Part-time independent journalist, Australian regenerative & organic farming pioneer 1988 until a total family & Labor Party/ CPSU fraud, lived in virtual exile 13 1/2 years, now part time commercial organic b/ d veg gardener central Adelaide Hills
YELP you barking mad 16C proto @UN cartographers and old commonly tree-biting Wealth-of- imperial-powers people with Economic Geography degrees.
Yelpยฒ
South Australians
“On page a hundred and Twenty-five in your discussion you have a reference..”
“yes..”
“to Australia’s role in the Security Council of the.. United Nations.”
“Berkeley’s two gentlemen conversing in the garden” refers to the opening scene of George Berkeley’s Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous (1713)
This scene serves as the introduction to Berkeley’s philosophical arguments against materialism and in defense of idealism.
You must now actively and deliberately with no malice aforethought but to take every action in your personal micro gift and power to expunge and destroy internet malefactors seeking to futher enrich themselves by literally the capture of all human culture on behalf of their mentally deranged deracinated1 ideologically totalitarian megalomaniacal prescribed text and speech.
AI Search โถ a whizz, a toy, and useful to all writers – though screamingly not for audio-visual gogglebox cultural junk (video – any, all, I would write ‘off-the-cuff’.. “more” later as and if the deadly serious grown-ups’ conversation runs) and AI ‘Tell’ โฃ a 2029 global apocalypse on a popsicle stick (not Like, OK?).
John Blundell
Thematics Logic, Neurocognitive Health, 21st Century Education, 5th Stage Organised Collaborative Human (regional, national and international) Groups, the dead-end of Master-servant nonsensisation of economy, culture, the arts & history (& concerning his 1993 rhetorical riposte โThe Dialectics of the Damnedโ
๐ฆ๐
Melaleuca known historically by Europeans in Australia as paperbarks (query M Incana)
11590s, “to pluck up by the roots,” from French dรฉraciner, from Old French desraciner “uproot, dig out, pull up by the roots,” from des- (see dis-) + racine “root,” from Late Latin radicina, diminutive of Latin radix “root” (from PIE root *wrฤd- “branch, root”). Related: Deracinated.
1แดฌThe French past participle, dรฉracinรฉ, literally “uprooted,” was used in English from 1921 in a sense of “uprooted from one’s national or social environment.”
This is far and away the longest article Mr Blundell has ever republished.
I extend my public thanks to American Journal
This public announcement display presentation would be for readers who have heard me speak this morning in the Adelaide Hills on the psycho-spiritual death of undergraduate Public Square^ chatter concerning the ghastly ‘gladiatorial’ 500 years to 2008 contest of pluralism and collectivism a useful jumping back point in patriarchic studies.
Have I myself read it, no. The first line in the ‘blurb’ or promotional schpiel named Oliver Wendell Homes one of the ‘Second’ or New-world’s grand and eloquent jurists. That did me.
John
Thematics logic, neurocognitive health, internet reform, economy, education, have-a-good-day
REVIEW ESSAY The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West Alexander Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska Crown Currency, 2025, 320 pages
America has gifted mankind two great patrimonies. The first is a familiar set of institutions and ideals. These are crystallized in our civic catechism, captured in certain phrases: โWe hold these truths to be self-evident,โ or โgovernment of the people, by the people, for the people.โ The institutions (constitutions, legislatures, courts, and so forth) that realize these ideals have had immense global influence.
Democracy, despite the challenge posed by alternative systems, remains the global default. This would not be true if Americans had not first proven that democratic governments could endure. We were the first people to gamble the fate of our nation on Enlightenment ideals and the first to demonstrate that those ideals could serve as the foundation for a stable political order. Two centuries on, American poets and politicians still celebrate this improbable achievement.
Americans are less proud of their second gift to the species. Yet on the civilizational scale, this second contribution may be more consequential than the first. It was the American people who first leapt from the agrarian age to industrial modernity, a revolution whose importance is only rivaled by the invention of agriculture itself. This revolution replaced mules with machinery, lamps with electricity, and bricks and wood with concrete and steel. Humanity would henceforth live in a world of wires, engines, and endless acceleration. This world had no precedent in human experience. It was a world built by the United States of America.1
The scene was prepared by the British, whose inventors harnessed steam power during the First Industrial Revolution of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. But the inventions that make modern life possible emerged between 1860 and 1930.2 These years saw the invention and diffusion of steam turbines, internal combustion engines, electric motors, alternators, transformers and rectifiers, incandescent light, electromagnetic waves, recorded sound, aluminum smelting, dephosphorized steel and steel alloys, reinforced concrete, nitroglycerin, synthesized ammonia, radio transmission, plastics, and gas turbines. The architecture of our industrial civilization was assembled within one lifespan.
Americans did this assembling. The science that underpinned these technologies was international, but these technologies were refined, commercialized, and scaled in the United States. The Second Industrial Revolution unfolded as American industrialists built the corporate and financial machinery needed for industrial-scale production. Out of this crucible came not only new machines but new forms of management, bureaucracy, and social organization that, over the course of a century, would be imitated, adapted, and imposed across nearly every society on Earth. The United States was the birthplace of the technological republic.
By naming their new book The Technological Republic, Palantir executives Alexander Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska gesture toward this heritage. The book comes at a unique juncture in Silicon Valleyโs history. Its leaders have awoken to their status as a distinct social elite but remain uncertain as to what obligations that status carries. Their old โCalifornian Ideology,โ half libertarian fantasy and half globalist prophecy, has collapsed. What creed will take its place is not clear.3 Few seem better placed to address these questions than Karp, a founder known as much for intellectual ambition as for entrepreneurial success. While leading a defense tech company, with close ties to the sitting administration, he and Zamiska are perfectly positioned to lay out a new civic philosophy for Americaโs technological elite.
Readers hoping for such a book, however, will be disappointed. The Technological Republic is not a serious exploration of the political foundations of technology, nor a study of the technological foundations of American power. It is not a sober forecast of technological trends or a reckoning with their implications for the American public. It is not even a business history of Palantir itself. The Technological Republic aims at something โsubstantial and ambitious,โ inhabiting โthe interstitial but we hope rich space between political, business, and academic treatises.โ4 It reads like a collection of TED Talks. Its chapters are discrete and disconnected. The themes that tie them together are nowhere explicitly laid out but must be inferred by the reader.
The most persistent of these themes is a critique of Silicon Valleyโs โengineering elite.โ Karp and Zamiska insist that the fortunes and fame of this elite were not created ex nihilo. This class is, in fact, deeply indebted to the civilization that made their firms possible, one that most of them feel no kinship with or obligation to. At the center of that civilization is the United States. The American nation should demand the loyalty of those who prosper most from it. This loyalty should be freely given. Karp and Zamiska believe that tech leaders should focus their substantial talents on bettering this nation. Like Palantir, their firms should not shy away from the provision of public goods. Silicon Valley should boldly take part in the โarticulation of the national project.โ5 Alas, the instinct of the Silicon Valley founder is to move as the market lists. How does the market list? Toward โlifestyle technologiesโ whose main purpose is to โenable the highly educated . . . to feel as if they have more income than they do.โ Americaโs engineering elite is brilliant, but their brilliance is wasted on baubles.6
These observations may be accurate, but the goal of The Technological Republic is to inspire American technologists to become American techno-nationalists. Regrettably, Karp and Zamiska offer no roadmap for accomplishing this. The two men invoke the technologists of generaยญtions past as archetypes the modern engineering elite might aspire to, but they do not investigate the religious, social, political, or economic milieu that created these technologists. This is unfortunate: Karp and Zamiskaโs sermonizing is not sufficient to make patriots out of a generation of engineers who have never been trained to think of themselves as stewards of a state. Elevating Silicon Valleyโs engineering elite into a governing class would require much more: institutions, alliances, and traditions that root the wealth and expertise of our technologists in service to the nation.
The United States has had such a class in the past. They were the architects of the Second Industrial Revolution: engineers, industrialists, and entrepreneurs who believed that a technological revolution was needed to propel America toward greatness. They were, in this sense, Americaโs first governing class of techno-nationalists. In the mid-twentieth century, Americans would label their descendants the โEastern Establishment.โ This class did not materialize out of thin air. Examining their origins, and the reasons for their seventy-year dominance of American business and government, provides a useful corrective to Karp and Zamiskaโs fragmented thinking and hazy wishcasting.
The Genesis of Americaโs First Techno-Nationalist Elite
The techno-nationalist sees technology and nationhood as two intertwined goods. As technology advances, so does national power. Only a powerful state can unite a populous nation around a common identity and protect it from both external enemies and centrifugal forces. Such a nation then functions as a vast open market that allows emerging industries to benefit fully from economies of scale. These industries create wealth; wealth invested expands industrial capacity; booming industrial development stimulates the invention and adoption of new technologies, beginning the cycle anew.
This vision of techno-nationalist development has a long American pedigree. Alexander Hamilton described its essential elements more than two centuries ago. Hamilton predicted that American independence would last only if the thirteen American states fused their economies into one national market governed by an energetic executive. This government would spur industry, uphold American credit, and deter foreign predation. This was an explicitly industrial vision. He believed that โnot only the wealth but the independence and security of a country appear to be materially connected with the prosperity of [its] manufactures.โ Industrial development, in turn, required the security and scale that could only come from a large and unified nation. Hamilton argued that the U.S. Constitution would create this nation. By โbind[ing] together [our states] in a strict and indissoluble Union,โ the constitution would โerect one great American system . . . able to dictate the terms of the connection between the old and the new world.โ7
The Hamiltonian program for โone great American systemโ of growing integration, advancing industry, and rising power was not realized in Hamiltonโs lifetime. While the U.S. Constitution laid the groundwork for a technological republic, it was not enough to bring one into being. What the new republic required was a national elite resolutely committed to their nationโs technological ascent. But it would take decades before a class with such techno-nationalist inclinations came to helm the American state and economy.
