Middle class has a bunch of economic and social indicators that are "squishy". I was raised in a family that expected me to go to college, and I went, so even though I earn only a little more than some people who would count as lower class, I'm firmly middle class, although I'd say I'm lower middle class. I have a job with health care and some security, and it's unionized. There's a reasonable chance the factory workers have those things, too, which is nothing to sneeze at. And if they're in a two-earner household, there's a good chance they're not too far off from the median family income, especially if they were someplace like Michigan or Mississippi. The local factory workers here are in the same bracket as a moderately experienced school teacher.
I'd say factory workers could fall either way, depending on the prestige of the job, the risks and securities in place, and the pay.
It's also good shorthand for "average American", and politicians can get themselves into huge hot water by talking about the lower classes, because there's a lot of unspoken assumptions about mobility and what it means to be lower class.
Robert Rothman wrote:
Ironically, most of those who subscibe to that particular philosophy have never tasted a properly-brewed cup of the stuff.
There's a Beer Party?
Robert Rothman wrote:
I've got to run and take cover now, since the thea synensists will soon be coming after me with their assault weapons fully loaded.
Oh. Well, most Americans have never had proper tea. I like both proper and improper tea, and am essentially too lazy to go to the trouble of making the former when I find the latter drinkable. But I deeply regret the national horror that is Coors. (More evidence of my middle class status, I think.)