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Steward Beckham's avatar

This is exactly why divorcing economic policy from social reality is such a dangerous trap. SNAP, TANF, and Medicaid didn’t become billionaire subsidy programs by accident. They were slowly hollowed out by a politics that treated poverty as apolitical and race-neutral, ignoring how racialized backlash shaped economic policy from Reagan to today.

What Hartmann lays out here is structural proof that Mamdani-style politics, like naming power, marrying economic dignity with lived experience, and refusing to sanitize class struggle from race, gender, or immigration. It isn’t just morally right. It’s strategically necessary.

As I wrote in a recent Substack piece, the most successful Democrats aren’t those who soften their message to appease the center, but those who understand that working-class people are complex, multiracial, and sick of being split down the middle between their checkbook and their identity. Mamdani didn’t dodge that. He built power from it.

https://www.stewonthis.com/p/stop-unmarrying-economic-and-social

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Virgin Monk Boy's avatar

It’s wild how fast the narrative flips. The same billionaires who rely on taxpayer-funded food stamps to keep wages low are the ones screaming about “personal responsibility.” They’ve built a welfare system for the rich and convinced working people to feel ashamed for needing to eat.

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