The dramatic growth of income inequality in the U.S. over the last 30 to 40 years may mark the end of a long experiment in U.S. society, starting with Teddy Roosevelt and ending with Richard Nixon (things were already changing under Jimmy Carter). Teddy Roosevelt was the first of the progressive presidents, and was a major force in a shift in society in which government worked to limit the power of large corporations and guarantee basic rights like food and shelter to all citizens.
Those times are gone, and we have returned to the Gilded Age. Through a natural analogy with Greek mythology, I think we should call the present day the Argent Age. This is due to a broad shift in societal values: government is the problem, and business and the free market is the solution. The inevitable result is that an increasing number of people are poor and have little control over their own lives. In the Gilded Age their anger expressed itself in prairie populism which targeted financiers and politicians. In the Argent Age financiers aren’t doing so well at the moment, but the main anger is against politicians (again) and a somewhat imaginary liberal elite who are assumed to control the national discourse.
In both ages the wealthy by and large ignore the poor; when they consider them at all they tend to advocate a trickle-down theory. Rags-to-riches stories are prominent in both ages (Horatio Alger vs. American Idol), which serve as a form of bread and circuses. In both ages the wealthy exert enormous if somewhat hidden control over the political process.
The Gilded Age ended with Teddy Roosevelt and the Square Deal. He was a more or less accidental president, pushed onto the ticket as a vice-presidential candidate by a Republican boss who wanted him out of his position as governor of New York, and becoming president after McKinley’s assassination. Despite this inauspicious start, he immediately started working to curb the power of corporations, passing the Meat Inspection Act and the Pure Food and Drug Act, and making the serious use of the Sherman Antitrust Act.
The Argent Age will end too, but I can’t guess how. I hope we don’t have to wait for another Teddy Roosevelt; he was a true original.
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