Rich People's Movements: Grassroots Campaigns to Untax the One Percent

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OUP USA, 2013 M10 3 - 275 páginas
On tax day, April 15, 2010, hundreds of thousands of Americans took to the streets with signs demanding lower taxes on the richest one percent. But why? Rich people have plenty of political influence. Why would they need to publicly demonstrate for lower taxes-and why would anyone who wasn't rich join the protest on their behalf?

Isaac William Martin shows that such protests long predate the Tea Party of our own time. Ever since the Sixteenth Amendment introduced a Federal income tax in 1913, rich Americans have protested new public policies that they thought would threaten their wealth. But while historians have taught us much about the conservative social movements that reshaped the Republican Party in the late 20th century, the story of protest movements explicitly designed to benefit the wealthy is still little known. Rich People's Movements is the first book to tell that story, tracking a series of protest movements that arose to challenge an expanding welfare state and progressive taxation. Drawing from a mix of anti-progressive ideas, the leaders of these movements organized scattered local constituencies into effective campaigns in the 1920s, 1950s, 1980s, and our own era. Martin shows how protesters on behalf of the rich appropriated the tactics used by the Left-from the Populists and Progressives of the early twentieth century to the feminists and anti-war activists of the 1950s and 1960s. He explores why the wealthy sometimes cut secret back-room deals and at other times protest in the public square. He also explains why people who are not rich have so often rallied to their cause.

For anyone wanting to understand the anti-tax activists of today, including notable defenders of wealth inequality like the Koch brothers, the historical account in Rich People's Movements is an essential guide.

 

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Contenido

The Riddle of Rich Peoples Movements
1
CHAPTER 1 The Revolution of 1913
24
CHAPTER 2 Populism against the Income Tax
44
CHAPTER 3 The Sixteenth Amendment Repealers
68
CHAPTER 4 The Most Sinister Lobby
90
CHAPTER 5 The Power of Women
110
CHAPTER 6 The Radical Rich
131
CHAPTER 7 Strange Bedfellows
155
CHAPTER 8 The Temporary Triumph of Estate Tax Repeal
182
The Century of Rich Peoples Movements
195
Notes
205
Index
265
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Isaac William Martin is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of California - San Diego. He is the author of The Permanent Tax Revolt, and co-editor of After the Tax Revolt: California's Proposition 13 Turns 30 and The New Fiscal Sociology.

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