This comes up so often when discussing Welsh, Scottish, Cornish etc. secession from the Westminster state. Liberals often conflate the often coercive and dominating force that England has on the politics of the union to colonialism, when in fact this is more akin to the exact same stratification that develops within all bourgeois societies.

The development of a reserve army of labour entails the oppression of the proletariat of the imperial core, because the goal of imperialism is NOT to sprinkle treats amongst the workers to keep them suppressed, it is to create the gradient boundary necessary for the accumulation of capital.

The fact we have treats to buy and the means to do so is part of the process, not a byproduct. Yes, it also has the benefit of suppressing our efforts in class struggle, but no less do bullets, bombs, and hunger suppress the workers at the imperial periphery. The treats are not a reward.

The point being, colonialism isn’t when one country is annexed by another and develops a stratified hierarchy within its borders, it is when that system is exported and maintained through its military. The struggle between the imperial and colonised world powers does not negate the importance of class struggle within the imperial core; both produce the social and material relations to produce the other.


At least this is how I’ve come to critique this misinterpretation of the relationships of the UK’s inner states. I should probably read more theory.

  • Chana [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    6 days ago

    Yes, or at least a massive shakeup in prices. If there were a rapid flattening, cheap imported consumer goods would rapidly rise in price. The bananas may triple in price or more.

    Though also, some of the largest costs in the imperial core are in economic rent. While those imports would become expensive, even just overhauling housing and healthcare would crash the two most expensive bills for every worker.

    Furthermore, that exploitation still exists in the imperial core. Workers are rarely paid on par with what is brought in by the product of their labor, even high wage earners. I’ve spoken with baby lefty tech workers who think of themselves as privileged and that labor organizing is for other people, people who need it. They don’t consider that their $200k is compensation for a product that made $1.5 million per dev and that the difference was used to pay useless management and pocketed as profit. While a high wage earner doesn’t face the desperation of other workers, and this carries a psychological challenge to class consciousness, they are still wage earners exploited by their employers. A sudden socialist realignment could begin changing this quite directly, nationalizing various industries and raising wages.

    • dil [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      6 days ago

      Good point. Treats will be more expensive, but I’d expect that to be largely offset by increased earnings and lower cost of living.

      May we live to see the day that one banana costs $10 :inshallah: