As some of you may remember, in his 2020
Democratic National Convention acceptance speech, Joe Biden stated that “hope
and history rhyme,” words quoted from the Irish poet Seamus Heaney. Biden drew
parallels between the 2020s and the 1920s by highlighting similarities in
political, social, and economic contexts. 
The 1920s were often called the Roaring Twenties. That term indicates that that decade was characterized by significant economic prosperity, rapid social and cultural change, and exuberant optimism following the tragic years of World War I.

The slogan "Return to Normalcy" was
used by Warren G. Harding during his successful 1920 presidential campaign. He ran
on that theme, appealing to the widespread public desire for stability and a
return to pre-World War I conditions after a decade marked by upheaval,
including the war, the 1918 influenza pandemic, and other serious issues.
The economy boomed in the 1920s. People in the
U.S. used installment plans to spend liberally on consumer products. They also poured
money into speculative new investments, such as automobile and telephone
stocks. The prevailing interest rate was around 5%, a low rate that encouraged “gambling”
in the stock market.
In a November 7 essay in The New York Times,
William Birdthistle wrote that the “influx of buying from 1919 to 1929 drove
the stock market up more than six-fold over the decade.”** But we know how that
ended in October 1929. The stock market collapsed, triggering the Great Depression.
As Birdthistle pointed out, "Between 1929
and 1932, the stock market dropped 77 percent, and the global economy staggered
into the Great Depression while unemployment and malnutrition spiked. In 1932,
suicide rates soared to their highest in recorded history.”
Is that a harbinger of what might happen
before the end of this decade?
F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby
(1925) was written to portray the 1920s as a time of decadence, materialism, and
moral bankruptcy.
According to what I learned from AI, “The
novel critically depicts the era’s opulence and empty pursuit of wealth through
its characters and their lifestyles. Gatsby’s lavish parties symbolize the era’s
excess, but beneath the surface lies a loss of authentic human connection.”**
Does that remind you of a man you read/hear about in the news daily?
You probably heard something about the 47th
POTUS’s lavish Halloween party last month. As Nobel Prize-winning economist
Paul Krugman wrote on November 4, it was “a party complete with sequined,
feathered dancers and, yes, a scantily-clad woman in a giant martini glass.”
That party, held just hours before 42 million
Americans were about to lose federal food assistance, was, in Krugman’s words, “grotesque”
and “unspeakably vulgar.” The vapidity of that evening might well be referred
to as a Holloween, rather than a Halloween, party.
The 1920s was also the time of Eugene Debs, the energetic
socialist leader paralleled in significant ways by Zohran Mamdani, the newly
elected mayor of New York City and a dynamic, young trailblazer for progressive
Democrats in the 2020s.
In her November 5th “letter,” Heather
Cox Richardson wrote how Mamdani began his victory speech the night before with
a nod to Debs, the Socialist candidate for president in 1920. He said, “The sun
may have set over our city this evening, but as Eugene Debs once said: ‘I can
see the dawn of a better day for humanity.’”**
A blog article I posted in March 2015 was
titled “Christians for Socialism” (see
here). I wrote briefly about Debs there, so I know there are many differences
between Mamdani and Debs, who was 65 years old in 1920 when he was the
Socialist candidate for president even though he had been imprisoned in 1919
because of his opposition to WWI.
I also know that Mamdani is a Muslim and not a
Christian, although I personally know several Christians who are happy that
Mamdani was elected mayor of New York last week.
The best hope for most U.S. citizens in the
2020s lies partially in the hands of politicians such as Mamdani—and Bernie
Sanders, AOC (Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez), and other like-minded democratic
socialist leaders.
_____
*1 William A.
Birdthistle, “Trump Is Bringing Back the Roaring Twenties. The Hangover Could Be
Brutal.” The author served from 2021 to 2024 as director of the Division of
Investment Management at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
*2 This is from Perplexity
AI, which I am now using more than Claude. It is linked to the web browser
called Comet, which I am also using regularly now. – Regarding The Great
Gatsby, I tried to read it for what I call my “recreational reading,” but I
found it quite unenjoyable and quit reading it about halfway through. June read
it just before her book study group discussed it last month, and I have learned
more about it from her.
Social justice, with what Mamdani called competence and compassion (as Richardson quoted him), has been dropped from the rightist vocabulary, frankly creating hardship for US citizens, especially those in the working classes. Mostly it has come with dishonest intention, the same lies and malicious stoking of fears. How interesting it is that "some Republicans" reactively refer to Mamdani as a "communist" and never mind the real distinctions between that ideology and social democracy, or democratic socialism, or, God-forbid-but-isn't-it-stalking-us-in-the-policies-and-politics-of-DT, neo-fascism (so many points can be ticked off on the list of characteristics); or, for that matter, in a capitalism without guardrails, as if that is "a good thing". What's "good" for such as the present "presidential" administration is manifestly poison to the people here and abroad.
ReplyDeleteYes, at present the errant "leaders" do suggest reference to the incompetence and mendacity of the administrators of the Twenties (re this and their morality I do not equate all of those presidents), and, yes, the risks of oligarchy as government is in the pocket of big business presents a clear and present danger. But "hang the East Wing of the People's White House" that the people provide as a token of trust during president's term of service, because as DT might put it, "I know better what I want, and my hyper-rich friends have the cash to build it like I want it." (Sorry, I almost put some big, biting words in there, but DT knows no such vocabulary.) The White House East Wing is another absurd provocation--an full-blown insult against true American tradition.
