Introduction
Privateersmen to Robber Barons
excerpted from the book
Wealth and Democracy
a political history of the
American rich
by Kevin Phillips
Broadway Books, 2002, paper
Introduction
pxi
The early nineteenth century ... in the frontier settlement decades
humming with bargain-priced government land sales-"doing
a land office business" became a common phrase in the 1830s-empowered
millions of new small landowners. New World openness in acreage
or jobs became a beacon, drawing millions of emigrants from European
embarkation ports. Stephen Girard and John Jacob Astor, America's
richest men, were two immigrants who had built fortunes with the
help of Jeffersonian politics. Wealth in their hands symbolized
opportunity.
The other great example came in the quarter
century after World War II when the middle class pushed its share
of national wealth and income to record levels. The skepticism
of the rich imprinted by the Great Depression guided politics
and public policy through the 1960s.
These were the two eras in which wealth
and opportunity clearly nurtured democracy. Yes, the top 1 percent
of Americans had a very large slice, but it was smaller than the
share commanded by the aristocracy of Europe.
The last two decades of the twentieth
century, by contrast, echoed the zeniths of corruption and excess-the
Gilded Age and the 1920s-when the rich in the United States slipped
their usual political constraints, and this trend continued into
the new century. By the 1990s data showed the United States replacing
Europe at the pinnacle of Western privilege and inequality. This,
of course, is part of what made the United States the prime target
of terrorism in much the same way as the Europe of czars, kings,
and grand dukes was during the period of 1880 to 1920. Finance
itself had been a target before-in 1886, an anarchist flung acid
and fired shots at the stockbrokers of the Paris Bourse, and in
September 1920, terrorists set off dynamite on Wall Street in
front of the offices of J. P. Morgan. Thirty-four people were
killed and more than two hundred injured.
Given these extraordinary wealth-related
circumstances, provocations, and stakes, a political history of
the American rich must inquire far beyond the predictable concentration
of assets, inequality, and conspicuous consumption. It must also
pursue troubling and crippling side effects: high levels of political
corruption, the arrogance of global economic power, the twisting
of the U.S. tax code, and the voter belief in the captivity of
government to private interests.
The inroads on American democracy in the
1980s and 1990s have many philosophical as well as political patrons:
think tanks, university chairs, and publications joined in praise
of economic elites, corporate predators, Darwinian competition,
the claims of political moneygiving to be free speech, uninhibited
markets, global policing on behalf of investment, and "free"
enterprise (however reliant on friendly government). Allied pundits
and promoters, in turn, have repeatedly undercut popular programs
ranging from Social Security to business regulation. Unelected
judges, central bankers, trade regulators, and global economic
organizations have been encouraged in taking over powers earlier
enjoyed by elected national leaders and legislatures. Critics
counter with charges of a growing "democratic deficit."
These trends are closely related to-indeed,
many of their conservative protagonists are funded by-America's
deepening wealth and income concentrations. Between 1979 and 1989
the portion of the nation's wealth held by the top 1 percent nearly
doubled from 22 percent to 39 percent. By the mid-nineties, some
economists estimated that the top 1 percent had captured 70 percent
of all earnings growth since the mid-seventies.
pxiv
Early in his pursuit of the 2000 Democratic nomination, former
senator Bradley made the point that
"When politics becomes hostage to
money, as it did in the late nineteenth century, and as it increasingly
is today, people suffer. Neither economic opportunity nor economic
security is given the place it deserves in our national ambitions.
There is still a very tangible relationship between the level
of opportunity and security available to every American family
and the extent to which we can keep our democracy secure and separate
from the force of money."
pxv
... by 2000 the United States could be said to have a plutocracy,
when back in 1990 the resemblance to the previous plutocracy of
the Gilded Age had not yet fully matured. Compared with 1990,
America's top millennial fortunes were three or four times bigger,
reflecting the high-powered convergence of innovation, speculation,
and mania in finance and technology. Moreover, the essence of
plutocracy, fulfilled by 2000, has been the determination and
ability of wealth to reach beyond its own realm of money and control
politics and government as well. In America, explains political
scientist Samuel Huntington, "money becomes evil not when
it is used to buy goods but when it is used to buy power . . .
economic inequalities become evil when they are translated into
political inequalities." Political inequalities, in turn,
lead to more dangerous economic inequalities.
The morphing of politics into a marketplace
with barely hidden price tags reached critical mass in the 1990s.
Escalating monied control of politics provoked a stream of new
studies and volumes about the "Buying of the Presidency"
and the "Buying of Congress." Elizabeth Drew, a serious
author, employed a suitably stark title: The Corruption of American
Politics. Pundits labeled pre-2000 presidential fundraising as
a "wealth primary" that distilled the new electoral
essence: big contributor sponsorship. Others derided the contest
itself as our "national auction." Senator McCain dismissed
the U.S. system of campaign finance as "an elaborate influence-peddling
scheme in which both parties conspire to stay in office by selling
the country to the highest bidder."
