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May 5, 2024
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by andrew carnegie. through this idea of the gospel of wealth. and so when a student brings that to mind, there's a number of reasoning processes that they can use to analyze it. but the one i like to think about in terms of this document is the reasoning process of comparison. and so as students can recall, there's an easy comparison to this gospel of wealth, which assumes that the wealthy industrialists during the second industrial revolution should provide some kind of social uplift to the rest of america. and that comparison would be to the ideology known as social darwinism. first generated by an english theorist named herbert spencer. and it was the application of charles darwin's theory of evolution and natural selection to modern societies. and it is that some individuals succeed in modern society and some individuals do not, and that society is improved as those who are more successful, continue to thrive, and those who are less successful do not. it's a very cold ideology and is a comparison in
by andrew carnegie. through this idea of the gospel of wealth. and so when a student brings that to mind, there's a number of reasoning processes that they can use to analyze it. but the one i like to think about in terms of this document is the reasoning process of comparison. and so as students can recall, there's an easy comparison to this gospel of wealth, which assumes that the wealthy industrialists during the second industrial revolution should provide some kind of social uplift to the...
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May 26, 2024
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carnegie fellowship. their writing has appeared in the new york times. the atlantic foreign affairs, among many other outlets. originally from mexico city, they now live with their partner in the bay area. their book, which we have in front us in the shadow of liberty the invisible history of immigrant detention in the united states is the second and most recent book. now, let me say a little bit about the book. um here we go. in the shadow of liberty, the invisible history of immigrant detention. viking press coming officially on the 16th of april 2024. today is the 39th, so you get to have special copies of this book coming out. and like i said, nowhere books has the copies outside this book reveals the history of the immigrant detention system from its inception in the 1800s to the present time braiding together vivid stories of four immigrants seeking to escape the turmoil of their homelands for the promise of america. the book gives this a human face four human faces to be precise, along with many ot
carnegie fellowship. their writing has appeared in the new york times. the atlantic foreign affairs, among many other outlets. originally from mexico city, they now live with their partner in the bay area. their book, which we have in front us in the shadow of liberty the invisible history of immigrant detention in the united states is the second and most recent book. now, let me say a little bit about the book. um here we go. in the shadow of liberty, the invisible history of immigrant...
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May 30, 2024
05/24
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but if your bosses, andrew carnegie, he's not going to remember your name, nor will he care. right. and so what does it mean to force the government to stay neutral and disputes between two people, two sets of groups over how to conduct a business when it seems like perhaps one side ownership side has a built in set of advantages over workers. by the way, also not really a subject of this course, but other courses at umbc this substantive due process also forms the basis for the line of cases. actually, that really did start around the same time as the lochner era, but we really sort of recognize them as being civil rights advances beginning in the 1960s, around the protection of privacy, reproductive rights, marriage, that sort of thing. and it's follows a very similar logic. if you are a grown adult capable of making your own economic decisions without arbitrary government interference, perhaps you should also be accorded the same freedom to run your lives without the government interfering over questions of how you raise your kids, what you do in the privacy of your own home, who
but if your bosses, andrew carnegie, he's not going to remember your name, nor will he care. right. and so what does it mean to force the government to stay neutral and disputes between two people, two sets of groups over how to conduct a business when it seems like perhaps one side ownership side has a built in set of advantages over workers. by the way, also not really a subject of this course, but other courses at umbc this substantive due process also forms the basis for the line of cases....
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May 26, 2024
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carnegie jpmorgan samuel huntington with trains. everybody saw this in the potential and tuskegee and what they were doing and they were pumping up thousands of students who were graduating more than harvard. a saw was happening wanted to help and he could have went to the north and lived like a celebrity could went to europe and lived very easy life making money off speeches. he says, no, i'm staying. the south, an income segregation incomes comes jim crow it unbelievably difficult. but for the people that knew him, for the thousands graduated, there were little by little changing the perception of blacks america. and that's why i just can't get enough of booker t washington and how much there is to learn from him. how much he wrote, and how much he wouldn't be denied. it also taught me something else about. vision and and you know, we talk about norman peale, we talk about anthony robbins. we about napoleon hill and talk about thinking grow rich. booker t washington beat all of them to the punch because in his mind, he pictured su
carnegie jpmorgan samuel huntington with trains. everybody saw this in the potential and tuskegee and what they were doing and they were pumping up thousands of students who were graduating more than harvard. a saw was happening wanted to help and he could have went to the north and lived like a celebrity could went to europe and lived very easy life making money off speeches. he says, no, i'm staying. the south, an income segregation incomes comes jim crow it unbelievably difficult. but for...
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May 11, 2024
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so think of in in right the pinkertons were a private detective agency they were were hired by andrew carnegie right in the carnegie steel mills to infiltrate the unions that were there or that were trying to form. right. certainly there could be violence. they would intimidate union leaders and union organizer was trying to keep them out. but really what they did is serve the muscle. right, for for carnegie and his managers. but in appalachia, in the south west virginia coalfields, the big one was baldwin fells, the baldwin felts detective agency. they were run and operated by a man named felts and his and his family. they were hired by the coal companies who also then with those local politicians, mine guards themselves and law enforcement. right. so you kind of have this kind of pseudo law enforcement that includes, again, these these private police forces. but again, they are not beholden a state. right. or to a government they are their own entity and they are being right by the mining companies themselves. certainly this can bleed. you know, i think you can understand how all of
so think of in in right the pinkertons were a private detective agency they were were hired by andrew carnegie right in the carnegie steel mills to infiltrate the unions that were there or that were trying to form. right. certainly there could be violence. they would intimidate union leaders and union organizer was trying to keep them out. but really what they did is serve the muscle. right, for for carnegie and his managers. but in appalachia, in the south west virginia coalfields, the big one...