I don’t think I’ve ever been condescending in characterization of the working class, especially not one along the lines you seem to be suggesting I am. I think that’s coming from you being presumptuous and intentionally being a prick by making vulgarizations of my views. Maybe you’re confused and don’t know much about where I’m coming from, but what I promote and the activity I’m involved in has nothing to do convincing people to drop everything and fall in line to the “learned man’s revolution” or “enlightening” anyone. I understand and appreciate nuance in class analysis, differences within the class and the potential for working people to be swept up in reactionary backwards movements. I do not see the working class in abstract terms but rather born out of concrete social relations that are historically specific to capitalism. Most importantly I said that I consider myself very much a part of it. I am convinced that the working class, because of its position in capitalist society, is the only force capable of doing away with it and its struggles have historically shaped the “political climate”. Am I really the one being condescending here by pointing out that things can change pretty rapidly?
I’m sorry, I didn’t intend to equate your project with a green roof or whatever and it wasn’t meant to minimize it(I happen to think that increasing the area of permeable surfaces is of critical importance, and a lot of the projects I'm familiar with and had in mind are pretty large multimillion dollar endeavors). I used it as an example to point out that localized remediation projects, no matter how neat and good they may be, fail to address the real problem(the root of it all). This comes back to my initial disagreement with you: Is sneaking 'subversive' things in under the noses of developers that hire good-hearted professionals really the best thing that can be done because the political climate will never be hospitable to radical social change? Great, do your thing, have a blast, it’s probably really swell. But I think you’re wrong, I think your premise is wrong. I disagree very much with that statement.
maybe you think something was implied that isn't, but I was just going by what you've posted. sounded a lot like knowing what's best for the silly little people, who remain pure and unspoilt in their quaint ignorance; who, if provided the proper stimulus, would rise up and support your planned revolution as desired. if I exaggerated or ran with it at all, it was only to show that some of the stuff you've been saying can come across as pretty gross without the necessary context. you haven't provided that context until now. apparently it's the 'working class' that is important, because they are the only ones capable of generating the force necessary to bring radical change. that's cool, I can't disagree with that. 'never' was an exaggeration, but I remain pessimistic something like that will happen soon enough to make a difference in the lives of the people who are living here now. I don't think I said anything about radical social change to begin with tho, that's something that surfaced later in the argument. my point was that a lot of your end-goals can be implemented with or without your revolution, with or without capitalism. this is not to say capitalism isn't something that should be eliminated. but even 'if' it still exists in this country, that doesn't mean the lives of the people, particularly the urban poor, can't be vastly improved in the meantime.
and one doesn't necessarily need to go under anyone's nose to implement anything
btw this isn't intended as a dig or anything but don't you think the title "working class" excludes some of the people who could use help the most and sort of implies some kind of randian labor fetishism? an outsider witnesses a debate between a communist and objectivist and wonders what this pervasive fascination with jobs and quantifiable labor is all about
edit: is it an attempt to distance the valuable hard-working innocents from the impoverished, homeless people, prostitutes, the disabled and unable to work etc