are many people, usually in low-wage jobs, who had to go to work everyday and simply didnt have any alternative to just letting the kids roam the streets and get into trouble. It certainly wasnt good for the kids and was a real hardship for the parents, many of whom try to do the best they can with their kids but probably, even if they could have stayed home, wouldnt have been up to assisting with the lessons anyway.
I suggested a special summer session to start immediately that would help these kids to catch up on what they missed in an abbreviated class schedule and might even be heavily recreation-based so that much of the day would be sports, etc. - just something so that their parents could go to their essential low-age jobs without so much to worry about.
I was told by someone that the teachers union might object, which tells you all you need to know about the true priorities in all this.
Yes, that is a great essay which I have used many times. I met Leonard Read a couple of times.
Having been semi-retired from / by the tech industry at age 58, I took up being a teacher’s aide in public pre-school. I’ve been laid off.
However, the pay while laid off is HIGHER than my paycheck while I was working, because of the extra $600 per week passed by Congress.
I hear the same thing about bartenders, etc. Their Republican bar owner is going out of business, but they are making more staying home smoking pot (an essential business).
Having been semi-retired from / by the tech industry at age 58, I took up being a teacher’s aide in public pre-school. I’ve been laid off.
However, the pay while laid off is HIGHER than my paycheck while I was working, because of the extra $600 per week passed by Congress.
I hear the same thing about bartenders, etc. Their Republican bar owner is going out of business, but they are making more staying home smoking pot (an essential business).
They just think it's unfair that anyone should have to.
It's an impossible mindset to debate with.
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