With Americans of the early twenty-first
century confronting plutocracy's second U.S. emergence, it is
only moderately comforting to know that the first emergence was
eventually curbed a century ago by a pair of progressive presidents
and the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution,
which authorized an income tax and required popular election of
U.S. senators. The victories under Theodore Roosevelt and
Woodrow Wilson, however, came after four decades.
The measure of the Gilded Age, beginning in the 1870s, was that
by the 1890s the goliaths of U.S. business, railroading, and finance
had gained de facto control over many state legislatures, the
federal judiciary, and the U.S. Senate. Looking back from the
1930s, historian Arthur Schlesinger Sr. observed how "America,
in an ironical perversion of Lincoln's words at Gettysburg, had
become a government of the corporations, by the corporations and
for the corporations."
Schlesinger's analysis has a contemporary
ring. While this book confines itself to a brief opening portrait
of the George W. Bush administration, reformers like public television's
Bill Movers were proclaiming Gilded Age deja vu within two months
of the Bush inaugural. "Big money and big business, corporations
and commerce," Moyers commented, "are again the undisputed
overlords of politics and government. The White House, the Congress
and, increasingly, the judiciary, reflect their interests. We
appear to have a government run by remote control from the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers
and the American Petroleum Institute. To hell with everyone else."
pxvii
The Republican Party has its own recurring role in partial democratic
erosion. Republicanism began its presidential cycles circa 1860,
1896, and 1968 with centrist economics, some concern for labor,
and skepticism of capital-first under Lincoln, then under McKinley
and Theodore Roosevelt, and later under Richard Nixon and Gerald
Ford. Once these crisis-era beginnings gave way to more normal
times, the Republican compass has swung toward Wall Street, private
profit, market utopianism, and the demanding politics of money.
Interest-group insistence and ideology took over. The third and
current GOP shift of attention from Middle America to Upper America
is no coincidence.
The new U.S. war against terrorism adds
a further possibility: that a U.S. government concerned with protecting
wealth may do so at the expense of democratic procedures and may
try to blame terrorism rather than flawed policy for hard times.
There is also the possibility that the "financialization"
processes of the 1980s and 1990s-securitizing so many income and
debt streams, becoming electronically dependent, exalting the
stock market as the center of commerce-have made possible a new
manner of economic terrorism and warfare prior great powers never
faced.
p3
John Jay, first chief justice of the United States, 1787
The people who own the country ought to
govern it.
p3
National platform of the Populist Party, 1892
Corruption dominates the ballot-box, the
Legislatures, the Congress and touches even the ermine of the
bench. The fruits of the toil of millions are boldly stolen to
build up colossal fortunes for a few, unprecedented in the history
of mankind; and the possessors of these, in turn, despise the
Republic and endanger liberty.
p3
... Alexis de Tocqueville, in 1837, hedged his praise for democracy
in America with concern that the new industrial elite, "one
of the harshest that ever existed," would bring about the
"permanent inequality of conditions and aristocracy."
p4
By 2000 ... the United States was not only the world's wealthiest
nation and leading economic power, but also the Western industrial
nation with the greatest percentage of the world's rich and the
greatest gap between rich and poor.
p6
The radical architects of the new state constitution [in Pennsylvania
in 1720] in took indirect aim at these disparities by expanding
the franchise, limiting the terms of state legislators, and opening
sessions to the public. They even specified that final passage
of bills should be delayed until their contents could be published
in the state's newspapers and debated by the general public. But
in the Declaration of Rights attached to the Constitution, they
were more direct, declaring that government existed for the "Common
Benefit, Protection and Security of the People, Nation or Community,
and not for the particular Emolument or advantage of any Single
man, family or Set of Men, who are only part of that community."
This was bold talk for the eighteenth century, and many delegates
had supported an even stronger Sixteenth Article, narrowly rejected,
which stated that "an Enormous Proportion of Property vested
in a few Individuals is dangerous to the Rights, and Destructive
of the Common Happiness of Mankind; and therefore, every free
State hath a right by its Laws to discourage the Possession of
Such Property."
p9
... all but six of the major waves of inflation that have swept
the United States have come in [war's] wake ...
p11
Half of the southern wealth was in slaves, some 600,000 valued
at perhaps $120 million by the 1780s.
p35
Each of the six major U.S. inflation waves came out of a war.
While the phenomenon seems unavoidable, the economic burdens and
benefits have rarely divided evenly, and the divergences-who pays,
who profits-have determined the wartime wealth effect, one of
the most powerful that politics and government can influence.
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