There were several reasons for this. Antebellum elites thought of themselves as the first men of their states, not as the first men of the Union.8 Most came of age in an era when communication between regions was slow and halting. A letter from New Orleans to New York, cruising the countryโs waterways, could take a month to arrive.9 In such a world, elite social networks were centered in their local communities. The leading patriarchs of Philadelphia, New York, Charleston, Baltimore, and Boston did not marry beyond state lines.10 Elite universities were anchored just as firmly in their regions. For instance, more than 70 percent of Harvard students were born in New England well into the 1870s.11
Commerce lacked the weight, and industry the reach, to forge a constituency for national integration. Most antebellum corporations were chartered by individual states and were required to ply their trade within state lines.12 The defeat of the Second Bank of the United States in 1832 left the country a fractured financial mosaic, its credit system a patchwork quilt of competing state-based institutions. Even with the advent of the railroads, uninterrupted transportation for more than a hundred miles was rarely possible. Most antebellum railroads were locally built and used completely different gauges. The system was fragmented between hundreds of competing lines. By 1860, no more than half a dozen crossed state borders.13
Geographic distance was compounded by cultural rifts. The United States was founded by a variety of settler cultures, each with distinct views on virtue, freedom, and honor.14 These cultural cleavages persisted into the nineteenth century, sparking tensions wherever pioneers from different backgrounds settled in close proximity.15 The Congregationalism of the old Boston Brahmins contrasted sharply with the Anglicanism of the Tidewater aristocrats and Philadelphia merchants; both were distinct from the Methodist and Presbyterian creeds which dominated the Midwest and the Scots-Irish backcountry.16 Orators played up these differences and often framed political debates as battles between culturally and economically distinct regions, such as โthe North,โ โthe West,โ and โthe South.โ17 In this environment, Washington was, like Brussels today, less the seat of a cohesive governing elite than a forum where representatives of competing polities met to hammer out deals.18
The most significant fissure split the slaveholding South from the rest of the republic. For decades, influential southerners were dogged enemies of national integration, fearing it might erode the stability of their โdomestic institution.โ19 These forces controlled the balance of American power. Eight of Americaโs first fifteen presidents hailed from the South; in twenty-four of the thirty-two years that preceded the Civil War, the presidency was controlled by the Democrats, whose party was dominated by southerners. The strength of the slave power not only reinforced the localist, antinationalist thrust of American politics, it also fueled fierce resistance to any national program of technological development. Southern elite life revolved around counties, not cities; agriculture, not industry; and the export of raw materials, not the import of foreign capital. The Democratic press thus attacked proposals for industrial development with special venom.
A Hamiltonian economic program, declared Argus of Western America, โruns the whole round of the British devices to enslave a people.โ The Southern Review told its readers that โours is an agricultural people, and God grant that we may continue so. It is the freest, happiest, most independent, and with us, the most powerful condition on earth.โ The Democratic Review was more venomous, calling it โalmost a crime against society to divert human industry from the fields and forests to iron forges and cotton factories.โ A Georgia newspaper was even more scathing: โFree Society! we sicken at the name. . . . The prevailing class one meets with [in the North] is that of mechanics struggling to be genteel . . . [but] who are hardly fit for association with a Southern gentlemanโs body servant.โ20
The fortunes of the wealthiest Northern families were yoked to the slave power; their politics often echoed its priorities. New Yorkโs merchant houses served as financial brokers for the cotton magnates and their British customers. They had as much disdain for โmechanics struggling to be genteelโ as the Southerners; their dealings and their wealth were oriented toward the Atlantic, not the American interior.21 The other great bloc of Northern wealth, the tight-knit dynasties who raised the textile mills of Lowell and Lawrence, confined their investments to New England. Their mills hummed only so long as the Southern plantations fed them raw fiber. The coalition they formed with Southern planters (what Charles Sumner would scornfully call โthe lords of loom and the lords of the lashโ) further magnified Southern political power.22
The wealthiest elite groups of the antebellum era thus resembled Karpโs picture of the contemporary tech elite: they were suspicious of executive power, distrustful of American nationalism, insulated from the American public, and focused their investments in whatever field promised the highest returns, regardless of the political consequences for doing so. Many were localists; some were Atlanticists. Almost none were nationalists. Their favored politicians, men like Franklin Pierce, William Marcy, Howell Cobb, and James Henry Hammond, dismantled Americaโs system of centralized finance, slashed its tariffs, vetoed internal improvements, shoved industrial policy down to the states, and maligned the rising class of industrialists.
Americaโs most powerful regional elites simply had no material stake in a technological republic, and they lacked the nation-spanning institutions or social networks needed to lead one. The handful of antebellum statesmen who, with Daniel Webster, urged Americans to become โone people, one in interest, one in character, and one in political feeling,โ were rewarded with a lifetime of political disappointments.23 All of this would change with the Civil War.
The conflict elevated two social groups that had hitherto played second fiddle on the American stage: the disparate Northern regional elites, newly united beneath the Republican banner, and the rising class of industrialists and their financiers.24 The first seized the commanding heights of the Unionโs politics; the second built the commanding heights of its economy. War bound them together in a common techno-nationalist project. The personal ties, institutions, and ideology that saved the Union would continue long after the guns went silent at Appomattox.
The ascent of this new elite class was hastened by the eclipse of its old rivals. With a few Maryland grandees excepted, the great planter aristocracyโferociously hostile to both industry and the Unionโfollowed their states in secession. Before their rebellion was over, the economic and political foundations of their power lay in ruins. Their ports were blockaded; their fields were stripped bare by marauding armies; their traditional customers found other sources of cotton; and emancipation, in a stroke, erased the largest store of Southern wealth.25 During Reconstruction, the plantation class was denied formal political power; after Reconstruction, they were only a junior coalition partner in the weaker national party. It would be a full century until any representative of a secessionist state would be elected president.
The Republicans of the 36th Congress moved quickly to exploit the absence of Southern obstruction. They advanced a legislative program which has since been called โthe blueprint for modern America.โ26 The package included vast land grants to transcontinental railroads, high tariffs to stimulate domestic manufacturing, and a host of measures designed to spur national development. As the Civil War stretched on, demand for iron, rail lines, machine tools, telegraph wires, steam engines, and armaments surged. The combination of new protective tariffs and the threat of Confederate commerce raiding ensured that domestic producers met this demand. For enterprising industrialists, this was an extraordinary opportunity to amass wealth on a scale that antebellum America had never offered.27
War also birthed a new kind of American financier. At the outset of hostilities, Washington lacked both the taxation machinery to fund its armies and the appetite to inflate away the nationโs currency. Instead, it turned to a rising class of bankers who marketed bonds in Philadelphia, Boston, and, above all, New York. These financiers, in turn, closely advised the federal government on how to design a national banking system capable of supplying the Union with a universal currency and a uniform system of credit.28 Young upstart J. P. Morgan began his ascent serving as one of these financial intermediaries.29 He was not alone in this. Out of the ten largest banks in New York City in 1870, five did not exist before the war.30
To a striking degree, the war effort was sustained through the voluntary efforts of the Unionโs most prominent citizens. Some of these contributions, such as John D. Rockefellerโs sponsorship of thirty Cleveland soldiers, were individual.31 Others required association. Across the Northโs largest cities, prominent citizens organized Union League Clubs, which functioned both as social clubs for nationalist elites and as political action committees for the Union cause. Through the course of the war, the members of the Philadelphia Union League Club would outfit โnine regiments, two battalions, and a troop of cavalry.โ32 Its New York counterpart would print 900,000 Unionist pamphlets and would put New Yorkโs first black regiment into the field.33
More impressive still were the efforts of the New York City Union Defense Committee, organized days after the first shots at Fort Sumter; it rushed workers to fix sabotaged rail lines, aided the families of poor conscripted soldiers, and raised a total of sixty regiments.34 The Sanitary Commission, a volunteer aid society led by the same upper-class northeastern elites that flocked to the Union League clubs, mobilized and trained thousands of nurses to tend to the Northโs wounded and sick. A similarly organized Christian Commission provided religious literature and services to soldiers and sailors on every front of the war.35
The men who joined this effort drew from it a new national consciousness. โWhat I learned from the Civil War,โ recalled Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., who served as a regimental officer in the Army of the Potomac, โwas that Boston is just one city in America.โ36 It was a lesson learned by many young Boston Brahmins on the frontlines. Of each class that graduated from Harvard between 1855 and 1861, between a third and a half went to war.37 They were thrown into a great melting pot of young northeastern patricians. Of 120 Union staff officers who were not West Point graduates, ninety-three were natives of the New England states, New York, and Pennsylvania; of 134 cavalry officers, seventy-three were natives of the Northeast.38 There, working in close contact with commanding officers who had earlier worked with the regional railroads, these young men would gain firsthand experience with the industrial methods of organization, logistics, and accounting that powered the Union war machine. And they would not forget these skills when they returned to civilian life. As historian George Fredrickson observed, the war transformed them โfrom a demoralized gentry without a clearly defined social role [in national life] into a self-confident modernizing elite.โ39
This would shock and disconcert their fathers and grandfathers; most were still devoted to the romantic individualism that had dominated American culture during their own youth.40 The Civil War thus marked a decisive generational turning point. Most Union generals were in their thirties or forties when they assumed command; their junior officers were younger still. Nor was the Unionโs civilian leadership dominated by elder graybeards. In William H. Sewardโs words, at the dawn of the Civil War, the Republican Party was โchiefly a party of young men.โ41 Wall Street saw it the same way. One prominent financier later recalled that the struggle to mobilize finance occurred just after the panic of 1857, during which the โold conservative element [of Wall Street] had fallen . . . and its place supplied by better material and with young blood.โ42 The Civil War both elevated a new generation of elites into public life and served as the crucible that defined their worldview; they would carry this worldview with them through the rest of their public careers, which often stretched well into the twentieth century.
Few understood the significance of these developments better than Frederick Law Olmsted, a pivotal figure in New York politics who founded the cityโs Union League Club and served as the first secretary of the Sanitary Commission. Reflecting on the Clubโs mission, Olmsted compared its members with rebel plantation masters, who fought to protect a โlegally privileged classโ modeled on European nobility. In contrast, the Union League Clubs represented a โtrue American aristocracy.โ This democratic gentry would be composed partly of โmen of substance and established high position socially . . . men of good stock, or of notably high character . . . and especially those of old colonial names well brought down.โ But it must also draw in โpromising young menโquite young men, who should be sought for and drawn in and nursed and nourished with care, but especially of those rich young men . . . who donโt understand what their place can be in American society.โ43
The rebellion had shown these young men what that place might be.44 Republican politicians, army officers, industrialists, and financiers had been thrown together by common cause. In the sweat and strain of wartime administration, these young men worked shoulder to shoulder. They met in committee rooms and counting houses, in field headquarters and Union League clubs. In the process, they formed bonds of trust that endured long after the Civil Warโs close.
In war, they had saved the Union. Now, they would build its strength in peace. Their task was to stitch the continent into a single market, to tie its farms and cities together with railroads and telegraphs, and to develop new American industries, thereby empowering the American people on the world stage. They would be the architects of a new, continent-spanning technological republic. Such an ethos would sustain Americaโs new elite through the Gilded Age.
Consolidation of a Techno-Nationalist Elite
The partnership between Northern industrialists and political leaders only deepened in the postbellum years. Both groups โembraced continental integration as a heroic undertaking and infused it with an exhilarating sense of grandiosity.โ45 Their solidarity was expressed in political alliances, reinforced by common schools and civic clubs, and deepened through widespread intermarriage. By the end of the Gilded Age, it no longer made sense to speak of them as two separate camps. They had fused into one governing stratum: the โEastern Establishment.โ
Consider the composition of Theodore Rooseveltโs cabinet. Before he served as Rooseveltโs postmaster general or the chairman of the Republican National Committee, Henry Clay Pyne worked as both an electricity and railway executive. He was not the only railway or electricity executive in the cabinet: Rooseveltโs vice president, his first secretary of the interior, and two of his Navy secretaries had been railway men, while his first secretary of commerce and second postmaster general both served as the presidents of electric utilities.
