Meet the man who invented the GOP’s defense of the wealthy—in 1883.
By Beverly Gage | Posted Thursday, March 29, 2012, at 7:15 AM ET
Last month, Rick Santorum announced that he likes inequality. “There
is income inequality in America,” he told the Detroit Economic Club in a
much-quoted speech. “There always has been and, hopefully, and I do say
that, there always will be.”
Many political observers have since ridiculed this stance, declaring
Santorum “unhinged,” or at least unfit to conduct a serious presidential
campaign. But the positive defense of inequality is not entirely new in
American politics. From the moment that social reformers began to
“discover” poverty in the 19th century, naysayers were on
hand to explain why extremes of wealth and poverty made for a just
society. By embracing inequality, Santorum is reviving the politics of
our last Gilded Age.
Sunday, April 1, 2012
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