‘Disaster socialism’: Will coronavirus crisis finally change how Americans see the safety net? | Will Bunch
Diana Hernández has one foot in the
Instead, Hernández wrote that she witnessed
“The black and brown folks who work for these corporations have to show up on their line or at their cleaning facility, because they’re taking care of the things that can’t be taken care of remotely,” Hernández told me by phone. I’d called her after reading her op-ed on how a public health crisis has laid bare what so many have tried to ignore for so long -- the many ways that the cruel inequalities of modern
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The public-health emergency even has some lawmakers who’ve worked for decades to cut the social safety net now supporting a universal paid sick leave -- at least for this one virus, if not for the 900 or whatever other things that could make workers ill -- and or even funding what might be called Medicaid-for-all ... people with coronavirus symptoms, so that the uninsured or under-insured will get free testing, at least.
How the have-nots are coping with coronavirus -
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In 2020, a liberal is a conservative who’s been exposed to the coronavirus. It was almost surreal to watch a suddenly kinder, gentler-sounding
It’s fascinating to watch how a pandemic-inspired fear of the unknown -- flavored by the fact that COVID-19 initially tended to spread through the things that more affluent Americans do, like travel overseas, book cruise-ship vacations or attend business conferences -- has finally caused at least a slight bump in awareness of the kind of problems that everyday folks, working two or three jobs in a gig economy, have been screaming about for years.
Many experts noted that America’s mad scramble to suddenly guarantee paid sick days or coverage for necessary medical procedures must look strange to Europeans, or other developed societies with a generous safety social net, where leaders don’t think the only solution to every problem is to throw more tax breaks at corporations and pray that a few dollars trickle down.
America needs to talk about the new book that says lacking a college degree might kill you | Will BunchOn this side of the
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In arguably the most well-timed paper in the history of American academia, research co-led by a
Temple economist
Maclean told me on Wednesday that “sometimes it takes a crisis” for leaders to see the benefits of something like paid sick leave, even though polls before the coronavirus showed roughly 75 percent of Americans support such laws. “We see this pattern,” she said, “where it takes a troubling development to rise the value of a policy change to policy makers.”
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Well, yes and no. As is so often the case in today’s American oligarchy, corporations are responding faster and better to the public outcry than government. In the last week we’ve seen big businesses like Amazon to
But up on
The legislative state-of-play on Thursday -- with the nation reeling from a bear market, the suspension of NBA basketball and news that
There’s a notion that’s gained credence over the last decade or two -- “the shock doctrine,” as named by the writer
Will the coronavirus crisis spark a kind of “disaster socialism,” to finally embrace the social safety net that’s the norm in so many other countries?
It’s the affordability, stupid. Can this one word put a Democrat back in the
But despite their flaws, the thing about Biden and, arguably,
And if calling this “disaster socialism” makes you politically uncomfortable, then just call simply a more humane America. But the coronavirus has exposed an underlying sickness in modern
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