Chris Wright
Goodreads Author
Born
in The United States
Website
Twitter
Influences
Karl Marx, Noam Chomsky
Member Since
March 2017
More books by Chris Wright…
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"Class War, Then and Now is a powerful manifesto for our time, a sharp, historically grounded dissection of how capitalism has hollowed out democracy, eroded justice, and left working people disillusioned yet resilient. Chris Wright fuses the urgency "
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"Wright writes like a teacher who refuses to oversimplify. He weaves theory, history, and activism together in a way that feels both grounded and visionary. You don’t have to be a Marxist to appreciate the truth in his arguments just someone who’s tir"
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"Chris Wright doesn’t just critique capitalism he dissects it with historical clarity and moral urgency. Each essay burns with conviction and scholarship. It’s a reminder that class struggle isn’t an outdated idea; it’s the key to understanding our cu"
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Chris Wright
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Author Marketing - Resources, Exchanges, & Challenges and The Debate Club
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Oct 28, 2025 03:49PM
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Chris Wright
finished reading
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“In some cases, they are already doing so. Influenced by a coalition of community groups, the New York City Council passed a historic budget in the summer of 2014 that created a $1.2 million fund for the growth of worker-owned cooperatives. Richmond, California has hired a cooperative developer and is launching a loan fund; Cleveland, Ohio has been actively involved in starting a network of cooperatives, as we’ll see in the next chapter; and Jackson, Mississippi elected a mayor (Chokwe Lumumba) in 2013 on a platform that included the use of public spending to promote co-ops. On the federal level, progressive politicians like Bernie Sanders are working to get the government more involved in supporting employee ownership.130”
― Worker Cooperatives and Revolution: History and Possibilities in the United States
― Worker Cooperatives and Revolution: History and Possibilities in the United States
“One of the ways in which cooperatives rectify the injustices of capitalism is by instituting a relatively equal compensation-scheme for their members. While in the U.S. the average ratio of CEO compensation in the Fortune 500 companies to the ordinary worker’s has recently been reported as 344:1,49 in co-ops the pay-differential between management and the average worker rarely exceeds 4:1. In collectives, everyone is usually paid the same amount. For example, a British study from the 1980s reports that all of the dozens of small co-ops it researched had lower pay-differentials than conventional businesses, and most had little or no differential at all.50 At Arizmendi Bakery everyone currently receives about 20 dollars an hour plus a percentage of the year’s profits. The worker-owners of Mondragon Bookstore and Coffeehouse in Canada earn the same rate of pay. At Equal Exchange, a relatively large co-op, there is a 4:1 pay ratio.”
― Worker Cooperatives and Revolution: History and Possibilities in the United States
― Worker Cooperatives and Revolution: History and Possibilities in the United States
“The Knights of Labor originated in the late 1860s and early 1870s in Philadelphia, but slowly expanded into the rest of Pennsylvania and finally became a national organization with 750,000 members. It encompassed many trade unions and was organized geographically rather than by occupation. “The Knights attempted to organize all American productive workers into ‘one big union’ regardless of skill, trade, industry, race or sex and were divided into local, district and national assemblies, with a centralized structure”155—although substantial autonomy was granted to local assemblies, which took the initiative in establishing hundreds of cooperative stores and factories. The national leadership was less energetic on this score than local leadership. The overarching purpose of the organization was, as its longtime leader Terence Powderly said, “to associate our own labors; to establish co-operative institutions such as will tend to supersede the wage-system, by the introduction of a co-operative industrial system.”156 To this end, the Knights lobbied politically, engaged in numerous strikes, lent their support to other radical social movements, and, of course, organized co-ops. Masses of workers genuinely believed that they could rise from being “rented slaves” to become cooperators in control of their work and wages, living in revitalized and stabilized communities, no longer subject to periods of unemployment. Cooperation was a religion for some of them.”
― Worker Cooperatives and Revolution: History and Possibilities in the United States
― Worker Cooperatives and Revolution: History and Possibilities in the United States
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