I posted
a New York Times article to my Facebook feed about how West Virginia used to be a Democratic stronghold, back when the Democratic Party stood up for working people. I selected a pull quote warning that "when the average American feels looked down on, his interests minimized or ignored, he can not only become less generous, he can also
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...[It] is evident that intelligence, which is or should be the aim of education... can operate upon wages only by increasing the effective power of labor.... And it can raise the wages of the individual only in so far as it renders him superior to others. When to read and write were rare accomplishments, a clerk commanded high respect and large wages, but now the ability to read and write has become so nearly universal as to give no advantage.... The diffusion of intelligence, except as it may make men discontented with a state of things which condemns producers to a life of toil while non-producers loll in luxury, cannot tend to raise wages generally, or in any way improve the condition of the lowest class-the "mudsills" of society, as a southern senator once called them-who must rest on the soil, no matter how high the superstructure may be carried.
Henry George, Progress & Poverty, 1879, Book IV, Chapter I, paragraph 19.
That book almost single- ( ... )
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