money of our own that creates the battered wife or the closet lesbian and forces so many of us to remain in unwanted family situations. With money in our hands, we would have the power to walk out whenever we wanted. Men would certainly think twice before raising their hands to us if they knew that we could leave any minute, without the prospect of starving. Our wageless condition in the home is the material basis of our dependence on men. This weakness in the community, as wageless house- workers, is ultimately the weakness of the entire class. Capitalism takes away from us in the community (through inflation—price hikes, rent increases, fare increases, etc.) what we have gained through our power in the factory. Women pay a double price for this defeat. Higher prices mean an intensification of our work, since we are expected to absorb the cost of inflation with extra work. The struggle for wages for housework is a struggle for social power—for women first, but ultimately for the entire working class. In fact, by demanding wages for the work we already do, instead of demanding more work, we are posing the question of the immediate reappro- priation of the wealth we have produced. Ex- ploitation is the enforcement of unpaid labor, the only source of capitalist profits. Thus, to attack our wagelessness is to attack capitalism at its roots, for capital is precisely the accumu- lated labor that has been robbed from workers generation after generation. In contrast, the strategy that has been offered to us by “feminists” and the left—the strategy to obtain more work—would only mean further enslavement to the present system. It is capital that poses work as the only natural destiny in our lives, not the working class, whose struggles are always directed toward gaining more money and less work. To pose the “right to work” as our road to liberation ignores that we are already working, and that housework does not wither away when we go out for a paid job. Our work at home simply intensifies: we do it at night when everybody is already asleep, or in the morning before everyone awakes, or on week- ends. Our wages remain low—and they quickly disappear in paying for day-care centers, lunches, carfare, etc. Furthermore, with two jobs we have even less time to organize with other women. Unions have long accused wom- en of being backward. But when did unions consider that we are not free to attend meetings after our second job is over because we must hurry to report back to our first one—picking up the kids at the day-care center or babysitter’s, getting to the supermarket before it closes, fix- ing dinner for the men who expect it to be ready when they come home from work? Another illusion is that to go “out to work” is to break our isolation and gain the possibility of asocial life. Very often the isolation of a typing pool or a secretarial office matches our isola- tion in the home. We certainly aspire to a social life better than the one provided by an assembly line. But going out of the home is not much of a relief if we don’t have any money in our hands, or if we go out just for more work. We also reject the idea that sharing our ex- ploitation in the home with a man can be a strategy for liberation. “Sharing the housework” is not an invention of the Women’s Movement. Women have continuously tried to get men to share this work. Despite some victories, we have discovered that this battle also has many limitations. First, the man is not home most of the time. If he brings in the money, and we are economically dependent on him, we don’t have the power to force him to do housework. In fact it is often more work for us to get the man to share the work than do it ourselves. Most im- portantly, this strategy confines us to an in- dividual struggle which does not give us the power (or the protection) of a mass struggle. And it assumes that every woman has (or wants) a man with whom to share the work. As for a possible rationalization of house- work, we must immediately say that we are not interested in making our work more efficient or more productive for capital. We are interested in reducing our work, and ultimately refusing it altogether. But as long as we work in the home for nothing, no one really cares how long or how hard we work. For capital only introduces advanced technology to cut its costs of produc- tion after wage gains by the working class. Only if we make our work cost (i.e., only if we make it uneconomical) will capital “discover” the technology to reduce it. At present, we often have to go out for a second shift of work to afford the dishwasher that should cut down our housework! Who will pay for this work? We demand wages for housework from the government for two major reasons. First, every sector of the economy benefits from our work — we don’t work for one boss, we work for all the bosses. Consequently we demand the money from the state. Second, the government already is our boss. In every country the government is responsible for guaranteeing an adequate labor force to industry. This means that the govern- ment directly regulates and controls our work through the family, world population control, immigration laws, and finally by entering the community whenever we refuse to perform our work. The question “who will pay?” is usually posed so as to subvert the cause. It is assumed that the government is broke, and that our demand will only divide the working class by forcing the government to tax other workers to pay us a wage. In reality, by getting more power for our- selves, we will be giving more power not only to men (power not over us but with respect to their bosses) but to every sector (the young, the elderly, and the wageless in general). We will 105