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I'm asking, because as I was reading What's The Matter With Kansas, by Thomas Frank, he tells of how the worse things get, "depopulation, the rise of the food trust, the general reorganization of life to favor the wealthy," the more Kansans take up arms—against the very Populist traditions that prevented the very thing that is currently happening.
"Kansans just don't care about economic issues, gloats republican senator Sam Brownback, a man who believes the cause of poverty is spiritual rather than "mechanistic." Kansans have set their sights on grander things, like the purity of the nation."
This struck a chord with me, reminding me of the Shawnee prophet Tenskwatawa, who wielded enormous influence at a time when the Shawnee tribe was at a low point (game animals non-existent, crops poorly tended, and settlers taking their land with the help of the US military). It also reminded me of the Ghost Dance movement among the Paiute of Nevada, who were in roughly the same boat as the Shawnee. In this case, the leader, Wovoka, told his people that if they wore special clothing, they would be impervious to bullets, or weapons of any kind.
Are we at a similar juncture in the US today? Have people become so forlorn, that they have instead put their trust and faith in the religious "prophets" of our time, and by default, the right-wing American Taliban, i.e. the Republican party—in fact, the very agent of their destruction? Why care about the economy, or Iraq, when our very souls are at stake?
Is this a valid comparison? I know that there are other examples throughout history, but I found it interesting that Frank focuses on Kansas, and both examples I've mentioned also take place in (mostly) the Midwest—the Shawnee in Ohio, and the Paiute in Nevada. Opinion?
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