An indignant cri de coeur against the practice of contemporary capitalism to make people, yes, disposable.
It is a crime against humanity, born of contempt indeed, that so many Americans—members of ethnic minorities, immigrants, the elderly and disabled—live lives in which it is “normal” to suffer privation. “In America,” asserts New York magazine writer Jones, “normal for millions can mean fear and hunger and, sometimes, death.” All that came true with the arrival of the Covid-19 epidemic on the watch of a “slumlord president” whose brief it was, by her account, to protect the interests of the ruling class. The pandemic, Jones holds, was a prime example of what Friedrich Engels called “social murder.” One victim was her grandfather, who transitioned from working-class life to “the mercy of whatever rehabilitation center that he and our family could afford,” there being scarcely any safety net for such people in a society based on the fundamental belief that rich and poor enjoy those conditions because somehow they deserve them. “My grandfather died because a virus killed him, but other hands helped him toward his demise,” Jones holds. Others she profiles are among the “essential workers,” who are disproportionately members of ethnic minorities and whose low rate of pay all too often condemns them to poor, overcrowded housing conditions that are perfect vectors for a pandemic. Jones examines ways in which the excesses of predatory capitalism can be contained, from reparations to the reconstitution of labor unions, higher wages, and other protections. The pandemic laid bare the casual cruelty and inequity of a system that, for most people, means “there is work, and then death.” Undoing that system, Jones insists, will require a radical solution: “Excise an inhuman political economy from the national body, and replace it with something else, something we haven’t yet tried.”
A powerful, heartfelt argument for a more humane economics.