How the Pandemic Laid Bare the Cruelty of Capitalism, by Kenn Orphan

Class War #occupyboston

Image by Chase Elliott Clark via Flickr

by Kenn Orphan
Writer, Dandelion Salad
Halifax, Nova Scotia
April 9, 2021

One thing this pandemic has demonstrated in stark terms is class struggle. Those people deemed essential, though often applauded in public, have been treated as expendable. In truth, they were always treated this way. But this last year has made this struggle visible for anyone paying attention.

The medical staff, grocery clerks, janitors, sanitation workers, transportation services, delivery people, all of them have been the ones on the front lines, not only of potential exposure to a lethal pathogen, but to abuse from privileged customers, clients or patients who feel their rights have somehow been violated for being asked to simply wear a mask. I can’t count how many videos I have seen of people (mostly white and middle to upper middle class) berating workers. And this often takes on a racist tone.

Over the past year we have witnessed people throwing groceries at workers, spitting at them, calling them names. In various states, from California to Texas to Florida, there have been mobs that invaded stores like Target or Home Depot without masks and carrying anti-masker and “Covid is Hoax” signs, even physically attacking other customers and workers. And in one recent instance in British Columbia an older white male customer was asked to wear a mask in a pizza restaurant. He answered angrily: “are you f**king Middle Easter or where are you from?” Concluding with “I’m worth $50 million, you’re worth zero.” He and his companion then went on to assault a teenage customer outside tearing his mask from his face.

How disconnected from reality could one be to think that being asked to wear a mask in a store is a violation of ones’ rights? And how privileged does one have to be to think dressing down a worker is somehow a noble expression of those supposed rights? And this gets to the crux of the problem: capitalism.

Capitalism is about class and status. The man who said he was worth $50 million and clerk worth $0 really believes it. And it is a system that posits the supposed “rights” of the individual over the well being of the community. But many of these rights are merely privilege and have little to nothing to do with liberating oppressed or marginalized members of society or protecting the most vulnerable or persecuted. It is the very opposite of cooperation and mutual respect. And it is an arrangement which always favors the wealthy and upper classes disproportionately over the poor and working class. This is because the list of “rights” seldom, if ever, include basics like housing, food, healthcare, education or meaningful work.

This is playing out most obviously in the ongoing strikes against corporations like Amazon and the fast food industry. But in the US, as well as some other western nations, liberals have found themselves alienated from these struggles thanks to years of political pandering to corporations. We should ask ourselves why these workers aren’t even asking for a good wage, they are only asking for a livable wage. “Livable.” And yet they work 80 or more hours a week yet cannot “live” on the pittance they get. All while there are people like Bezos and Musk who pay little to no taxes and make thousands of dollars a minute while they sleep.

The pandemic has laid bare how the systemic inequities of capitalism manifest in real abuse and contempt for low wage workers. Often this is compounded by racism and xenophobia. But it isn’t simply the tirades of entitled anti-maskers against people behind the counter making minimum wage. It is warehouses and other places of business that have put low wage workers at risk by exposing them to Covid-19, while providing them no paid sick leave or a “livable” wage. It is about a government that provides subsidies to corporations and the military industrial sector, while denying the public basic healthcare, good housing, free education and opportunities for growth.

But outrage at individual instances of worker abuse captured on TikTok or Youtube is not enough. The entire system is designed to inflict cruelty on the most vulnerable in society. And if we cannot see the machine behind this all, we will lack the most effective tools to dismantle it.


Kenn Orphan is a writer, artist, antiwar and anti-capitalist activist, hospice social worker and radical nature lover living in Halifax, Nova Scotia. As an independent writer and artist Kenn Orphan depends on donations and commissions. If you would like to support his work and his blog you can do so via PayPal. He may be contacted at KennOrphan.com.

Previously published on Kenn Orphan, Apr. 6, 2021

From the archives:

The “Innocence” Of Early Capitalism Is Another Fantastical Myth, by Pete Dolack

The Anti-Social Socialist: Why Capitalism is NOT the Free Market

Humans, Nature and the Illusion of Separateness, by Kenn Orphan

The Final Dance: A Conversation with Cheryl Deines on Death and Dying, the Pandemic, and Living Our Best Lives, by Kenn Orphan

Plutocracy I-V (must-see)

The Scale of Loss: 400,000 Dead, by Rivera Sun

Global Vaccine Apartheid, by Yanis Iqbal

19 thoughts on “How the Pandemic Laid Bare the Cruelty of Capitalism, by Kenn Orphan

  1. Pingback: Chris Hedges and Maximillian Alvarez: Workers are Essential, Capitalists are Not – Dandelion Salad

  2. Pingback: What Must Be Done To End The Pandemic – Dandelion Salad

  3. Pingback: Corporate Greed Keeps The Pandemic Alive, by Pete Dolack – Dandelion Salad

  4. Pingback: Max Lawson: World’s Richest Doubled Their Wealth While Millions Fell Into Poverty – Dandelion Salad

  5. Pingback: Chris Hedges: It Exposes the Distortion of the Entire For-Profit Health Care System in the US – Dandelion Salad

  6. Pingback: How To End The Pandemic – Dandelion Salad

  7. Pingback: The Frontier is Closed: Capitalist and Constitutional Chickens Coming Home to Cancerous Roost, by Paul Street – Dandelion Salad

  8. Pingback: A Time of Plague in an Era of Corruption, Distrust and Irrationality, by Kenn Orphan – Dandelion Salad

  9. Pingback: Working Conditions are Getting Worse in the US, by Pete Dolack – Dandelion Salad

  10. Pingback: The Outlook for the US is Uniquely Bleak, by Finian Cunningham – Dandelion Salad

  11. Pingback: Pandemic Shows China Bests US, by Finian Cunningham – Dandelion Salad

  12. Pingback: Cuba’s Covid-19 Vaccines: A Journey of Collaboration and Revolutionary Solidarity, by Jyotsna Singh – Dandelion Salad

  13. Pingback: Chris Hedges: Virus: Vaccinations, the CDC and the Hijacking of America’s Response to the Pandemic – Dandelion Salad

  14. Pingback: The Imperialist Nature of G7, by Yanis Iqbal – Dandelion Salad

  15. Pingback: India Is Being Pulverised By A Second Covid-19 Wave, by Haris Zargar – Dandelion Salad

  16. Pingback: The Intensification of Colonial Genocide Will Blowback, by Rainer Shea – Dandelion Salad

  17. Pingback: Chris Hedges: We Must Build A New Party – Dandelion Salad

  18. Pingback: How America’s Descent Into A Failed State Will Happen, by Rainer Shea – Dandelion Salad

  19. Pingback: Chris Hedges and Richard D. Wolff: American Economic Illusions – Dandelion Salad

Comments are closed.