In the last Gilded Age, late 1800's, Mid-West farmers organized Populist Co-operatives, factory workers and miners organized unions and strikes, Muckrakers published books, and there were nationally famous leaders like William Jennings Bryan who articulated and fought for their viewpoint.
Fascinating article posted below attempts to answer the questions of why downwardly-mobile average American hasn't rebelled yet and if/when they might..
If I had written it, I would have more explicitly talked about a conscious effort by business/ wealthy elite pulling the strings in the background to focus election campaigns on "family" and social values so as to exclude talk of economic inequality. Also the alliance of the business elite with conservative religious elements within in the Republican Party - an alliance that has always favored the corporate elite, who've gotten most of what they wanted over the last 30 years while the conservative religion folks who supplied the voters have gotten very little in the way of concrete legislation to remake society acc to their values.
I'd also have talked more about the ability of the business/ corporate elite to control the parameters of the discussion by getting rid of laws that limited media consolidation, so now 5 media companies control most of the information that the average Americans see and hear. And using phony populists like Ann Coulter and Bill O'Reilly to cleverly define the cause of people's anger and frustration and channel it into directions that do not threaten the U.S.'s business/ Wall Street elite and their ability to make huge sums of money.
Still, it's a very good article. A few exerpts:
"Certainly, Mark Twain would feel right at home today...Crony capitalism, inequality, extravagance, Social Darwinian self-justification, blame-the-victim callousness, free-market hypocrisy: thus it was, thus it is again! ."
"....by every measure, the country has now exceeded the extremes of inequality achieved during the first Gilded Age; nor are our elites any more embarrassed by their Mammon-worship than were members of the "leisure class" excoriated a century ago by that take-no-prisoners social critic of American capitalism Thorstein Veblen. "
"Perhaps the answer is simple and basic: The first Gilded Age rested on industrialization; the second on de-industrialization. In our time, a new system of dis-accumulation looted American industry, liquidating its assets to reward speculation in "fictitious capital." ...the fastest growing part of the economy has been the finance, insurance, and real estate (FIRE) sector. De-industrialization has laid the industrial working class and the labor movement low, killing it twice over...Dis-accumulation transformed the working class into a disaggregated pool of contingent labor..."
"Decline, dispossession, and marginalization: a grim scenario. Yet the new political economy of finance-based dis-accumulation also announced itself as the second coming of democratic capitalism. And in the realm of the collective imaginary, if not in reality, it convinced millions. "
"Our corporate elite are much more adept than their Gilded Age predecessors were at playing the democracy game...Beginning in the 1970s, our age's business elite became acutely politically-minded and impressively well-organized...They've gone so far as to craft strategic alliances with elements of what their nineteenth century predecessors would have termed the hoi polloi [the masses]. Calls to dismantle the federal bureaucracy now carry a certain populist panache, while huffing and puffing about family values has -- so far -- proven a cheap date for a gilded elite that otherwise generally couldn't care less. "
"Shareholder democracy" and the "ownership society" are admittedly more public relations slogans than anything tangible. Nonetheless, you can't ignore the fact that, during the second Gilded Age, half of all American families became investors in the stock market..."
"However, the wheel turns. The capitalism of the Second Gilded Age now faces a systemic crisis...Old-fashioned poverty is making a comeback...anger and resentment over insecurity, downward mobility... and the ill-gotten gains of our Gilded Age mercenaries and their political enablers already rippled the political waters during the mid-term elections of 2006. This primary season has witnessed a discernable leftward shift..."
"Legitimacy is a precious possession; once lost it's not easily retrieved. Today, the myth of the "ownership society" confronts the reality of the "foreclosure society." The great silence of the second Gilded Age may give way to the great noise of the first."
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174922/steve_fraser_the
Fascinating article posted below attempts to answer the questions of why downwardly-mobile average American hasn't rebelled yet and if/when they might..
If I had written it, I would have more explicitly talked about a conscious effort by business/ wealthy elite pulling the strings in the background to focus election campaigns on "family" and social values so as to exclude talk of economic inequality. Also the alliance of the business elite with conservative religious elements within in the Republican Party - an alliance that has always favored the corporate elite, who've gotten most of what they wanted over the last 30 years while the conservative religion folks who supplied the voters have gotten very little in the way of concrete legislation to remake society acc to their values.
I'd also have talked more about the ability of the business/ corporate elite to control the parameters of the discussion by getting rid of laws that limited media consolidation, so now 5 media companies control most of the information that the average Americans see and hear. And using phony populists like Ann Coulter and Bill O'Reilly to cleverly define the cause of people's anger and frustration and channel it into directions that do not threaten the U.S.'s business/ Wall Street elite and their ability to make huge sums of money.
Still, it's a very good article. A few exerpts:
"Certainly, Mark Twain would feel right at home today...Crony capitalism, inequality, extravagance, Social Darwinian self-justification, blame-the-victim callousness, free-market hypocrisy: thus it was, thus it is again! ."
"....by every measure, the country has now exceeded the extremes of inequality achieved during the first Gilded Age; nor are our elites any more embarrassed by their Mammon-worship than were members of the "leisure class" excoriated a century ago by that take-no-prisoners social critic of American capitalism Thorstein Veblen. "
"Perhaps the answer is simple and basic: The first Gilded Age rested on industrialization; the second on de-industrialization. In our time, a new system of dis-accumulation looted American industry, liquidating its assets to reward speculation in "fictitious capital." ...the fastest growing part of the economy has been the finance, insurance, and real estate (FIRE) sector. De-industrialization has laid the industrial working class and the labor movement low, killing it twice over...Dis-accumulation transformed the working class into a disaggregated pool of contingent labor..."
"Decline, dispossession, and marginalization: a grim scenario. Yet the new political economy of finance-based dis-accumulation also announced itself as the second coming of democratic capitalism. And in the realm of the collective imaginary, if not in reality, it convinced millions. "
"Our corporate elite are much more adept than their Gilded Age predecessors were at playing the democracy game...Beginning in the 1970s, our age's business elite became acutely politically-minded and impressively well-organized...They've gone so far as to craft strategic alliances with elements of what their nineteenth century predecessors would have termed the hoi polloi [the masses]. Calls to dismantle the federal bureaucracy now carry a certain populist panache, while huffing and puffing about family values has -- so far -- proven a cheap date for a gilded elite that otherwise generally couldn't care less. "
"Shareholder democracy" and the "ownership society" are admittedly more public relations slogans than anything tangible. Nonetheless, you can't ignore the fact that, during the second Gilded Age, half of all American families became investors in the stock market..."
"However, the wheel turns. The capitalism of the Second Gilded Age now faces a systemic crisis...Old-fashioned poverty is making a comeback...anger and resentment over insecurity, downward mobility... and the ill-gotten gains of our Gilded Age mercenaries and their political enablers already rippled the political waters during the mid-term elections of 2006. This primary season has witnessed a discernable leftward shift..."
"Legitimacy is a precious possession; once lost it's not easily retrieved. Today, the myth of the "ownership society" confronts the reality of the "foreclosure society." The great silence of the second Gilded Age may give way to the great noise of the first."
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174922/steve_fraser_the
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