The cabinet also included several accomplished industrial lawyers, among them Victor Metcalf, Elihu Root, and Philander Knox, who began his career representing Andrew Carnegie. Before he led the State Department, Robert Bacon managed J. P. Morganโs steel and railroad interests; Lyman Gage, in contrast, would leave the administration to serve as the president of U.S. Trust. Even the literary-minded John Hay, who never held a corporate job in his life, was thoroughly enmeshed in the world of industry by way of marriage: his wife was Clara Stone, daughter of Ohio railroad mogul Amasa Stone. During the Second Industrial Revolution, the families that governed the United States and the families that captained its industries were one and the same.
This was Americaโs first techno-nationalist elite class. Their nation-building program, and the fortunes that sustained it, demanded coorยญdinated action across economic, political, social, and cultural fronts.
In the years following the Civil War, the vast financial machinery built to market war bonds now opened its coffers to the railroads, telegraph companies, and manufacturing. The scale of expansion was extraordinary. In the seven years after the Civil War, the number of American factories doubled. By 1873, $400 million dollars had been invested in manufacturing capital, four times the amount invested in 1865. It only took four years for the railroads to gather $500 million dollars in new investment. To handle this boom in financial activity, the number of bankers in New York City grew from 167 in the year 1864 to 1,800 in 1870. The railroad companies they invested in would lay thirty-five thousand miles of track over those same years, which amounted to more track than existed in the entire railroad network of 1860.46 That was only the beginning: by 1895, railroad capitalization was fourteen times the national debt, and four times all local, state, and federal debt combined. At that point, 183,601 miles of rail line had been laid, approximately 42 percent of the global total.47
The sheer volume of physical material that could now be produced, transported, and processed by these new technologies had no precedent in human history.48 Existing corporate forms could not manage the torrent. The railroads, which had to coordinate hundreds of trains moving across multiple states and time zones on a finite number of lines, were the first to confront the problem head-on. Their solution was to invent the modern corporation: vast, vertically integrated bureaucracies with multi-level, managerial hierarchies. These structures shifted deciยญsion-making power away from the decentralized marketplace and into the hands of salaried technicians and middle managers, creating a template that would define American businessโand American powerโfor the next century.49
Corporate hierarchies gave businessmen, a profession created by this technological revolution, the tools to master scale. But scale alone did not guarantee profit. As technology proliferated, so did competition. Cutting-edge industries required enormous capital outlays, yet ruthless price wars drove returns downward. In this environment, financiers found it difficult to justify further investment in technological development. Once again, an organizational answer was found. Under the prodding of financiers like J. P. Morgan, firms first formed cartels or โpools,โ then coalesced into trusts, and at last fused into horizontally integrated holding companies.50 Consolidations would reach a fever pitch in the years between 1897 and 1904, as 4,277 industrial firms were merged into just 257.51
Americaโs technological revolution could not have been possible without a corresponding revolution in legal doctrine. Before the Civil War, corporations were generally quasi-public bodies chartered indiยญvidually by state legislatures to accomplish public aims. Their activities were confined to narrow public purposes, with their capitalization, geographic scope, and permissible lines of business limited by their charters.52 National industrial systems were not possible within this framework. The Second Industrial Revolution was premised on a legal architecture designed and defended by the Eastern Establishmentโs jurists and legislators.
This great reformation began with a salvo of new laws across northeastern states that replaced incorporation through legislation with a standardized system of procedural filing. New legal statues provided directors and shareholders with nearly unlimited power to amend articles of incorporation, modify the character of their business, and modify the rights of classes of their shares. Northeastern states also relaxed restrictions on internal business operations, liberalizing the definitions of capital, surplus, and profits to enable complex corporate accounting practices, removing requirements to receive state permission to operate outside of the state, allowing corporations to hold stock in foreign state companies, and loosening merger requirements. This process went furthest in New Jersey, whose state legislature undermined trust-busting efforts by passing a general incorporation law for consolidated holding companies just before the federal Sherman Antitrust Act went into force.53
The courts strengthened the new corporationsโ legal standing in a series of groundbreaking cases. Wabash v. Illinois (1886) barred states from regulating interstate commerce, leaving corporations largely free to operate across state borders. Reflecting back on the case at the dawn of the twentieth century, one legal analyst described its consequence: โin the last 30 years [the Commerce Clause of the constitution] has been so developed that it is now in its nationalizing tendency perhaps the most important conspicuous power possessed by the federal government.โ54 Just as important may have been Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroadโs (1886) formulation that corporations were constitutional โpersonsโ entitled to due process and equal protection. When coupled with Chicago, M. & St. P. Railway v. Minnesota (1890) and Allegeyer vs. Louisianaโs (1896) substantive due process doctrines that barred rate regulation absent โjust compensationโ and prevented state governments from breaching โliberty of contract,โ this doctrine โrendered many efforts to regulate economic activity impossible.โ55
The effect of these decisions was to create a large, unified national market unencumbered by state regulation, one which accelerated โthe centralization of power in the Federal Government, the obliteration of State lines, and the degradation of the State judiciary,โ56 as one contemporary opponent of the federal courts described it.
Justices in this era would occasionally cite the benefits of an integrated national market explicitly in these decisions.57 But their belief in the importance of integrated national systems was most visible in their treatment of corporate receivership. Before the 1880s, insolvent railroads were typically broken up and their assets liquidated for the benefit of bondholders. But as the scale of the major interstate railroads grew, railroad managers began petitioning federal courts for receivership even before default, hoping to ward off dismemberment. Judges obliged. Beginning in the 1880s, federal judges began to protect managers by appointing them as receivers of their own companies, subordinating creditor rights to the larger imperative of maintaining a nationally integrated system of rail lines.
The overleveraged industry embraced the new arrangement: twelve of the nationโs twenty-eight largest railroad systemsโfirms that owned one-third of all American railroad mileageโentered โfriendlyโ receivership. This allowed them to write off terrific amounts of debt: of the sixty-eight companies so reorganized between 1885 and 1900, the average firm slashed its fixed charges by 34 percent as it passed through receivership!58 In the words of legal scholar E. Merrick Dodd, โthe tendency [of the legal environment] was to permit a capitalist to combine a considerable measure of control over a business with a sharing in its profits without becoming responsible for its debts.โ59 This was a setting favorable to the progress of capital-intensive technologies and the expansion of industrial infrastructure.
The politicians of the new establishment did their part to create a macroeconomic environment equally conducive to techno-nationalist development. Their chosen political vehicle was, naturally, the victorious party of Lincoln. The GOP regularly endorsed a Hamiltonian vision of Americaโs future. Because, as James Garfield put it, โthe civil society of our country is honeycombed through with disintegrating forces,โ60 the United States was in desperate need of a strong centripetal force, which is exactly how most Republicans saw industry. Benjamin Harrison articulated a common belief when he argued that the new industrial economy was โworking mightily . . . to efface all lingering estrangements between our people.โ61
For two generations, Republicans used the powers of the American state to strengthen this new national industrial order. Republican congressional majorities offered more than 120 million acresโmore than double the area of Virginiaโin land grants to transcontinental telegraph and railroad companies.62 They built a wall of tariffs to protect American manufactures, especially the producers of iron and steel.63 Republican presidents appointed friendly justices to the federal courts (in the year of the Wabash and Santa Clara County decisions, all nine justices on the U.S. Supreme Court had been appointed by Republicans).64
These presidents also maintained Americaโs commitment to the gold standard against a tidal wave of populist agitation against it. This was particularly important to industrial interests dependent on foreign investment, such as the railroads. The scale of this investment was substantial. By 1895, the value of British railway bond holdings exceeded the annual expenditure of the U.S. federal government. And there was widespread fear that foreign investors would dump American securities if the United States abandoned the gold standard for greenbacks or free silver.65 Republican statesmen had to justify this monetary status quo to a national constituency all throughout the late nineteenth century, something they did with great zeal.
The Republican Party of this era was a political alliance between the Protestant clergy and the petit bourgeois of small-town New England and New York; the prosperous farmers of the Midwest, many of whom were Union veterans; and the new Eastern Establishment.66 The policy suite enacted by the GOP benefited each of these groups. Protective tariffs not only favored the large industrialists, but also smaller manufacturers across the North. Industries like wool were given special carve-outs in order to keep their producers in the Republican column. Tariff revenues, in turn, were used to fund generous pensions to Union veterans.67 These commitments often extended beyond government policy into acts of private patronage, such as when, during a federal budget shortfall, J. P. Morgan personally lent $2.5 million to the Army payroll to ensure that the payment of veteran pensions would continue, or when George Westinghouse underwrote the national gathering of five thousand chapter leaders of the Grand Army of the Republic in his hometown.68
The magnates of the Gilded Age grasped a lesson their twenty-first-century successors have largely forgotten. Technological development is only possible when a governing coalition commits to it; potential coalition members must be courted and convinced.69
The Eastern Establishment understood its project in generational terms. They knew that the integration of the American nation and the growth of American power would not be accomplished in their lifetime. They wanted their children to inherit their select position in American societyโand to be worthy of that inheritance. These anxieties came to a head in the 1880s, as the first generation with no memory of the Civil War came of age. During this decade, New England boarding schools like St. Paulโs reinvented themselves as national preparatory academies for the sons of the industrial elite, drawing students from New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio.70 In their wake came a crop of new boarding schoolsโLawrenceville (1883), Groton (1884), Hotchkiss (1892), Choate (1896), St. Georgeโs (1896), Middlesex (1901), and Kent (1906)โeach catering to a nationally defined upper class.71
Ivy League universities would follow suit. In the 1870s, Harvard instituted a standardized test for admissions that could be administered outside of Boston. By 1880, applicants were sitting for them in New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, and California. Alumni clubs were sprouting up in Americaโs major cities just as quickly, and the Board of Overseers soon opened to Harvard graduates living outside of Massachusetts.72 The result was a truly national institution and a reliable training ground for corporate America. On any given year between 1860 and 1900, between one-quarter and one-half of all Harvard students studied business.73
These institutions were not, and could never be, a complete replacement for the Civil War experience, though they did seek to cultivate the virtues the Civil War generation revered, such as patriotism, self-discipline, rationalism, professional competence, and physical courage.74 Just as importantly, they gave the children of a geographically dispersed elite a shared background, a common set of expectations, and enduring social bonds. Social clubs, intermarriage, and business partnerships reinforced these ties, allowing the Establishment to act with coherence and confidence long after the war had faded from living memory.
The economic, social, and political activities of the Eastern Establishment were mutually reinforcing pillars of a larger program. Members of the Establishment used the wealth generated by new technologies to secure political influence, used that influence to sustain a national market and legal framework geared for yet more technological expansion, and then presided over a conscious effort to preserve and transmit the values of their class to future generations, ensuring that the unity and discipline they gained in shared struggle would not dissipate amid power and prosperity. Through these means, a techno-nationalist elite guided Americaโs development for more than seventy years. Under its stewardship, the United States became the worldโs wealthiest, most industrially advanced, and most powerful nation: a true technological republic.
A New Techno-Nationalist Elite?