The real contrast between the doubtful Christian DT and the Muslim Mamdani who speaks for the people has to do with behavior. How do they act? Speech implies action, too. These things hinge on character. Of course, different candidates, different political contests, but if present behavior commends a candidate like Mamdani to most New Yorkers of the City, they are right to vote on the hope that reform is on the way.
Thanks for your, as always, erudite comments, Jerry. -- I wonder if you think there is any validity to what I said in the last sentence of my third footnote.
DeleteAs always big money tends to thwart the unpriceability of social consciousness. Bezos bought a newspaper but not its record of speaking truth to power
Delete—I do not know how consistent WP was about this overall. Nor did Bezos build the WP from the ground up. I doubt the editorial board has its former level of trust.
As a long time subscriber to the WaPo, I saw significant changes in it after Bezos became more involved in the editorial section. In January of this year, Jen Rubin, a leading opinion piece editor/writer, announced that she had resigned from that newspaper to begin writing at a Substack named The Contrarian, of which she was the co-founder (and which I highly recommend). Then other opinion-piece writers whom I admired most left: Eugene Robinson, E.J. Dionne, and Jonathan Capehart. Thee Post still publishes some good, worthwhile guest essays, but I miss the post as it was pre-Bezos.
DeleteThanks for this summary of some important historical highlights and current hopes. It's all close to my heart since I was among the founding members of the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee in New York (led by Michael Harrington) in, I think, 1972, which merged later with another group to become the DSA. Debs has long been a hero of mine.
ReplyDeleteParticularly unfortunate is the ignorance of so much of the American population, such that they don't understand the difference between communism and democratic socialism. This division among socialists goes back to the 19th century. Part of it is the way American-style capitalism has had hegemony over American politics, thus controlling the narrative.
Anton, I am highly impressed that you were among the founding members of the DSA organizing committee with Michael Harrington. As I wrote in the blog article I linked to in today's post, "Harrington (1928~89) was the last great socialist leader in the U.S."
DeleteHere are comments I received about ten minutes ago from Thinking Friend Pat Harris, with whom I chatted with briefly yesterday at Rainbow Mennonite Church.
ReplyDelete"Holloween definitely! Good article, Leroy. There seems to be a tremendous amount of excess greed in this country; perhaps in the world. Yours is a good voice!"
*please disregard the first "with" in my first sentence. Sorry.
DeleteAbout 11:15, I received the following comments from Thinking Friend Michael Olmsted in Springfield, Mo.
ReplyDelete"Years ago, when I was serving a church in California and working on a sermon about Christian leadership in politics ... the seeming impossibility of that concept ... I discovered Donald Trump and his family history! I am still dismayed with the idea of his integrity and utterly selfish character. Human desire is tragic when the love and grace of God are missing from our concept of integrity. Contrast the example and teachings of Jesus, the love of God, and the power of selfishness ... we seem to be blind to love, compassion, and a meaningful life. A pastors lament! A call to prayer! A hope beyond human ideas!"
I forgot the one thing I wanted to mention in my previous comment: When I was teaching sociology at William Jewell in the 80s-90s, I researched the history of the sociology department and discovered that very early in the 20th century the department was offering courses titled "Christian Socialism." I don't remember the exact year but very close to the turn of the century. In those days, the American Baptists were still influential at Jewell, and as you know, some leading Social Gospelers were American Baptists.
ReplyDeleteAnton, I taught a few courses at William Jewell in 1981-82 and again in 1986-87 while on "Stateside assignment" (furlough) from my main "job'" as an educational missionary in Japan. I probably didn't mention "democratic socialism" and maybe not "Christian socialism" in my lectures or in classroom discussion, but I am quite sure I talked about the "social Gospel" as propounded by Walter Rauschenbusch and others in the first part of the 20th century. Here is what Perplexity AI says about the connection of the social gospel to democratic socialism:
Delete"There is a significant and close connection between the Social Gospel movement of the early 20th century and democratic socialism in the U.S. The Social Gospel was a Protestant religious movement that sought to apply Christian ethics to address social problems like poverty, economic inequality, child labor, and labor rights. Many of its leaders, such as Walter Rauschenbusch, linked Christian teachings to democratic socialist ideas, advocating for social justice and equality as a reflection of the kingdom of God on earth."
What an alternate holiday to evoke, "All Hollowed's Eve!" Having no light in the eye, nor love in the heart, the hollowed men and women have nothing to value but the empty abstractions of money and power. Truly, the love of money is the root of all evil! Verily, the Trump Pets do sound, and the seals of misery are opening. Will an angel show us "the river of the water of life, bright as crystal, flowing from the throne of God" with "the tree of life ... with leaves for the healing of the nations"? "Come, Lord Jesus!" (Revelation 22:1-2, 20, NRSV)
ReplyDeleteWow, what impressive comments (Trump Pets!). And your reference Trump reminded me of the POTUS's "pets," the MAGA people who largely embrace a problematic form of Christianity. And as it is somewhat related, it led me to think again about the link to a challenging article I posted on Facebook this morning:
DeleteSøren Kierkegaard, the great Danish philosopher/theologian, died on November 11, 1855 (170 years ago yesterday). In May of this year Plough magazine published an excellent article titled "Kierkegaard’s Attack on Cultural Christianity." For those of you who recognize the meaningfulness of Kierkegaard's thought and writings as well as for those of you who would like to know more about him, I highly recommend this article:
https://www.plough.com/en/topics/faith/kierkegaards-attack-on-cultural-christianity