The other thing that’s important to remember, she said, is that the organizers were a threat—of socialist revolution—and it was that which allowed F.D.R. to say to Wall Street, “We have to compromise, or else we’ve got a revolution on our hands.”
1) There ain't no more U.S.S.R. The "threat of socialist revolution" was given basis by a large, socialist nation that was actively trying to spread its system of government. Now, not only is that nation gone, but it has thoroughly discredited the ideology. Back then, years before the McCarthy "Red Scare," there were many open, unashamed advocates for American Communism. You'd be unlikely to find a single one outside the lunatic fringe nowadays; not from fear of persecution, but from fear of ridicule. Even the one major "Communist" nation -- China -- appears more and more like a far-right fascist system, with government and military power involved in supporting big business. If there's going to be a "revolution" in the U.S. anytime soon, it won't take the form of a conversion to socialism, but rather anarchy and civil war, more likely leading to a breakup of the country into various, warring regional "nation-states," such as (ironically) what happened to the Soviet Union twenty years ago. The end result of most of those was a series of dictatorships squabbling with one another. Do we
really want to turn into an amalgam of Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, and so on?
2) 1984 took place twenty-four years ago. Revolutionary uprisings were much easier to pull off before the rise of the "Homeland Security" state. As it is now, you've got pretty much unregulated government surveillance (plus the technology to track and listen in on virtually anyone through control of cell phones and long-distance listening devices), imprisonment without trial, and a domestically-based military with vast numbers of effective crowd-control measures. It would be relatively easy to brutally crush the first sign of an uprising, in the name of "making an example" of them. Think "Tienanmen Square" and its aftermath (whatever happened to the Chinese "democracy movement" thereafter?), and you won't be far off.
3) "E Pluribus Unum" replaced by "Every Man For Himself." What would have been the final objection to a complete -- and I mean armed -- class war carried off by the haves against the have-nots in the '30s was that, in the end, we were "all in this together." The American workers who needed to be catered to -- however reluctantly -- via the New Deal were the ones who built and bought the products for the upper class. If the working class of the '30s were to simply disappear, the moneyed class would have been largely lost. But, now, with the globalized economy, that moneyed class is having its products made in India and China and largely sold in overseas markets. As long as there are enough "service workers" for medical care, transportation and domestic work, there would be no problem for the ruling class in instituting a "final solution" for the troublesome American worker.
I agree that this is a "progressive moment," but it is so because, for the first time this millennium, we are about to have national leadership that isn't made up entirely of far-right "true believers." But, if they act, it will be because of
positive pressure from us, not the fear of a socialist revolution if they don't comply.