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Working Class Crashes Bourgeois Party at the Waldorf.

sipila
Sun, 27 Jan 2002 05:47:31 -0800



From: "mart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, January 27, 2002 1:17 AM
Subject: Text: Capitalism, World Economic Felons, and the Waldorf
HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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Working Class Crashes Bourgeois Party at the Waldorf:
By Heather Cottin 

The arrogance of the ruling class is boundless. While 20% of New York City
residents in 2002 have been forced to depend on soup kitchens and food
pantries to stay alive, the leaders of the world capitalist system will be
meeting and partying at the elegant Waldorf Astoria Hotel. They will be
following a long tradition of the bourgeoisie

In the Gilded Age, at the late 19th Century, the Robber Barons, Rockefeller,
Carnegie, Belmont, Morgan, and the others attended extravagant balls and
parties at the original Waldorf located on Fifth Avenue and 34th Street.  At
one party, according to Matthew Josephson in The Robber Barons, the men were
given cigarettes wrapped in $100 bills, while the women received 14-karat
gold bracelets as favors.

In the period between 1890 and 1900 there was a terrible depression, and the
median amount necessary for a family to live on for one year was about $500,
according to the Historical Statistics of the US.  These industrialists and
bankers must have sniggered as they cavalierly smoked up what amounted to
1/5 of a family's yearly survival.

One night in 1897, during the depth of a depression, one of the fabulously
wealthy men of the age, Mr. Bradley Martin, had the entire lobby of the
Waldorf-Astoria transformed into Hall Of Mirrors from the Palais de
Versailles, reflecting the complete disregard that the monarchy had for the
poor in the days just before the French Revolution. August Belmont wore a
suit of armor marked with gold inlay of ten thousand dollars' value. Women
wore beautiful and expensive jewels as if they were corsages (Protestantism
in America: A Narrative History by Jerald C. Brauer)

The ruling classes, then as now, were aware of the poverty running rampant
through the cities, the poverty that was forcing thousands of farmers off
their farms. They were the cause of it. It was they who paid the workers
their miserable wages. It was they who sent their thugs and Pinkerton
rent-a-cops to kill workers, as Carnegie did in the 1892 Homestead Strike.
It was the industrialists who paid the farmers so little they were forced to
sell their farms. 

A Populist Leader, Mary Lease thundered to a crowd in Kansas in 1890:
"Wall Street owns the country. It is no longer a government of the people,
by the people   
 and for the people, but a government of Wall Street, by Wall Street and for
Wall Street." 

Mary "Yellin' Lease said, "The great common people in this country are
slaves and monopoly is the master ; . . . We will not pay our debts to the
loan shark companies until the government pays its debts to us. . . let the
bloodhounds of money who have dogged us thus far beware!"

The working classes and the farmers were moving fast in those days. As the
economy declined, immigrants and native born people joined together against
the banks, the corporations, the system the workers called, "wage slavery."

Eugene Victor Debs led the railroad workers in a strike that stopped the
railroads. It took the army to break it up and Debs went to jail. There he
read Marx's Das Kapital, and came out months later a socialist.

In the South, refusing to be intimidated by the Ku Klux Klan Black and White
farmers joined together against the ruling class whites and organized coops.
They opposed the dreaded crop lien system, which turned the African American
and white farmers into debtors on their own lands.

And how did the ruling classes respond to these strikes and acts of
defiance? They sent in the police and National Guards against strikers. They
funded and armed and encouraged the growth of the Klan. They looked the
other way when nightriders and vigilantes mowed down poor people, the
majority of whom were Black, throughout the South.

The bourgeoisie showed their sympathy for the plight of the workers by
throwing what they called "poverty socials". A western millionaire had the
ballroom in his home decorated as a hobo camp and his ruling class guests
came in rags and tatters. It cost $14,000 to serve them "hobo stew" on
wooden plates. The cost of the party was equal to what it would have cost to
have fed, housed, clothed and provided for 2800 families for a year.

The wives and daughters of the bourgeoisie felt virtuous and noble as they
carried baskets of fruit to poor families in the crowded, fetid tenement
houses. The bourgeoisie gave occasional charity balls for the poor, just as
they do today. As they danced the night away in their satins and diamond
tiaras, the men talking business over cigars, their concern for the poor was
as cynical as it is today.

The City of New York paid the Astor family $17 million for the land and on
the site of the old hotel constructed the Empire State Building. The "new"
Waldorf Astoria was constructed and opened at its present location with much
ceremony as a playground for the ruling classes in 1931, in the midst of the
next world economic crisis, the Great Depression.

