
The Coming of Neo-Feudalism
A Warning to the Global Middle Class
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Narrated by:
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Traber Burns
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By:
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Joel Kotkin
About this listen
Following a remarkable epoch of greater dispersion of wealth and opportunity, we are inexorably returning towards a more feudal era marked by greater concentration of wealth and property, reduced upward mobility, demographic stagnation, and increased dogmatism. If the last 70 years saw a massive expansion of the middle class, not only in America but in much of the developed world, today that class is declining and a new, more hierarchical society is emerging.
The new class structure resembles that of Medieval times. At the apex of the new order are two classes - a reborn clerical elite, the clerisy, which dominates the upper part of the professional ranks, universities, media, and culture, and a new aristocracy led by tech oligarchs with unprecedented wealth and growing control of information. These two classes correspond to the old French First and Second Estates.
Below these two classes lies what was once called the Third Estate. This includes the yeomanry, which is made up largely of small businesspeople, minor property owners, skilled workers, and private-sector oriented professionals. Ascendant for much of modern history, this class is in decline while those below them, the new Serfs, grow in numbers - a vast, expanding property-less population.
The trends are mounting, but we can still reverse them - if people understand what is actually occurring and have the capability to oppose them.
©2020 by Joel Kotkin (P)2020 by Blackstone PublishingA wake up call to what we are loosing in the west.
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A must read for anyone who cares about their future.
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It reminds us that, those who are ignorant of history, often become it’s victims.
Amazing book.
A unifying book for left and right
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Great read
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Well read book with some good information.
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However, the author used a lot of rhetorical fallacies, including presenting stat's and quotes to "prove" arguments without context or nuance. The author's personal and cognitive biases pepper this book.
I'd say this reads like someone trying to bludgeon the audience into accepting what they feel is right rather than an examination of ideas.
An important topic poorly examined.
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interesting and insightful but has some flaws
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An important book
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I do think the term is a bit overworked here though. One characteristic of feudalism is the formal structure of vassalage, but he doesn't present anything comparable to that beyond a severe shrinking of economic power. He's also highly focused on Big Tech, but extreme inequality predates the internet and the underlying drivers were neoliberal reforms to Keynesian economics, the unleashing of globalisation and the enablement of increasing share of returns to capital at the expense of labour.
I also didn't fully buy into the notion of the clerisy as a single supportive force for orthodoxy comparable to the Church back in the day. He describes Piketty's characterisation of the Brahmin Left and Merchant Right, acknowledges their differences but then tries to bring them together as a single institution. But these two sides don't exactly collude in their support for trickle-down economics or Big Tech's Brave New World. He tries to bring in wokeism but it doesn't sit right in the critique here either, as it doesn't amount to a quasi-religious justification of inequality. For all the intellectual incoherence of the full woke stack of ideas, you can at least say that it is not a church of inequality.
Overall, this was a thought provoking book and well worth a look.
The Maladies of our Times
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very educational and eyes opening
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