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gulliver

(13,871 posts)
Sat Feb 21, 2026, 03:03 PM Saturday

Blue pencil note on the term "middle class"

I don't know whether it was an oversight, but I've seen at least one Dem or Dem-aligned spokesperson leave "middle-class" out of the correct phrase, "working- and middle-class."

7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Blue pencil note on the term "middle class" (Original Post) gulliver Saturday OP
Context? snot Saturday #1
I only heard the "middle class" left out once by a leading Dem spokesperson gulliver Saturday #3
The correct phrase? Cirsium Saturday #2
It's "correct" in the sense of good manners and good politics. gulliver Saturday #4
This message was self-deleted by its author W_HAMILTON Saturday #5
Are you kidding? Cirsium Saturday #6
It is, however, kind of pandering to the US consumerists myth of themselves... haele Saturday #7

gulliver

(13,871 posts)
3. I only heard the "middle class" left out once by a leading Dem spokesperson
Sat Feb 21, 2026, 03:59 PM
Saturday

It was recent, so I thought I would bring it up. But it was a very prominent person in a very high-profile setting. Again, I'm hoping the person just messed up. There is no way, in an election year, that we want to snub the middle class (or those aspire to it, aspire to return to it, or think they are in it, even if they aren't).

The fact that the middle class is under pressure, even with some falling out of it, should be a major concern. We need more votes to win. I, for one, don't want us to win by a squeaker. I want it to be a landslide.

gulliver

(13,871 posts)
4. It's "correct" in the sense of good manners and good politics.
Sat Feb 21, 2026, 04:02 PM
Saturday

We don't want to snub our voters, and we have a whole lot of middle-class voters. It would be both rude and, from a political perspective (imo) incompetent.

Response to gulliver (Reply #4)

Cirsium

(3,741 posts)
6. Are you kidding?
Sat Feb 21, 2026, 06:35 PM
Saturday

Rude? Snubbed voters? What does "middle class" mean to you? You are distinguishing it from "working class." Does that mean white collar versus blue collar, then? And it would be rude to white collar workers and snub them if we say working class but fail to say middle class?

haele

(15,258 posts)
7. It is, however, kind of pandering to the US consumerists myth of themselves...
Sat Feb 21, 2026, 09:12 PM
Saturday

As simply temporarily embarrassed Millionaires.
Working Class is Middle Class.

Unless the money you have on hand to get your "stuff" comes a trust or investments, you work.
Even if it's begging someone else to give you money or getting paid to look pretty or sound smart.
You get up at a certain time to perform an expected task. That's work.

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