http://www.crimsonbird.com/history/the-second-gilded-age.htm
Book Review by
Ed Bloomer

The Second Gilded Age: The Great Reaction in the United States,
1973-2001, by Michael McHugh

When I was working on the assembly line at General Electric in 1979, a
boss came down one day and gave each worker a share of stock worth
$3.00. I tore mine up and threw it in the trash. Even so, the company
kept it on record, and from time to time in the 1980s and '90s contacted
me to say that the stock had split and increased in value. To make a
long story short, by August 2001, that lonely share of GE stock had
multiplied like capitalist loaves and fishes into 90 shares-now worth
$4,500. Not being much of a capitalist, I gave away my totally unearned
loot to my family or the Catholic Worker community. Even so, when I
imagined from this one example just how much the rich, the near-rich and
the obscenely rich must have increased their wealth during this time, I
understand just what Michael McHugh meant when he called it a Second
Gilded Age .

Anyone interested in politics, culture and race will certainly be
enthralled with this book! It describes the cycles of US History from
the time of the First Gilded Age (1873-1901) to the Second a century
later. Both were periods of laissez faire capitalism, of Robber Barons
who exploited new technologies to establish giant industries such as
John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil in the 19th Century or Microsoft a
hundred years later. In these capitalist heydays, wealth and incomes are
highly concentrated in the hands of the top 10% of the population, while
the living standards for most of the population stagnated or declined.
Far from protecting and defending the interests of the common people,
politicians serve the oligarchy during these Gilded Ages, while
manipulating the voters through the calculated use of racism, religious
and cultural issues, law and order and nationalism. It is no accident
that these capitalist heydays are also the heydays of right-wing
populist movements like the Ku Klux Klan and Moral Majority.
Buy the book Michael McHugh , The Second Gilded Age: The Great Reaction
in the United States, 1973-2001

McHugh compares these Gilded Ages with what he calls the Historical
Exception Period of 1945-73. He shows us how prosperity after World War
II, when the American Empire was at its strongest, also gave working
people social democratic and modern liberal capitalist welfare state.
Building on the New Deal and Fair Deal of the 1930s and 1940s, the New
Frontier of John Kennedy and the Great Society Lyndon Johnson created
programs that uplifted the city's and fed the hungry plus Medicare,
which enriched the elderly with help on their medical expenses. As a
result of the Second Reconstruction of 1954-65, new laws were passed to
protect minorities in voting rights, affirmative action and
desegregation of schools and work places.

In the 1968 election, the Vietnam War was tearing the fabric of the
nation apart. Nixon beat out Humphrey for the presidency. Nixon was the
last president of the Historical Exception Period and the initiator of
the Second Gilded Age. He promised to dismantle the Great Society
programs that benefited poor women with children the so called 'welfare
queens'. He was effective in manipulating the backlash of white voters,
which Republicans called the Southern Strategy. Nixon also used the
issue of 'law and order' to erode the gains which minorities and working
people had gained during the Historical Exception Period. Reelected in a
landslide against George McGovern in 1972, only the Watergate break-in
and his disgrace and his ouster from office prevented him from
establishing a new Republican majority. Nixon self-destructed in 1974,
but the conservative backlash endured and prospered despite this.

Even so, with the declining economy and massive public distrust of
government and politicians, the Second Gilded Age was being ushered in.
Jimmy Carter was elected in 1976 by labor minorities and the Old New
Deal Coalition, but he was basically a moderately conservative southern
Democrat. In the last two years of his term, Carter had on the drawing
board massive increases in military spending, the neutron bomb, and the
B-2 bomber-all of which robbed the poor and it took. The election of
Ronald Reagan in 1980 was the High Noon of the Second Gilded Age, which
featured huge cuts in social spending longstanding hostility toward
civil rights for minorities, the Draconian age of more prisons, tougher
penalties and ushered in a backlash against gays, feminists and minority
rights. Reagan and his advisors were experts in using the Southern
Strategy, beating Carter and Mondale with issues of culture, race,
flag-waving and family values.

By the 1990's, after twenty years of declining living standards, the
majority of voters were alienated from the political system and favored
a third party candidates, from Pat Buchanan on the right and Ralph Nader
on the left but. In the 1992 election Ross Perot stole enough white
votes from George Bush Sr to hand the election to Bill Clinton. Like
Carter, he was a moderately conservative southern governor, who made
promises about improved social programs and universal health care, but
was unable to keep them. Once again using cultural and racial backlash
issues, the Republicans under Newt Gingrich seized both the House and
Senate in 1994.Their Contract on America was a radically free market
version of capitalism to which Clinton accommodated with a welfare
'reform' law that dumped the poor into the street. Thanks to this
'triangulation' strategy, Clinton was elected for a second term in 1996.
By then, the Stock Market was riding high, although by 2000 -2001 its
bubble began to look deflated even before 9/11. This Gilded Age version
of 'prosperity', like that of the 1920s or the First Gilded Age, was
concentrated mostly at the top. In an election that further disgraced
the political system, George Bush, Jr. came to power in 2000 thanks to a
conservative majority on the Supreme Court. His War on Terror and Second
Oil War brought about big deficits, high inflation with big tax cuts and
breaks to the rich.

I cannot do this book a great enough service. In The Second Gilded Age ,
Dr. Michael McHugh has given a concise critique of the history of the
workings of our society and political system in an amazing way. This
book should be read by scholars or anyone who is concerned about the
future this country and our world. It at least offers the hope that the
Gilded Ages are cyclical and that although they might have seemed
endless at the time, they have never been the last word in history.

BOOK EXCERPT

"In 2005, columnist Ted Rall asked the question: 'Why do the poor and
the middle class, who get screwed by Republican policies, vote for them
anyway?' One important answer was that, 'they were willing to take an
economic hit for their heartfelt beliefs' on cultural, religious and
national security issues, although another would be that they had little
choice or suffer from what Karl Marx called 'false consciousness'. For
whatever reason, America had no class parties, and in 2000, 46% of
people making $100,000 or more voted for Al Gore, while millions
blue-collar whites voted Republican. One of the most important questions
this book will try to answer in the following chapters is why, 'millions
of Democrats and Republicans alike routinely cast votes that work
against their narrowly defined economic self-interest.' But are either
motivated by non-economic issues or do not vote at all."

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