McGarvey Review

The Social Distance Between Us: How Remote Politics Wrecked Britain

by Darren McGarvey

Simeon Scott

Published in 2022, Darren McGarvey’s book is well written, well presented and full of insights relevant to the working class of Bradford. As a “rapper” and “social commentator” from a working class Scottish background, in the book’s final chapter, called Coda, he is uneasy regarding his new found fame and relative financial security due to his book sales and radio career. Whilst to cite a well worn journalistic cliché, his heart remains in the right place, Darren’s text reveals some limitations regarding the fundamentals of social class. On the three main classes in Britain to day, he seems to distinguish between them in terms of typical levels of income and wealth, educational opportunities and whether people live in the inner city or leafy suburbs. Whilst describing such relevant characteristics is a media commonplace, it fails to capture the essence, to cite a term used by the ancient philosophers, of capitalism. That is, capitalism is not a system based on the seemingly random socio-economic differences between people, rather its core characteristic is the relationship between capitalist and worker inherent in the wage labour system. This is a system which continues to dominate our socio-economic environment, but which is, like slavery and serfdom before it, fundamentally exploitative. At its simplest, workers receive only a portion of the value which they collectively create, in the form of wages or salaries; the rest is pocketed by the capitalist in the form of profits.

Throughout his lengthy book, Darren fails to make this crucial point. As a result, his repeated calls for social and economic equality are puzzling. What, for example, does greater equality mean? Do we all become equally rich or equally poor; do we all live in palaces or pigsties? Crucially, if a worker were to receive the full value of what she or he produces, then the capitalist employer’s profit would be zero, and the wage labour system would come to an abrupt end. In view of his failure to highlight this relationship at the core of capitalism, the rest of Darren’s text rings a little hollow. For instance, his call for change in the education system tacitly accepts that learning is nothing more than skill training; that education should be about making us all better able to increase human wellbeing seems to escape Darren’s attention. As things stand, education is about acquiring knowledge that contributes to the process of value creation inherent in the wage labour system. The more knowledge a worker acquires the higher the value created by her or him; therefore the income of both the worker and the capitalist rises and the wage labour system and its inherently exploitative core remains in tact. Similarly, with regard to the middle classes, despite his Coda, Darren underplays the contradictions inherent in the theory and practice of members of this class, located as they are one remove from direct confrontation between the capitalist and the worker.

One faction of this middle class is what Darren calls the “Radical Left” in his 17th chapter; or what might be more accurately referred to as the radical intelligentsia. In this chapter, he fails to mention the crucial issue with regard to the so-called socialists, who some of us have seen selling their papers and trying to recruit vulnerable young people on marches, demonstrations and rallies up and down the country for decades. This issue is as follows: do we want to replace the market capitalist system we currently have in Britain with state run capitalism, as existed in the Bolshevik USSR and currently exists in China and North Korea? Compared with this issue all the rest is “just propaganda”, as the factory worker, played by Albert Finney, says in the film Saturday Night and Sunday Morning.

Surely, what we should be talking about is how to rid ourselves of global capitalism, irrespective of whether the worker is exploited by the private sector employer or the communist party intellectual. The current standoff between the private and state versions of capitalism generates arms manufacturing, for example, instead of decent housing. Rather than the pseudo-socialism offered by the paper sellers, we could be talking about how to set up workplace democracy. Ignoring the distraction that is the Westminster gossip pumped out by the media, by means of authentic democracy we can gear production to providing food, clothing and shelter, rather than profits or communist party surpluses, as ends in themselves. Whilst this might seem like a Hollywood fantasy at the moment, surely discussing such a credible democratic possibility is a step forward from naïvely calling for a “more equal” version of capitalism in which we all go to posh schools and have second homes in the Cotswolds. There have been times when British capitalism was indeed more equal than it is today, as in the 1945 to 1964 period. However, given global competition, a low profit British capitalism was never going to last and the Thatcher/Blair counter-revolution has taken us to where we are today, as described so well in Darren’s book.

One response to “McGarvey Review”

  1. Nagbea Nagbea avatar
    Nagbea Nagbea

    A very interesting article Simeon Scott, reviewing author Darren McGarveys attempts to investigate the idea of what it means to be “working class.” The intended meaning and origin of this particular couplet can really only be understood by scrolling back to Marx’s original proposition in his crititique of the Political Economy (Das Kapital) as it began to unfold in the post industrial formation of Capitalism. Marx defined 2 essential agents as critical to the process of capitalist development. Those who “owned” the means of production (capitalists) and those who supplied their labour (working classes)in exchange for wages. He further divides workers into occupational and aspirational sub groups in relation to their subjective experiences. For the purposes of this response we are going to leave the subgroupings (bourgeois, petty bourgeois, lumpen and dispossessed etc) and concentrate only on the 2 classes that Marx identifies as being the key historical adversaries and central determinants in a post capitalist dispensation. Location, understanding and recognition of an individuals concrete position as “working class” is reliant ultimately on the individuals “conciousness” of his or her self within their current social dispensation and particular situation as employed/un-employed/imprisoned etc. A helpful way to understand this is perhaps to see “class conciousness” as having 5 dimensions within which the degree of your recognition as being “working class” will be determined by your understanding of Marx’ original propositions of the role of these 2 oppositional classes as being key in the ability of societies to function and continue.

    1- Class Location – Where you work and how you earn your living.

    2 -Class Interest – Wether you can understand your interest as a collective enterprise rather than as solely an individual process

    3 – Class Organisation – As an employee your recognition and your participation in a Trade Union.

    4 – Political Representation – As an employee waged or salaried your awareness of the need to affiliate to Political organisations or to build Political organisations to defend and further workers control, ownership and power.

    5 – Class Conciuosness – This represents the thought process that will cohere your actions and participation in the previous 4 areas and will determine the part you play to remove Capitalism and replace it with Socialism as the interim social arrangement on route to real Communism.This is the stage of human organisation in which human needs as determined by conscious workers replaces private property and profit seeking. “Working Class Conciousness” is an inevitable consequence of an ever more ruthless and predatory capitalism which devours both people’s and planet and further propels us to fulfill our historic task of being the class that frees ourselves from the deadly yoke of capitalist decay. As Marx’ again intoned each epoch and Social arrangement contains the embryo of the next and as capitalism reaches the end of it’s ability to cohere and improve social living human beings will strive to produce a social, educational, intellectual and spiritually satisfying alternative internationalist Socialist solution.5 – Class Conciuosness – This represents the thought process that will cohere your actions and participation in the previous 4 areas and will determine the part you play to remove Capitalism and replace it with Socialism as the interim social arrangement on route to real Communism.This is the stage of human organisation in which human needs as determined by conscious workers replaces private property and profit seeking. “Working Class Conciousness” is an inevitable consequence of an ever more ruthless and predatory capitalism which devours both people’s and planet and further propels us to fulfill our historic task of being the class that frees ourselves from the deadly yoke of capitalist decay. As Marx’ again intoned each epoch and Social arrangement contains the embryo of the next and as capitalism reaches the end of it’s ability to cohere and improve social living human beings will strive to produce a social, educational, intellectual and spiritually satisfying alternative internationalist Socialist solution.

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