This historical review offers uncomfortable lessons for those who dream, as Alexander Karp and Nicholas Zamiska do, of a twenty-first century techno-nationalist elite. The Technological Republicโs call for a โunion of the state and the software industryโ is, at bottom, a call for a new governing class.75 Any governing class requires three things: a political coalition to which it owes allegiance and over which it exercises influence; an economic base that provides this class with wealth and unites its members around shared material interests; and finally, a set of institutions, rituals, and social customs that give this class a culture distinct from the country at large. Absent the first two, a leadership class lacks the power to lead; absent the latter two, it lacks the ability to act as a class. The Eastern Establishmentโs seventy-year dominance rested on its possession of all three.
It is not enough, therefore, to advocate for โa closer alignment of visionโ between Silicon Valley and the state without asking what economic, political, and cultural arrangements could make such an alignment possible.76The Technological Republic suggests that the federal government could profit from Silicon Valleyโs organizational ingenuity, but it does not suggest how elected officials or federal bureaucrats might gain that expertise firsthand. It argues that technologists must identify with the American nation-state, but it never explains how this culturally progressive, immigrant-heavy industry might actually do so.
Part of Karp and Zamiskaโs problem lies in how they conceive of this task. The Technological Republic speaks of the fusion of a โsectorโ and a โstate,โ but sectors and states are abstractions; what must be fused are people. This was also true for Americaโs first techno-nationalist elite. Behind the Eastern Establishment stood a dense web of personal ties that bound its families together. Many of these ties were consummated, quite literally, on the marriage bed. Karp and Zamiska are loathe to think in these terms. They write a great deal about the engineering eliteโs waning commitment to Western civilization, but they have little to say about its waning commitment to raising the next generation of that civilization. The Eastern Establishment was self-consciously reproductive: it built schools, endowed universities, and founded literal dynasties. Part of building โa shared culture . . . that will make possible our continued survivalโ is creating the children who will survive us.77
The only concrete suggestion Karp and Zamiska offer for stopping the โmost talented minds of our generation [from] splintering off . . . from the nationโ is to restore โa core curriculum situated around the Western traditionโ in Americaโs top universities.78 To this end, an entire chapter of the Technological Republic is spent relitigating the โcanon warsโ of the 1980s. This is thin gruel. If John Calhoun lacked national feeling, it was not for want of reading Plato and Homer, nor can the public-spirited ethos of the old Eastern Establishment be chalked up to a reading list. It was first forged in total war. It was later passed on and maintained through a lifelong system of education and socialization that started with the spartan boarding schools of youth and culminated in restrictive codes of behavior that governed all adulthood. A two-semester survey of the Western canon is no substitute for a way of life.
Karp and Zamiska recognize that Silicon Valleyโs engineering elite lack the cultural confidence to defend any way of life. In a revealing passage, they lament that Americaโs technologists shy away from โthe vital yet messy questions of what constitutes a good life, which collective endeavors society should pursue, and what a shared and national identity can make possible.โ79 This fundamentally misdiagnoses the problem, however. Silicon Valleyโs failing is not that its leaders refuse to ask such questions: it is that they refuse to answer them. Here Karp and Zamiska cannot escape the disease they so confidently diagnose. They insist that โthe reconstitution of a technological republic will require a reassertion of national culture and valuesโ but never tell us what those values are.80 They lament that Silicon Valley has been swallowed by โnarrow and thin utilitarianism,โ yet they do not articulate a richer moral vision to replace it.81 There is no passage in the Technological Republic that attempts to โdefine the good lifeโ or โdescribe what a shared national identity can make possible.โ
The technologists of an earlier century were not so reticent. They spoke frankly about their understanding of duty, hierarchy, patriotism, and moral standards. They preached an ethic of service to the nation that both sustained their power and defined its use. So confident were they in their vision of American life that it not only defined the worldview of their children and grandchildren but gave those descendants the ambition to โAmericanizeโ the rest of the country, and, in time, much of the globe.
One looks in vain for such confidence in The Technological Republic. Karp and Zamiska devote entire chapters to urging the American public to tolerate corporate leaders who are strange, discomforting, or corrupt. They argue that too many of these leaders โare reluctant to venture into the discussion, to articulate genuine belief . . . for fear that they will be punished in the contemporary public sphere.โ82 There is nothing objectionable in that argument, but it is painfully procedural. When Karp and Zamiska lament that that too many โfounders say [they] actively seek out risk, but when it comes to public relations and deeper investments in more significant societal challenges, caution often prevails,โ they could be describing themselves.83 They demand a pulpit for Americaโs technologists but never summon the courage to state what gospel they should preach.
Large passages of The Technological Republic thus read as a throat clearing exercise in place of substantive content that never arrives. Karp and Zamiska correctly observe that โan overly timid engagement with the debates of our time will rob one of the ferocity of feeling that is necessary to move the world.โ84 But the book itself refuses to engage in any of the โdebates of our time.โ
To pick a timely controversy, what is the dispute over H-1B visas if not a debate over the very questions Karp says Silicon Valley must confront: โwhat is this country, what are our values, and for what do we stand?โ85 Karp abstains from staking a position in this debate, or in any of the dozens of debates that touch on technologyโs relationship to โsubstantive notions of the good or virtuous life.โ86 What is his vision for Americaโs place in the world? What principles should govern the relationship between artificial intelligence and the American polity? Does transhumanism violate or embody the โshared purpose and identityโ Karp and Zamiska believe we must forge? If what we need is a โlarger project for which to fight,โ87 then what precisely should that project be?
Americaโs first techno-nationalist elite did have such a project. Many of them died fighting for it. The industrial civilization they built would have been impossible without their ironclad commitment to Americaโs national greatness. Judged by that standard, Karp and Zamiskaโs arguments are intolerably thin. โThose who say nothing wrong,โ Karp and Zamiska warn, โoften say nothing much at all.โ88The Technological Republic says nothing wrong and nothing much at all.
This article originally appeared in American Affairs Volume IX, Number 4 (Winter 2025): 108โ31.
Notes
The author wishes to thank โDean Marshall,โ an attorney based in Washington, D.C., for his assistance in writing this essay.
1 A fact more generally recognized and celebrated outside of America than inside it. For examples, see: Thomas Hughes, American Genesis: A Century of Invention and Technological Enthusiasm (New York: Penguin Books, 1989), 249โ355.
2 See: Vaclav Smil, Creating the Twentieth Century: Technical Innovations of 1867โ1914 and Their Lasting Impact (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005); Vaclav Smil, Transforming the Twentieth Century: Technical Innovations and Their Consequences (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006).
3 Nadia Asparouhova, โRewriting the California Ideology,โ American Affairs 9, no. 2 (Summer 2025): 209โ21.
4 Alexander Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska, The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West (New York: Crown Currency, 2025), 219.
5 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 74.
6 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 107.
7 Alexander Hamilton, โAlexander Hamiltonโs Final Version of the Report on the Subject of Manufactures, [5 December 1791],โ Founders Online,National Archives, accessed October 2025; Alexander Hamilton, Federalist No. 10, in The Federalist Papers, ed. Yale Law SchoolโThe Avalon Project, accessed October 2025. For a longer exposition of Hamiltonโs proposed system, see: Edward Meade Earle, โAdam Smith, Alexander Hamilton, Friedrich List: The Economic Foundations of Military Power,โ in The Makers of Modern Strategy: Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age, ed. Peter Paret (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986), 217โ65.
8 E. Digby Baltzell, Philadelphia Gentlemen: The Making of a National Upper Class (Glencoe, Ill.: The Free Press, 1958), 384โ85; Peter Hall, The Organization of American Culture, 1700โ1900: Private Institutions, Elites, and the Origins of American Nationality (New York: New York University Press, 1984), 218โ19; William Freehling, The Road to Disunion, vol I: Secessionists at Bay, 1776โ1854 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991), passim, but especially 9โ37.
9 The transportation and communication networks of the early republic are described in: Daniel Walker Howe, What God Hath Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815โ1848 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), 40โ41, 212โ26.
10 Hall, The Organization of American Culture, 81โ88; John Ingham, The Iron Barons: A Social Analysis of an American Urban Elite, 1874โ1965 (Westport, Conn: Greenport Press, 1978), 22, 147. In Charleston, marriages between the stateโs lowland and piedmont planter elites were viewed as bridging two fundamentally different cultures. See: William Freehling, Prelude to the Civil War: The Nullification Controversy in South Carolina 1816โ183 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992), 19โ24.
11 David McCullough, Mornings on Horseback: The Story of an Extraordinary Family, a Vanished Way of Life, and the Unique Child Who Became Theodore Roosevelt (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1981), 199. See also comments on Princeton in: Ingham, Iron Barons, 95.
13 Hall, The Organization of American Culture, 241โ42.
14 David Hacket Fisher, Albionโs Seed: Four British Folkways in America (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989); E. Digby Baltzell, Puritan Boston and Quaker Philadelphia, (1979; reissued, New York: Routledge, 2017), 57โ177.
15 Howe, What God Hath Wrought, 136โ37.
16 Howe, What God Hath Wrought, 164โ203; Baltzell, Puritan Boston and Quaker Philadelphia, 364โ66; Robert Swierenga, โEthnoreligious Political Behavior in the Mid-Nineteenth Century: Voting, Values, Cultures,โ in Religion and American Politics: From the Colonial Period to the Present, eds. Mark Noll and Luke E. Harlow (Oxford: Oxford University Press), 144โ68.
17 For a prominent example, see: Daniel Webster, The Webster-Hayne Debate on the Nature of the Constitution: Selected Documents, ed. Herman Belz (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2000).
18 The Jacksonian party system reinforced the localist tendencies of Jacksonian ideology. Leaders of the Whig and Democratic parties were localists by necessity, not national organizations but loose networks of local political machines. Through the 1880s, national party committees were weak or nonexistent. National leaders were chosen through pyramidal nominating conventions, which empowered local bosses. The spoils system, rooted in geography, handed patronage to congressmen and party bosses rather than the president, further entrenching parochial interests. In the words of historian Daniel Klinghard, the system was โdesigned to empower the preferences of state and local organizationsโ over the concerns of the national electorate.
See: Daniel Klinghard, The Nationalization of American Political Parties, 1880โ1896 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 25โ66, 191โ235. Here, as elsewhere, this would change when leaders of the Eastern Establishment built a new set of national institutions at the tail end of the Gilded Age.
19 Howe, What God Hath Wrought, 221โ22; Freehling, Prelude to the Civil War, 98โ9, 118, 256.
20 As quoted in: Lawrence Frederik Kohl, The Politics of Individualism: Parties and the American Character in the Jacksonian Era (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991), 28, 141; James M. McPherson, The Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), 99.
21 Sven Beckert, The Monied Metropolis: New York City and the Consolidation of the American Bourgeoisie, 1850โ1896 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 20โ97, especially 60โ64, 87โ88.
22 Noam Maggor, Brahmin Capitalism: Frontiers of Wealth and Populism in Americaโs First Gilded Age (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2017), 22, 26โ30, 34โ35, 50.
