Saturday, January 4, 2025

A Liberal Dose, Jan. 2, 2025 "The Days of the Modern Robber Barons"

 




A Liberal Dose

January 2, 2025

Troy D. Smith

“The Days of the Modern Robber Barons”

 

What we are already seeing from the next Trump administration, before it has even started, is reminiscent of an earlier time (way before the first Trump administration). Let’s take an inventory so far.

Trump has packed his cabinet with billionaires. He is giving enormous power and influence, in fact, to the richest man in the world (Elon Musk), despite Musk holding no elected or (as of yet) appointed office. Musk seems to have supplanted J.D. Vance (himself a former vulture capitalist and the protégé of a billionaire, who financed his senate campaign) as de facto vice-president. Musk and Trump derailed the budget plan negotiated by their own party, and expressed a desire to shut the government down until the inauguration (almost a month away) -which would not only bring government services to a virtual halt, it would leave three million federal employees without a paycheck. At Christmas time. In other words, one of their first acts was to try to cancel Christmas. And don’t kid yourself -it is not just “lazy government employees” who would be affected by such a shutdown. YOU would be affected, in many ways.

Meanwhile, as part of the budget arguments, Trump wants to end the debt ceiling. Which, as it sounds like, is a limit on how high the government’s debt is allowed to go, or how much into the red the budget is allowed to be. Why is Trump concerned about that? Because he wants to vastly decrease (again) the amount of money IN the budget, by slashing taxes on billionaires like himself (like he did last time). This is why so many corporate leaders lined up behind him this past election season: tax cuts and less regulation of their businesses. This does not mean YOUR taxes would go down. Your taxes would probably go up. Plus many of the government programs that you depend on would be gone. Musk, whom Trump is tasking with cutting government expenses, has made it clear more than once (as have many Republican politicians) that social security and Medicare are at the top of the list to be cut. Also meanwhile… Trump promised to roll back higher prices on day one, which got him a lot of votes, and he is already backpedaling on that and saying it is beyond his control. However, his fat cat buddies are already benefiting. By most accounts, Musk’s personal wealth has soared just since election day.

So, to recap: The very wealthiest elites are going to be benefiting hand-over-fist, at the expense of the middle and working class, AND they are going to be running things politically with little-to-nothing standing in their way. Fewer regulations will save them more money, at the expense of the things protected by those regulations, such as public safety and the public benefit.

We are hip-deep in a new Gilded Age. A brief history lesson: the Gilded Age was that period, from the 1870s to the 1890s and coinciding with the Second Industrial Revolution (1870-1914), when huge fortunes were being made by a handful of individuals with names like Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, and Carnegie, while the middle and working class suffered from low wages, unsafe labor conditions, frequent unemployment, and general poverty. The rich got much richer and the poor got much poorer. The very term “gilded age”, coined by Mark Twain in the 1870s, indicates that it LOOKED like a golden age on the surface, but that was only a patina and was not solid. The Gilded Age is also known for being the most politically corrupt era of U.S. history (which is really saying something). I sometimes challenge students to see how many presidents they can name between Ulysses Grant and Teddy Roosevelt (1877-1901). They usually can’t name any at all- because none of them really stand out, because none of them really did much. Nor were they really in charge. They were the puppets of the business tycoons. Those tycoons were often called “robber barons” -implying they acted like they thought they were nobility (some actually built castles or huge mansions), but they had gained their fortunes at the expense of other people. “Get rich,” Twain described their attitude: “dishonestly if you can, honestly if you must.”

By the way, it was during that time period that, in this region, railroads and coal companies did everything they could (including force) to take land away from farmers, leaving those farmers no longer self-sufficient and, instead, forced to live on whatever low wages those businesses offered. It was the beginning of the perennial impoverishment of the Upper Cumberland.

The robber barons never really left- but now they are more firmly and openly in control, of the economy and of your life -than they have been in over a century.

How did people resist them then? Stay tuned.

 

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech and serves on the executive committee of the Tennessee Democratic Party. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

 Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE



You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE