the betrayal of the American middle class since World War II /
First Statement of Responsibility
William J. Quirk and R. Randall Bridwell.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
Lanham, Md. :
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Distributed by National Book Network,
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
c1992.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
xxiv, 442 p. ;
Dimensions
24 cm.
GENERAL NOTES
Text of Note
Includes index.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Ch. 13. "Conservatism" v. "Liberalism" on the Court. Ch. 14. The Future of the Post-Abandonment Judiciary -- Pt. IV. The Academic Abandonment: Guardians of the Grove. Ch. 15. The Old Groves. Ch. 16. Renovation. A Blow From Above. The Blow From Below: The Mechanics of Revolution. Ch. 17. The New Grove. The Diversity Movement. The Church of Diversity. The Enforcement of Diversity. Ch. 18. Scholarship in the New Grove. Ch. 19. The Costs of Diversity. Ch. 20. The Aftermath -- Pt. V. Conclusion.
Text of Note
Pt. 1. The Money Abandonment. Ch. 1. New York City Fiscal Crisis: 1974-1975: A Dry Run and Some Characters Introduced. John Newton Mitchell. Donald Trump. William Edward Simon. Felix George Rohatyn. The Abandonment. The Fix. The Sell-Out. Epilogue. Ch. 2. The Middle-Class Cow and the National Debt. Before the Sixties. From 1965 On. Ch. 3. The Oil Gouge and Third World Debt. The Attack. The Bankers. Ch. 4. The Tax Abandonment. Ch. 5. Social Security--The Sting. Ch. 6. The Savings and Loan Fiasco. The Traditional S&L 1831-1982. The Congressional S&L. Diary of the $100,000 Deal. The Keating Five. Ch. 7. Filing for Bankruptcy: The Budget Deal of 1990 -- Pt. II. The Political Abandonment. Ch. 8. The Homeless Majority -- Pt. III. The Legal Abandonment: Trustees of the Temple. Ch. 9. Cornerstone. Ch. 10. Renovation. Ch. 11. The New Legal Science. Ch. 12. The Modern Court. Race. The End of the Individual. Beyond Race. The Goodbye Music. Crime.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Do you consider yourself a member of the middle class? Eighty percent of Americans describe themselves in those terms; working-class citizens who are neither rich nor poor. Has the government addressed the needs of the middle class to your satisfaction? William J. Quirk and R. Randall Bridwell argue that the fundamental interests of the middle class have been ignored and undermined since WWII. This provocative book chronicles the events which have defined the post-WWII political and economic period, and shows how the middle class has been compromised in the process. From the New York City fiscal crisis of the 70s, to the rise of the new judicial activism, to the looming economic influence of Japan, the authors show for the first time how these developments are interrelated.
Text of Note
The authors provide a novel interpretation of the constitutional meaning of the events leading to the abandonment of the middle class, as well as a new interpretation of the condition of the American Constitution as it is applied today. By analyzing the constitutional source of problems which our political system has had in recent years, the authors provide a new theory as to why the federal system is not working, and they offer novel solutions for the future.
OTHER EDITION IN ANOTHER MEDIUM
Title
Abandoned.
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Intellectuals-- United States.
Middle class-- United States.
GEOGRAPHICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
United States, Economic conditions, 1945-
United States, Politics and government, 1945-1989.