23 Quoted in: Kohl, Politics of Individualism, 138.
24 On the consolidation of the Northern regional elites during and immediately after the war, see: Hall, Organization of American Culture, 275โ89; on the industrial elite, see: Beckert, The Monied Metropolis, 115โ32, 135โ37, 148โ58.
25 Richard Franklin Bensel, Yankee Leviathan: The Origins of Central State Authority in America, 1859โ1877 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990), 233โ34, 416โ20. Their allies in the Northern textile mills and New York merchant houses were likewise forced either to anchor their fortunes elsewhere or sink into decline. See: Maggor, Brahmin Capitalism, 8โ10; Beckert, Monied Metropolis, 120โ21, 151โ54, 164โ71.
26 Leonard P. Curry, Blueprint for Modern America: Nonmilitary Legislation of the First Civil War Congress (Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1968).
27 Kessner, Capital City: New York City and the Men Behind Americaโs Rise to Dominance (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2003), 36โ43; Allan Nevins, The War for the Union: The Organized War, 1863โ1864 (New York: Scribner, 1971), 249โ57; Beckert, The Monied Metropolis, 136โ37.
28 Long after becoming one of the most successful bankers on Wall Street and an adviser to several Republican governments, Henry Clews remembered his participation in Union War financing as the most significant accomplishment of his career. He would memorialize his professionโs participation in war financing with the following words: โThere was patriotism worthy of Patrick Henry, as well as profit, in this. . . . As General Grant said long afterwards to me, we were not fighting for the Union as soldiers in the field, but we served it equally well by helping it in its struggle for money to prosecute the war; and I felt proud of the active part I took in thus helping to preserve the Union as one of its army in civilian life.โ See: Henry Clews, Fifty Years in Wall Street: โTwenty-Eight Years in Wall Street,โ Revised and Enlarged by a Rรฉsumรฉ of the Past Twenty-two Years, Making a Record of Fifty Years in Wall Street (New York: Irving Publishing, 1908), xliiโxliii, 91.
29 He was not entirely successful; in Vincent Carrosso and Rose Carassoโs judgement, Morganโs activities brought his firm โadded recognition and the satisfaction of contributing to the Treasuryโs efforts to reorganize the debtโ but did not result in profits. See: Vincent Carrosso and Rose Carasso, The Morgans: Private International Bankers, 1854โ1913 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1974), 94โ114
30 Beckert, Monied Metropolis, 150.
31 Rockefeller was not yet the oil magnate he would soon become, but a prosperous shipper of dry goods. See: Ron Chernow, Titan: The Life of John Rockerfeller, Sr., 2nd ed. (New York: Random House, 2004), 87.
32 Baltzell, Philadelphia Gentlemen, 345.
33 In both cases, the Union League Club did this in conjunction with other associations: the Loyal Publication League and Loyal League of Union Citizens, for the first; the New York Association for Promoting Colored Volunteering, for the second. The membership of these organizations drew from an overlapping set of wealthy activists in which manufacturing magnates like Peter Cooper dominated. See: Beckert, Monied Metropolis, 131, 134โ35.
34 Beckert, Monied Metropolis, 116. The committee was initially funded solely by donations from wealthy New Yorkers and the New York Chamber of Commerce; by the end of the war, it would also draw from the New York City municipal budget.
35 Allan Nevins, The Organized War, 1863โ1864, 317โ23; on the class background of the Commissionsโ leaders, see: George Frederickson, The Inner Civil War: Northern Intellectuals and the Crisis of the Union, rev. ed (Champaign, Illinois: University of Illinois Press, 1991), 99-100.
36 Louis Menand, The Metaphysical Club (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2001), 67.
37 Hall, Organization of American Culture, 270โ71.
38 Hall, Organization of American Culture, 270.
39 Frederickson, Inner Civil War, viii, 173โ76. On the question of the railroad influence on Army organizational practice, see: Hall, Organization of American Culture, 280โ87; on the impact military service had on late nineteenth century corporate culture, see: Nevins, The Organized War, 1863โ1864, 329โ30.
40 This generational conflict in ideals is explored in: Frederickson, Inner Civil War, passim, but especially 173โ76; Menand, The Metaphysical Club, 3โ69.
41 William H. Seward, The Works of William H. Seward, Vol. 1 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1884), 384.
42 Henry Clews, Fifty Years in Wall Street, 6. This generational turnover in financial and industrial circles during the 1860s is also emphasized in: Maggor, Brahmin Capitalism, 36โ40; Beckert, Monied Metropolis, 123.
43 Michael Allsep Jr., โNew Forms for Dominance: How a Corporate Lawyer Created the American Military Establishment,โ PhD diss. (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2008), 129.
44 Senator John Sherman described their vision as such: โThe truth is, the close of the war with our resource unimpaired gives an elevation, a scope to the ideas of leading capitalists, far higher than anything ever undertaken in this country before. They talk of millions as confidently as formerly of thousandsโฆ our manufacturers are yet in their infancy, but soon I expect to see, under the stimulus of great demand and the protection of our tariff, locomotive and machine shops worthy of the name.โ Quoted in: Allan Nevins, The War for the Union: The Organized War to Victory, 1863โ1864 (New York: Scribner, 1971), 373.
45 Maggor, Boston Brahmins, 9.
46 Kessner, Capital City, 46โ7; Beckert, The Monied Metropolis, 145.
47 Richard Franklin Bensel, The Political Economy of American Industrialization (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 295.
48 James Beniger, The Control Revolution: Technological and Economic Origins of the Information Society (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1986), 219โ91.
49 Alfred D. Chandler, The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1977), passim, but especially 81โ122; 145โ188. See also: Gerald Berk, Alternative Tracks: The Constitution of American Industrial Order, 1865-1917 (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1994), 1โ2, 12โ13, 65โ71; Bensel, Political Economy, 314โ18.
50 Kessner, Capital City, 285โ335; Chandler, Visible Hand, 315โ44.
51 Kessner, Capital City, 298.
52 Between 1789 and 1865, for example, Connecticut passed something like three thousand special acts incorporating every conceivable kind of social and economic organization. See: William J. Novak, โPutting the โPublicโ in Public Administration: The Rise of the Public Utility Idea,โ in Administrative Law from the Inside out: Essays on Themes in the Work of Jerry L. Mashaw, ed. Nicholas R. Parrillo (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), 373โ97.
53 E. Merrick Dodd Jr., โAmerican Business Association Law a Hundred Years Ago and Today,โ in Law: A Century of Progress 1835-1935, Vol. 1, ed. Alison Reppy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1937), 254โ84; Grandy, โNew Jersey Corporate Chartermongering.โ
54 Quoted in: Bensel, Political Economy, 327; this passage draws in his broader discussion from 321โ54. See also: Berk, Alternative Tracks, 58โ60, 156โ58.
55 Bensel, Political Economy, 336.
56 Quoted in: Tony Freyer, โThe Federal Courts, Localism, and the National Economy, 1865โ1900,โ Business History Review 53, no. 3 (Autumn, 1979): 359โ60.
57 Consider, for example, Justice Samuel Millerโs decision in Cook v. Pennsylvania (1878), striking down a Pennsylvania law that taxed the sale of out-of-state goods sold at auction, which reads in part: โIf certain states could exercise the unlimited power of taxing all the merchandise which passes from the port of New York through those states to the consumers in the great west, or could taxโas has been done until recentlyโevery person who sought the seaboard through the railroads within their jurisdiction, the constitution would have failed to effect one of the most important purposes for which it was adopted.โ Quoted in: Bensel, Political Economy, 325.
58 Berk, Alternate Tracks, 65.
59 Dodd, โAmerican Business Association Law,โ 258.
60 Quoted in: John Gerring, Party Ideologies in America, 1828โ1996 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), 99.
61 Benjamin Harrison, Speeches of Benjamin Harrison, Twenty Third President of the United States (New York: United States Book Company, 1892), 142. See also James G. Blaineโs comments about the โspirit of industrial enterpriseโ and the โunification of financial interestsโ in: James G. Blaine, Twenty Years in Congress, (Norwich, Conn.: Henry Bill Publishing, 1884), 671.
62 This was accompanied by loans for $16,000 per mile (for construction on the plains) and $48,000 per mile (in the mountains) of government bonds to the Central Pacific and Union Pacific Railroads. See: H. W. Brands, American Colossus (New York: Knopf Doubleday, 2011), 49.
63 Bensel, Political Economy of American Industrialization, 8โ18, 205โ88, 457โ509.
64 Moreover, seven of these were from the Northeast. See: Bensel, Political Economy of American Industrialization, 344โ55. Railroad executive Charles Elliot Perkins thought that this was the most important role of the GOP. As he wrote in one letter, โThere are so many jack-asses about nowadays who think property has no rights, that the filling of the Supreme Court vacancies is the most important function of the presidential office,โ See: Freyer, โThe Federal Courts, Localism, and the National Economy,โ 346.
65 Bensel, Political Economy of American Industrialization, 355โ456.
66 On the origins of this coalition, see Richard Cawardineโs account of the election of 1864 in: Richard Cawardine, Lincoln: A Life of Purpose and Power (New York: Knopf Doubleday, 2007), 249โ310. Also see: Phillip Shaw Paludan, โWar Is the Health of the Party: Republicans in the American Civil War,โ in The Birth of the Old Grand Party, eds. Robert F. Engs and Randall M. Miller (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002), 60โ81. On the maintenance of this coalition through the Gilded Age, see: Bensel, Political Economy, 130, 490โ5, 502โ6; Robert Marcus, Grand Old Party: Political Structure in the Gilded Age, 1880โ1896 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1971).
67 Bensel, Political Economy, 487โ502.
68 Kessner, Capital City, 217โ218; William Huber, George Westinghouse: Powering the World (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, 2022), 223โ24.
69 The leaders of nineteenth century industry did not just seek to materially reward coalition members but also built institutions to persuade coalition members of the value of favored policies. Consider the example of the American Iron and Steel Association, the million tracts it distributed in the run-up to the election of 1888 and the network of โquestion clubsโ it founded across American towns devoted to debating tariff policy. See: Klinghard, The Nationalization of American Political Parties, 76โ81.
70 Ingham, The Iron Barons, 93โ94, 148, 217; Baltzell, Philadelphia Gentleman, 307โ12.
71 Baltzell, Philadelphia Gentleman, 306.
72 Hall, The Organization of American Culture, 321โ22. Similar reforms occurred across the Ivy League
73 Hall, The Organization of American Culture, 289.
74 Jerome Karabell, The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Princeton, and Yale (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2005), 27โ38.
75 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 27.
76 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 53โ54.
77 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 243.
78 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 154, 106โ7.
79 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 14โ15.
80 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 31.
81 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 53โ54.
82 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 17.
83 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 69.
84 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 64.
85 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 95.
86 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 231.
87 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 250, 96.
88 Karp and Zamiska, The Technological Republic, 85.
About the Author
Tanner Greer is a writer and deputy director of the Open Source Observatory at the Council of Foreign Relations.