The Astor family moved to London where they bought the London Times and
developed close sympathies with Adolph Hitler, according to Cigar
Aficionado. In the late Thirties, according to the BBC History Magazine, a
group who gathered around Waldorf and Nancy Astor's dinner-table at
Cliveden, their opulent country house. Among regular guests were a number of
politicians, editors and intellectuals with a shared belief in the manifest
destiny of Anglo-Saxon culture.


Now the Waldorf Astoria is host to new generation of Robber Barons, with a
global view of manifest destiny. Today's bourgeoisie created the World Trade
Organization to assure their global dominance of capital over labor. But
they are not like the bourgeoisie of the late 19th century who were only
concerned with owning the means of production in the United States. They are
more rapacious even than the Astors with their Nazi tendencies.

These modern day capitalists are meeting now to plan for further global
plunder.  They have completed the conquest of the world the Robber Barons of
the late 19th century only dreamed of. But, like the capitalists of the late
19th Century and later in the 1930s, they are worried. And for good reason.

In  1890 there was no place left in the United States to invest. It was, as
historian Frederick Jackson Turner wrote in 1890, the "end of the frontier."
The capitalists were afraid. Capitalism was stagnant. The depression was
growing. The masses were angry.

In 1898, Senator Albert Beveridge urged the nation toward imperialism. That
would solve the economic crisis, he said.  "We are raising more than we can
consume, . . . we are making more than we can use, there is more capital
than there is investment." Supporting the war in Cuba and the Philippines,
Beveridge said, "we must find new markets for our capital, new work for our
labor, . . . think of . . . Hawaii and Puerto Rico . . . Think of the
thousands of Americans who will invade mine and field and forest in the
Philippines . . ." 

And invade they did, they attacked Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines.

Mark Twain criticized the war the United States waged on the Filipinos. It
was a war that resulted in the murder of 1/3 of the people of the islands.
This brutal war was modeled on the wars the United States had just waged
against the Native People. It was openly racist, reflecting Washington and
Wall Street's utter disregard for people in Asia, and Latin America and the
Caribbean. 


Twain excoriated imperialism in two short sentences in 1900. "I bring you
the stately matron named Christendom -- returning bedraggled, besmirched and
dishonored from pirate raids in Kiaochow, Manchuria, South Africa and the
Philippines; with her soul full of meanness, her pocket full of boodle and
her mouth full of pious hypocrisies. Give her soap and a towel, but hide the
looking glass" 

Capitalists, militarists and their intellectual lapdogs joined together to
urge this nation on a path which, as Columbia professor Charles Conant,
wrote in 1898, "marked out for them as children of the great Anglo-Saxon
race . . .demanding new markets and new opportunities for American
enterprise." 

Conant called this "A result of natural law and race development." He meant
imperialism, but he cautioned against the United States following in the
paths of England and Germany and the "older countries," as he called them.

Conant said, "Capital is no longer needed in excess of supply. It is
becoming congested."
He cautioned, "The multiplication of unprofitable enterprises has flooded
the market. . . and resulted. . . in a glut of goods which has destroyed
profits, bankrupted great corporations, and ruined investors."

This was before the United States embarked on its imperialist adventures
that turned the entire world into a market for its goods and an outlet for
investment. Though the United States took few actual colonies, in the 104
years since Conant's article the United States has come to dominate the
world economy. The bourgeoisie have expanded their grasp to every part of
the globe. 

And still, Conant's words ring as true now as they did then. "Capital is no
longer needed in excess of supply." The system has no where to go. As the
bourgeois financiers, corporate moguls and paid policy wonks skulk around
the Waldorf Astoria, they know that the economic crises of the late 19th
Century have multiplied exponentially. The size of the US economy in 1898
was miniscule compared to now. The number of workers, firms, products, and
nations involved in the global capitalist system connected to the U.S.
economy has grown astronomically since then.

They say the bigger they are the harder they fall.

The system is foundering, and the World Economic Forum has no idea how to
save it. They may feel secure in the Waldorf Astoria. Protected by the
police from the angry protesters outside, they may believe that the horrors
of poverty, unemployment, hunger, disease, and the myriad ravages of
capitalism will be forever accepted by the working classes of the world.

They may think that their armies can help them maintain control now of a
world capitalist system that the neo-imperialists of the late 19th Century
only imagined. They may believe they can wage endless war and the workers
here will accept it.

But if they look outside of the Waldorf Astoria, they will see that their
world is crumbling. From Allentown to Zimbabwe working people are wise to
the machinations of these World Economic Felons who have stolen the
resources and land and immiserated the lives of the people in every corner
of the world.   

A truly international working class now confronts the bourgeoisie that
created this criminal system.

The days of reckoning have begun.

.   

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  • Working Class Crashes Bourgeois Party at the Waldorf. sipila