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recently arrived to northern cities in what is called “the Great Migration,” faced massive exploitation and wretched conditions. Historian Michael Katz compares conditions of marginalized populations under neoliberalism to those faced at that earlier time and finds that, “with the notable exception of the Vietnam War, most of the conditions identified in the [Kerner Commission] report as precipitating civil violence did not disappear” but actually worsened to a severe degree.8 Asking in his aptly titled 2008 essay “Why Don’t American Cities Burn Very Often?” Katz observes,

      Gilligan’s analysis of interpersonal violence as stemming from the systematic disrespect of relative inequality helps us reframe Katz’s question. Instead of only asking why American cities don’t burn very often, we might ask why Americans often shoot each other instead of burning cities. How, in more academic terms, does the endemic violence of neoliberalism’s intensification of inequality become systematically displaced from public to interpersonal spheres?

      Reading these words now, their pained sincerity is no less striking than their absolute distance from our own times. Whatever one’s social position or political affiliation, the idea that complacent comfort, virtue, or some sort of Golden Age is in danger of being undermined by a threat of hypocrisy and decline is an idea from some other world. Political radicalization must now happen by other means, since no one—Left or Right—would entertain such naivety in the first place. Even those most likely to bristle at mention of “the hypocrisy of American ideals” would now never argue that the country is in an untroubled, untarnished Golden Age; rhetoric of hypocrisy and the decline of American virtue is now even more typical of the Right than among Left critics—albeit with different alleged causes. Talk of values and righteousness has largely been abandoned by liberals and the Left; such talk persists mostly within the Right, but then only as a thin pretext for the brutal exercise of force by those in a position to do so over those who, until recently, seemed little inclined to fight back. If movements are to do their job and disrupt the daily reproduction of the status quo, they cannot merely point out how unfair things are, which is obvious enough. Instead, they have to figure out, work through, and overcome those social “advances” that have convinced people that they are powerless to do anything about it. In many ways, as later chapters hope to show, they’ve already started.

      Disruption Disrupted:

      Or, Why Have the Poor Been Putting Up with Getting So Screwed?

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