Often, as Jim later discovered, you entered the war through an ordinary looking gap in a hedge. One minute you were in a ploughed field.. and peasants off at the edges of it digging turnips and winter greens, and the next you were through the hedge and on duckboards, and..
..
The smell got worse as the pushed further towards it. It was the smell of damp earthwalls and rotting planks, of mud impregnated with gas, of decaying corpses that had fallen in earlier battles and been incorporated now into the system itself, occasionally pushing out a hand or a booted foot, all ragged and black, not quite ingested; of rat droppings, and piss, and the unwashed bodies of the men they were relieving, who also smelled like corpses, and were, in their heavy-eyed weariness as they came out, quite unrecognisable, though many of them were known to Jim by sight and some of them even by name; the war seemed immediately to have transformed them. They had occupied these trenches for eleven days. ‘It’s not so bad,’ some of them mumbled, and others, with more bravado, claimed it was a cakewalk. But they looked beaten just the same.
They stayed eleven days themselves, and though the smell did not lessen, they ceased to notice it; it was their own. They were no longer the ‘Eggs a-cook’ of the easy taunt; ‘Verra nice, verra sweet, verra clean. Two for one.’ They were soldiers like the rest. They were men.
For eleven days they dug in and maintained the position. That is, they bailed out foul water, relaid duckboards, filled and carried sandbags to repair the parapet, stood to for a few minutes just before dawn with their rifles at the ready, crouched on the firestep, waiting – the day’s one recognition of the reality of battle – then stood down again and had breakfast. Some days it rained and they simply sat in the rain and slept afterwards in the mud. other days it was fine. Men dozed on the firestep, read, played pontoon, or hunted for lice in their shirts. They were always cold and never got enough sleep. They saw planes passing over in twos and threes, and occasionally caught the edge of a dogfight. Big black canisters appeared in the sky overhead, rolling over and over, very slowly, then taking a downward path; the earth shook. You got used to that, and to the din.
Jim never saw a German, though they were there alright. Snipers. One fellow, too cocky, had looked over the parapet twice, being dared, and had his head shot off. [ His name was Stan Mackay, and it worried jim that he couldn’t fit a face to the man even when Clancy described the man. He felt he ought to be able to do that at least. A fellow he had talked to more than once oughtn’t just go out like that without a face.]
Snipers. Also machine-gunners.
One of them, who must have had a sense of humour, could produce all sorts of jazz rhythms and odd syncopations as he ‘played’ the parapet. They got to know his touch. Parapet Joe he was called. he had managed, that fellow to break through and establish himself as something more than the enemy. He had become an individual, [who had then of course to have a name]. Did he know he was called Parapet Joe? Jim wondered about this, and wondered, because of the name, what the fellow looked like. But it would have been fatal to try and find out.
One night, for several hours, there was a bombardment that had them all huddled together with their arms around their heads, not just trying to stop the noise but pretending, as children might, to be invisible.
But the real enemy, the one that challenged them day and night and kept them permanently weary, was the stinking water that seeped endlessly out of the walls and rose up around their boots as if the whole trench system in this part of the country were slowly going under. Occasionally it created cave-ins, bringing old horrors back into the light.. The dead seemed close then. They had to stop their noses. Once, in heavy rain, a hand reached out and touched Jim on the back of the neck. ‘Cut it out, Clancy,’ he had protested, hunching closer to the wall; and was touched again. It was the earth behind him, quietly moving. Suddenly it collapsed, and a whole corpse lurched out of the wall and hurled itself upon him. He had to disguise his tendency to shake then, though the other fellows made a joke of it; and two or three times afterwards, when he dozed off, even in sunlight, he felt the same hand brush his neck with its long curling nail, and his scap bristled. Once again the dead man turned in his sleep.
Water was the real enemy, endlessly sweating from the walls and gleaming between the duckboard-slats, or falling steadily as rain. It rotted and dislodged A-frames, it made the trench a muddy trough. They fought the water that made their feet rot, and the earth that refused to keep its shape or stay still, each day destroying what they had just repaired; they fought sleeplessness and the dull despair that came from that, and from their being, for the first time, grimily unwashed, and having body lice that bred in the seams of their clothes, and bit and itched and infected when you scratched; and rats in the same field-gray as the invisible enemy, that were as big as cats and utterly fearless, skittering over your face in the dark, leaping out of knapsacks, darting in to take the very crusts from under your nose. The rats were fat because they fed on corpses, burrowing right into a man’s guts or tumbling about in dozens in the bellies of horses. They fed. Then they skittered over your face in the dark. [ The guns, Jim felt, he would get used to, and the snipers’ bullets that buried themselves regularly in the mud of the parapet walls. They meant you were opposed to other men, much like yourself, and suffering the same hardships. But the rats were another species. And for him they were familiars of death, creatures of the underworld, as birds were of life and the air. To come to terms with the rats, and his deep disgust for them, he would have to turn his whole world upside down ].
All that first time up the line was like some crazy camping trip under nightmare conditions, not like a war. There was no fight. They weren’t called upon in any way to have a go.
But even an invisible enemy could kill.
It happened out of the lines, when they went back into support. Their section of D company had spent a long afternoon unloading ammunition-boxes and carrying them up. They had removed their tunics, despite the cold, and scattered about in groups in the thin sunlight, relaxed in their shirtsleeves, were preparing for tea. Jim sat aside a blasted trunk and was buttering slabs of bread, dreamily spreading them thick with golden-green melon and lemon jam. His favourite. He was waiting for Clancy to come up with water, and had just glanced up and seen Clancy, with the billy in one hand and a couple of mugs hooked from the other, dancing along in his bow-legged way about ten yards off. Jim dipped his knife in the tin and dreamily spread jam, enjoying the way it went over the butter, almost transparent, and the promise of thick golden-green sweetness.
Suddenly the breath was knocked out of him. He was lifted bodily into the air, as if the stump he was astride had bucked like an angry steer, an flung hard against the earth. Wet clods and buttered bread rained all about him. He had seen and heard nothing. When he managed at last to sit up, drawing new breath into his lungs, his skin burned and the effect in his eardrums was intolerable. He might have been halfway down a giant pipe that some fellow, some maniac, was belting over and over with a sledge hammer. Thung. Thung. Thung.
The ringing died away in time and he heard, from far off, but from very far off, a sound of screaming, and was surprised to see Eric Sawney, who had been nowhere in sight the moment before, not three yards away. His mouth was open and both his legs were off, one just above the knee, the other not far above the boot, which was lying on its own a little to the left. A pale fellow at any time, Eric was now the colour of butcher’s paper, and the screams Jim could here were coming from the hole of his mouth.
He became aware then of blood. He was lying in a pool of it. It must, he thought, be Eric’s. It was very red, and when he put his hands to raise himself from his half-sitting position, very sticky and warm.
Screams continued to come out of Eric, and when Jim got to his feet at last, unsteady but whole [(his first thought was to stop Eric making that noise; only a second later did it occur to him that he should go to the boy’s aid) he found that he was entirely covered with blood – his uniform, his face, his hair – he was drenched in it, it couldn’t all be Eric’s; and if it was his own he must be dead, and this standing up whole an illusion or the beginning of another life. The body’s wholeness, he saw, was an image of a man carried in his head. It might persist after the fact. He couldn’t, in his stunned condition, puzzle this out. If it was the next life why could he hear Eric screaming out of the last one? And where was Clancy?]
The truth then hit him with a force that was greater even than the breath from the ‘minnie’. He tried to cry out but no sound came. It was hammered right back into his lungs and he thought he might choke on it.
Clancy had been blasted out of existence. It was Clancy’s blood that covered him, and the strange slime that was all over him had nothing to do with being born into another life but was what had been scattered when Clancy was turned inside out.
He fell to his knees in the dirt and his screams came up without sound as a rush of vomit, and through it all he kept trying to cry out, till at last, after a few bubbly failures,his voice returned. He was still screaming when the others ran up.
He was ashamed to reveal that he was quite unharmed, while Eric, who was merely dead white now and whimpering, had lost both his legs.
That was how the war first touched him. It was a month after they came over, a Saturday in February. He could never speak of it. And the hosing off never, in his own mind, left him clean. He woke from nightmares drenched in a wetness that dried and stuck and was more than his own sweat.
..
The question was monstrous. Its largeness in the cramped space behind the screen, the way it lowered and made Eric sweat, the smallness of the boy’s voice, as if even daring to ask might call down the wrath of unseen powers, put Jim into a panic. He didn’t know the answer any more than Eric knew the question and the question scared him. [Faced with his losses, Eric had hit upon something fundamental. It was a question about the structure of the world they lived in and where they belonged in it, about who had power over them and what responsibility those agencies could be expected to assume]. For all his childish petulance Eric had never been as helpless as he looked. His whining had been a weapon, and he had known how to make use of it. It was true that nobody paid any attention to him unless he wheedled and insisted and made a nuisance of himself, but the orphan had learned to get what he needed: if not affection then at least a measure of tolerant regard. What scared him now was that people might simply walk of and forget him altogether. His view of things had been limited to to those who stood in immediate relation to him, the matron at the orphanage, the sergeant and sergeant major, the sisters who ran the ward according the their own or the army’s rules. Now he wanted to know what lay beyond.
‘Who?’ he insisted. The tip of his tongue appeared and passed very quickly over his dry lips.
Jim made a gesture. It was vague. ‘Oh, they’ll look after you alright Eric. They’re bound to.’
..
[..and Jim saw that it was this capacity in Clancy that had constituted for Eric as it had for him, the man’s chief attraction: he knew his rights, he knew the ropes.]
‘I can’t even stand up to take a piss,’ Eric was telling him. The problem in Eric’s mind was the number of years that might lie before him – sixty even. All those mornings when he would have to be helped into a chair.
..
Outside, for the first time since he was a kid, Jim cried, pushing his fists hard into his eye-sockets and trying to control his breath, and being startled – it was as if he had been taken over by some impersonal force that was weeping through him – by the harshness of his own sobs.
โ Pages 76 – 87 ends Ch 12 Fly Away Peter Copyright ยฉ David Malouf 1982
Your music is Raps in Blue (optional consumer choice\ world NOT your @AmazonWebServices oyster or a dinki-die coastal bay or inlet one OK)
It is, definitively, and until 12:00:01 tonight in any of the three global longitudinal1 trispheres today, also known as THE 23rd Dec 2025
“Delete?”, you may cry. “What about the rare, precious and patently epoch-making JOHN BLUNDELL document,” your plaintive whimper?
You’re not really well-in-the-head are you?
At least promise this author you will have a deadly serious thinkie-winkie about the philosophic AND PARTICULARLY the macro-economic as differentiated for human eternity from the Evel Knievel Gridiron Andy Griffiths 1957 what-it-was-was-football Ro-deo/ rodayoh/ roe-thio (In Greek, “thio” (ฮธฮตฮฏฮฟฯ – theรญos) means uncle, while the prefix “thio-” in chemistry comes from the Greek for sulfur (theรฎon), and “Theo-” (from theosยน) means God, as in Theodore, God’s gift, so, depending on context, “thio” relates to uncles, sulfur, or divinity) super risk-taking often dead or mentally knackered @Nickelodeon and @ABCKids ADHD boy1, some soon time, hmmmn.
A PERSONAL ‘SURVEY‘ NO NOT A POST 1987 GECKOE-FRIEDMAN AUSTRALIAN FINANCIAL REVIEW ERA FAKIE
.. which might LEAD YOU TO EXAMINE/ MAKE NOTE of how you operate in the psycho-cultural spiritual mental or commonly RCQS-side hesitant reflective thoughtful imaginative and truly MENTALLY CREATIVE (“ideas – not things”) MACRO AND micro lived experience domains..
~ in face to face relationships (in your own micro or community-level school, workplace, household or recreational domain) – technically identified and signified qua Household +Neighborhood +geo-community – or vaguely โDomestic-economyโ after Community Economist international faxed newsletter October 1995 (the CCEc theorem you’ve all heard so much about down the years but Trump, Bannon, Thiel, Bill Nye the Seance Guy, AND Gavin Christopher Newsom born October 10, 1967, an American politician and businessman serving as the 40th governor of California since 2019 and shit don’t like one little bit).
~ in the psycho-cultural spiritual or commonly RCQS-side reflective, thoughtful, imaginative “ideas – not things” MACRO mental domain or OTHER SIDE OF CONSCIOUSNESS Emily Ngwarrai of Utopia around 1991 called in Eastern Arrente “landguage” KUHTA-NGUHLU
Do you hold yourself interpersonally in adversarial or defensive relation to other people ?
(i) Do you hold yourself interpersonally in non face 2 face, anonymous or virtual social RELATIONS where the other (party] is not known to you directly or personally in adversarial, defensive or basically suspicious or untrusting relation to him or her ?
(ii) How are your interpersonal RELATIONSHIPS with others affected by THEIR physical size (or social skills in speech or writing that is to imply how physically, socially or psychologically politically empowered these people are in relation to yourself) ?
~ NO NON no Monkeys and Green Ec DO NOT WANT your Survey responses emailed in !
~ The notes you might make are STRICTLY FOR YOUR FUTURE USE
GEA + ‘Billionaire Monkeys with MIT Olivetti Group Typewriters AUSTRALIA‘ are as you may already know the LETHAL enemies of PROLIFERATING GREY ECONOMY & Organised-crime CRAZY-ARSED START-UP consumer information theft/ gleaning bandit business outfits to further grow the disgusting and literally DUMBING DOWN AND ECOCIDAL Alpha-ON-Alpha (20%+ per year) profits of $0.5t to 1.0t a YEAR gargantuan accountancy “houses,” “investment” 4 the already super-rich “behemoths” and advertising & public relations robber barons, megalomaniacs and hateful old people.
You’ve probably heard five life-times worth of Socratic gadfly (pesky to Athenian horses and somehow emblematic of psycho-spiritual, ideological โactivistโ rebellion against crazy-arsed narcissistic vainglorious people) early 20th century ‘Young Turks’ (the Armenian genocide and attempted Kurdish one ongoing – with Israel, Syria & Iran) and undergraduate revolutionary shouties with NO economics and an abiding hatred Of Karl Marx’s dreaded Yoeman Farmers – Jeremy Clarkson I mean I askew, er Asquith, er arks-you Noah – and mind-numbing 3CR Melbourne splatter-chatter self-harm Fight China post Freudian/ Jungian โlick-the-ladiesโ psychobabble re CRITICAL MINERALS.. I mean these are only words an’ words are all I have to ‘steal your heart away (Hi Barry Gibb, Florida is it?) for vivisectional and let’s face it sweetheart, Organ-harvesting purposes BUT YOU TAKE CHARGE NOW & do the work !
If you don’t feel good about your new Read-outs in week 2 through say the 3 month mark i won’t only feel disappointed but DEEPLY personally hurt because humanity – ALL OF IT – has no time to fool around or whistle Dixie and is losing the lot for Christ’s and mammon’s sake.
BLUNDELL, AU
Thematics Neurocognitive Health Futures Human Projectยฒ
Satya Nadella
ยนthe Greek word for “God” (or “god”) is theos (ฮธฮตฯฯ), a common term used in both classical Greek and the New Testament for the supreme being or deities, and it’s related to words like “theology” and “theology,”.. while theos is general, other Greek terms like Kyrios (Lord) and Patฤr (Father) are also used for God in Christian contexts, and theos can refer to a single god, multiple gods, or the concept of divinity
ยฒ that would be the all-new THP after Edward de Bono (dcd) 1977.. sharp as a shithouse ๐ you my man my woman
Advert & Sales Promo for a regional ๐ฉ๐ช Energiewende Charity, contemporary
( Ruling-caste Musings on Penning People NOT being Punitive Conduct ‘II’ ex Substack }
( Cadwallader Having Sex with the Native Gells Again ‘II’ ex WordPress )
( Energiewende I )
Maconochie’s mark system – with its emphasis on connecting convicts into small social groups to support their mutual reform and encouraging individuals to work for their individual and collective best interests – starkly contrasted with Norfolk Island’s history of extreme physical punishment and exile for prisoners considered irredeemable1. In 1827, Governor Darling declared his intention for the Norfolk Island settlement to represent ‘the place of extreme punishment, short of Death2.’
[OUR NEW PARAGRAPH I] โ
Harsh labour, physical punishment and moral desperation marked by homosexual relations between prisoners characterised the image of the island prison in the public imagination. This fearsome reputation, encouraged by the penal administration and furthered in the colonial and metropolitan press, [HAUNTED] those convict letter-writers whom Backhouse and Walker had published. Convict revolts were not unusual on the island, and they were punished by flogging [AND MASS EXECUTIONS]. It was a challenging site for Maconochie to test his theories (indeed, he tried unsuccessfully to be granted a different [EXPERIMENTAL] location). The varied success of Maconochie’s system in practice has been well documented by convict historians, political scientists and sociologists3. The varied success of Maconochie’s system in practice has been well documented by convict historians, political scientists and sociologists3. Norfolk Island was a [HIGHLY CONCENTRATED LABORATORY] of reform: Maconochie described his [MACHINERY] there as raw and based on freshly formed theories4. From the Norfolk Island [MACHINE], streams of textual accounts poured forth written by Maconochie himself, by various religious personnel appointed to the island, by official visitors and the colonial press, and, distinctively, by convicts themselves. Knowledge was used to [PRODUCE] the (moral) prisoner, [rather than merely extracting knowledge about prisoners in the statistical schemas that otherwise typified convict administration].
[OUR NEW PARAGRAPH II] โ
[Maconochie’s education schemes brought print culture into the prison and in so doing shifted the usual flow of knowledge between colonial and [METROPOLITAN] elites. When they reached the public domain, these narratives challenged the tenor of the debate about transportation, imprisonment and reform].
1Carey, Empire of Hell, 165 2Darling, Letter to Hay, p104-5 3 Huh?! 4Maconochie, Norfolk Island
Your writer โjustโ back from 13 1/2 yrs Government-enforced proscription from Auss-ie ๐ฆ๐บ๐บ๐ธ๐ฎ๐ฑ๐ฌ๐ง๐ต๐ฌ๐ณ๐ฟ Civil-society, say 2015
With all of ours thanks to Australian scholar Annette Johnstone, the University of Queensland, .. making colonial knowledge 1770 t0 1870, Cambridge University Press 2023\ John, economy, thematics, immunology, child development, neurocognitive health and global educational reform, the #auspol state of South Australia 1956 – 2025 Wednesday 17th Dec 2025
Keypad Monkeys and GE/ CE/ CEPW/w, serving economic reform and systematically public-educating for the complete discard of Australian Council of Social Service policing, affective-empathy & disastrously antagonistic ‘How-do-you-feel?’ no-friendship social policy across the broad board since 1991 strongly recommend readers buy Anna Johnston’s book and also acquire ‘Far From a Low Gutter Girl’ re Adelaide and country town SA pre Federation – the days of Catherine Helen Spence, ‘speaking’ of the more than half-broken federation..
“Here I trace Maconochie’s connection to influential intellectuJoal networks and social reformers to examine how he used print and public testimony to shape the image of the Antipodean laboratory in the colonies and the imperial public sphere.
“Maconochie’s naval background and his wide-ranging intellectual interests positioned him uniquely to observe the workings of the penal system. Geographical and strategic curiosity, rather than any direct experience led to his proposal to annex the Sandwich Islands (later Hawai’i) as a British colony, and these traits underpinned his Summary View of the Statistics and Existing Commerce of the Principal Shores of the Pacific Ocean, etc. (1818), regarded as the first economic survey of the region. That substantial study was concerned to ‘fix public attention on the Pacific Ocean, that immense gap in our commercial relations:’ his statistical account sought to correct inadequate knowledge of the [quadrisphere’s] commercial and political resources. Maconochie’s intellectual connections with the Scottish and English Enlightenment and the admiralty ensured that he was among the founders and first office-holders of the Royal Geographical Society in 1830, which led to his appointment as first professor of geography at University College London .. Alison Alexander describes him as ‘an ambitious, self-confident theorist,’ and Maconochie’s career shows both the value and inherent risk when proponents of reform took metropolitan concepts into Antipodean practice. Eventually, Maconochie’s colonial methods were re-imported to Britain, [with questionable success but wide-ranging impact.]
“Maconochie claimed not to have preconceived ideas about penal systems, but he had speculated about the matter since 1818. Maconochie believed that the settlers in New South Wales were [ill-served by a penal system based on punishment] and exile rather than reform, casting [convictism] as a [violation] of settlers’ ‘civil rights as British subjects’ and a contamination of ‘their moral habits and feelings.’ Moreover, Maconochie was concerned that as long as it continued to be a penal colony, New South Wales could never become a ‘flourishing commercial establishment,’ which was the key to the linked port towns embedded in his Pacific vision. The fundamental principles of Maconochie’s penal reform were clear from the outset: prisoners’ positive actions should earn them marks through which they would earn their freedom from servitude, de-emphasising the time served under sentence. Prisoners would be grouped together in small family-sized [collectives] to reward them for behaviours based on [enlightened self-interest and social cohesion,] as opposed to the ‘separate system’ that [atomised] prisoners. So, too, Maconochie shrewdly made persuasive links to other pressing social matters: the secondary threat to mainstream (settler) society from the presence of unreformed prisoners, the moral degradation inherent in slavery that had recently been alleviated by abolition; and the economic and trade potential of [well-run] colonies with a properly mutual relationship to the imperial centre. ..”
That’s me done for major studies for Thu 11 Dec 2025
John Blundell
The two miracle goals of 1988 – Mount Barker and Milang – when you’re hot you’re hot
A PERSONAL SURVEY which might LEAD YOU TO EXAMINE MAKE NOTE of how you operate in the psycho-cultural spiritual mental or commonly RCQS-side reflective, thoughtful, imaginative “ideas – not things” MACRO and micro lived experience domains ..
~ in face to face relationships (in your own micro or community-level school, workplace, household or recreational domain) – technically called the Household- or truly Domestic-economy after Community Economist international faxed newsletter after October 1994
~ in the psycho-cultural spiritual or commonly RCQS-side reflective, thoughtful, imaginative “ideas – not things” MACRO mental domain or OTHER SIDE OF CONSCIOUSNESS Emily Ngwarrai of Utopia around 1991 called in Eastern Arrente “landguage” KUHTA-NGUHLU
Do you hold yourself interpersonally in adversarial or defensive relation to others
(i) Do you hold yourself interpersonally in non face 2 face, anonymous or virtual social RELATIONS where the other (party] is not known to you directly or personally in adversarial, defensive or basically suspicious or untrusting relation to THEM
(ii) How are your interpersonal RELATIONSHIPS with others affected by THEIR physical size or social skills in speech or writing (that is to imply how physically and socially or politically empowered these people are in relation to yourself)
NO NON no Monkeys and Green Ec DO NOT WANT your Survey responses emailed in. The notes you make are STRICTLY FOR YOUR FUTURE USE. GEA and ‘Billionaire Monkeys with MIT Olivetti Group Typewriters AUSTRALIA’ are as you may already know the LETHAL enemies of PROLIFERATING GREY ECONOMY & Organised-crime CRAZY-ARSED START-UP consumer information theft OR gleaning bandit business outfits to further grow the disgusting and literally DUMBING DOWN AND ECOCIDAL for Christ’s sake Alpha-ON-Alpha (20%+ per year) profits of $0.5t – 1.0t a YEAR gargantuan accountancy “houses,” investment 4 the already super-rich “behemoths” and advertising & public relations robber barons, megalomaniacs and hateful old people.
Jonno
Thematics quantum relations logic
that will certainly be enough to get you rocking in a good way
Drive and who in his or her right mind is writing about motor-powered vehicles or rich people’s aeroplanes\ ‘airplanes’ ?
Get the accursed Trash-news-Ted-Turner, Noah Webster and all their successors out of our lives
Banish not only sound-grabs but imagic takes of Mr Donald Take-a-dump from our homes
Backhouse, James A Narrative of a Visit to the Australian Colonies. London: Hamilton, Adams & Co., 1843\ Junk-lit of the Sir George Gipps (who served from 1838 to 1846) period
Now ยฉ Anna Johnston 2023 โ
” The problem of how to reform prisoners and eventually absorb them into general society was a pressing and distinctive one for the Australian colonies. It raised key questions about society, [who was fit to edit a newsletter], who could worship together, who could own property and hence hope to achieve political franchise. The conservative colonial politician James Macarthur led the exclusive party and represented their interests before the Molesworth Committee on Transportation (1837-1838): he railed against former convicts in positions of social responsibility and warned that ‘many disorders, gross corruption, and shameless profligacy, were the inevitable consequences.’ .. [Morality and social corruption were held in tension in these debates. While the Australian colonies were the ideal laboratory in which to conduct this moral experiment, the lessons learned were broadly applicable to modern societies, and the religious reformers and social theorists were acutely aware of this potential to extend their influence.]
” [Ambitious and curious men saw the Australian colonies as providing opportunities for intellectual endeavour and personal advancement.] ..
” When recalled to Britain in 1844 because his new system encountered considerable colonial resistance, Maconochie wrote a steady stream of publications to promote his scheme; appeared before Parliamentary select committees to defend his reputation and extend his influence; and, [along the way, inaugurated many of the foundational modern principles of penology1.] ..
” Here I trace Maconochie’s connection to influential networks and social reformers to examine how he used print and public testimony to shape the image of the Antipodean laboratory in the colonies and the imperial [public sphere2]. ”
w thnks 2 AJ
John
Hey, UWA/ hi F re 1
the thematics quantum relations V logic neurocognitive health concentric circles global โฃ geocommunity โฃ individual adult person economics reform of 25k universities guy
1 play on ‘pen..’ all young Australians at this moment in the 9/5/1901 cocko Federation with its evidently relentless onslaught upon Australian society and human culture in the broad by professors of real estate, by Marxian meliorist Reporting-balance socital parasites & by colourful trades union folk ARE REQUIRED to get with all-of-our global post Feminisation post Normalisation post Barbarism humanisation educational program and do penis jokes (hey). Sides-slapping is fine but as with Elon Musk Public Square politics and your influencer roles forget that this entire accelerated growing-up exercise is not about you let alone your private bodily parts (or cigars & stuff) at your personal peril
2 The Anna Johnston – interesting Church of England Archdiocese of Sydney name that perhaps see HV Evatt’s The Rum Rebellion – references on historical neoclassical academic lines were previously given to @greeneconomyact and greeneconomyaction.com readersn
n+1 A MANUAL FOR WRITERS OF RESEARCH PAPERSโalso known as โTurabianโโis the gold standard for college and graduate students in virtually all academic areas. An introduction to Chicago-style formatting and citation generation, the manual aids students in clear writing, citing, and research practice. At the heart of Turabian is the idea that, no matter the format, the foundations of good research remain the same: to do it carefully, present it clearly and accurately, and follow academic standards for citation, style, and format.
n+2 An initial, unpublished version of the manual was circulated as a booklet for students at the University of Chicago as early as 1937. Kate (i guess though dwelling most uneasily in a brutalist authoritarian facial surveillance society we should state her first name if ever we are about to bandy about her second one) Turabian was DISSERTATIONS SECRETARY at her tertiary instityution
FROM The Antipodean Laboratory: Making Colonial Knowledge, 1770 – 1870, a 313 page ‘ancient’ razza authored by Anna Johnston of the University of Queensland: so Ladies I want you all to be on your best behaviour.. indeed, lend me some sugar: I am your neighbour
While with each breeze approaching vessels glide.\ And nothern treasures dance on every tide!
” ..the first Australian colony emerged from a sea of print. By September 1786, newspapers reported the British government’s decision to establish a colony at Botany Bay (or Norfolk Island), and both the London and provincial newspapers regularly commented as plans proceeded. Government efforts to establish the colony and the many motivations for colonisation are revealed in the late eighteenth-century record-keeping procedures of the British bureaucracy. There was also contention about its practicality. Convict transportation was a driver, given that the decision to establish a penal colony was made in the context of vigorous public debate about crime and punishment under the Pitt government after the disruption caused by the American Revolution, but the colony’s strategic value in the [Hemispheric or mega- “] region [“] and the potential for the new settler colonies to support Britons were also key factors. One vision of the colony’s potential emerged in January 1787 in the King’s announcement at the opening of Parliament. Several newspapers reported that
“ ‘.. It is an undertaking of humanity, for in all the islands of the South Seas, there is not a four-footed animal to be found but the hog, the dog and the rat, nor any of the grain of the other quarters of the world .. By the number of cattle now sending over of various sorts, and all the different seeds for vegetation, a capital improvement will be made in the southern part of the New World; and our ships, which may hereafter sail in that quarter of the globe, must receive refreshment in greater plenty than from the exhausted soil of Europe, consider that all New South Wales is formed of a virgin mould, undisturbed since the creation.’
Beyond convict transportation the benefits of agriculture and ‘capital improvement,’ and the promise of the Antipodean new world to refresh the European old world, were [troth prosaic,] ..pragmatic and metaphorical. In the configuration New South wales was the model for a modern English Enlightenment colony. Most notably, New South Wales provided a distinctive {SPACE] in which Anglophone Enlightenment ideas and evangelical Christianity coalesced3.
” .. So, too, was his metaphoric yoking together of imperial policy, natural history and the untested nature of penal reform in the colony.
” These visions of the new Australian colony – sometimes competing, sometimes mutually constitutive – were shaped and debated in popular print culture. Popularisations of Cook’s Endeavor voyage had created a market for colonial literature; pamphlets and stage performances featuring titillating accounts of Joseph Banks’s intimate exploits in Tahiti; drawings, woodcuts,, engravings, lithographs and vivid descriptions proliferated in the many books and collections devoted to the study of Southern natural history; and the popular genre of travel writing produced descriptions of people, places and environments, which circulated in newspapers as extracts and letters, as well as substantial bound volumes for the private libraries of elite book collectors. Publishers interested in marketing exoticism to British readers were matched by a rich public debate in print about legal and social reforms that addressed [DOMESTIC] crime and punishment problems3. So, too, the evangelical revival mobilised print to speculate and then report on the empire’s newest colony. Together, they produced a book market hungry for accounts of New South Wales even before it was established.
” .. ‘There the proud arch, Collossus-like, bestride
Yon glittering streams, and bound the chasing tide;
Embellished villas crown the landscaped scene,
Farms wave with gold, and orchards blush between.
There shall tall spires, and dome-capt towers ascend,
and piers and quays their massy structures blend ..’
” Hope’s departing edict – to conjoin peace, art and labour – set a lofty ambition for the colony. Wedgewood’s made with Sydney clay were sent back to New South Wales to demonstrate the manufacturing opportunities of colonial materials and served to show, metonymically, how these resources could be refined by European industry and stamped with high cultural aspirations.
” This Utopian discourse occluded the penal origins of Botany Bay and the dispossession of the Gadigal people of the Eora nation; yet it resonated with older antipodean ideas that accompanied Britain’s newest imperial acquisition. A piece in the Lady’s Magazine in 1791 prematurely depicted the colony as a tame landscape, managed by canals to enrich agriculture and the flow of trade and commerce: ‘a civil settlement and polite norms, overseen by an improving colonial projector, Governor Phillip,’ Dierdre Coleman notes. Others imagined the Australian colonies as sites for neoclassical ideals.”
Oh my goodness, Auss-ie readership. I would love to go on [Liar, Kevin], but I’ve already missed a huge chunk of the Brisbane, Sydney, and Melbourne railway commuters heading home for a well-earned.. Some Tuesday huh. Are there trains in Hobart?
Damn, now they’ve all gone home. My kingdom for a mass worldwide audience but y’know, a horse.. But the document’s nice. That’ll do us cranky professors of stuff OK.
Jonno
Adelaide Hills
Meat Pies, Kangaroos, and Hyundaes Yeh
Neurocognitive Health-education
Thematics Logic
1 Garvey, Nathan. Where Sydney Cove Her Lucid Bosom Swells: the Songs of an Imagined ‘Nation, ‘ 1786 – 1789. Literature Compass 4, no. 3 (2007): 599-609
2 Gascoigne, John. The Enlightenment and the Origins of European Australia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002
3 Garvey, Nathan. Selling a Penal Colony: the Booksellers and Botany Bay. Script & Print 31, no. 1 (2007): 20-38
These are some appreciation photos so they are guaranteed that the aids do get to the families and children. Your donation will be a gift of hope, a reminder that we are not alone in this struggle, I can provide you with the PayPal or fund raising link if you would love to make a donation, no matter how little it will go a long way.
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These are some appreciation photos so they are guaranteed that the aids do get to the families and children. Your donation will be a gift of hope, a reminder that we are not alone in this struggle, I can provide you with the PayPal or fund raising link if you would love to make a donation, no matter how little it will go a long way.
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John for GEA & ๐๐๐๐ with Olivetti Group @MIT Keypads