Bryan, Bernie, and the Soul of the American Worker
Submitted by Jackson Andrews (@liftoffstocks)
Over the last 150 years, there has been much discussion in the United States over the plight of the worker and the state of society. Wages, working conditions, and billionaires have been constant themes in the discussion over the plight of the worker in America. This discussion has continued today, with the narrative having changed little since the Gilded Age when the debate began to heat up in earnest. However, one thing that is not mentioned in any of these debates is the spirit of work and the spiritual principles that society is directed towards.
The 1896 Democratic Convention saw William Jennings Bryan win the nomination for President off of his now famous “Cross of Gold” speech. The main argument at the time was whether the US Dollar should be based on gold or silver. The nuances of the debate are unimportant in the modern era, what is important was that the theme of the debate was the same: the working man benefited from Silver while the Capitalist class benefited from the Gold Standard. Bryan concluded his speech on the issue by proclaiming "You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns; you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.". It was a noble speech, with eerily similar themes to those being touted by Bernie Sanders (outside of the crown of thorns, that is). Ultimately, the argument being made by Bryan is only over the medium of exchange received by workers. It can reasonably be argued that even in 1896, there were many more issues affecting workers across the country. Bryan would go on to lose the election of 1896 to the capitalist-backed McKinley on sectional lines, with the North unanimously choosing the Republican to lead the country.
Bryan’s loss in the General Election of 1896 has some striking similarities to the failure of Bernie Sanders to win the nomination of the party in both 2016 and 2020. They both targeted their campaigns towards middle/lower-middle class workers who routinely toil in the workplace but have little to show for it. Both had their base of supporters in the smallest states in the country (Bryan in the rural Midwest and Sanders in Vermont/New Hampshire), while industry in New York and the larger states overwhelmingly supported their opponents. But all of that is to gloss over the fact that arguments solely over pay can easily be deflected.
Fast forward to the 1950’s and the issue over the soul of the worker had finally come to the forefront. While in the 19th century, many men engaged in monotonous and soulless factory work, they could at least feel like men while doing it as the work required strength and physicality. The rise of corporations and the emergence of the white-collar man in the 1950’s changed all of this to a large degree. Social commentators such as Arthur Schlesinger would comment on this phenomenon and argue that men needed to retake their role in society. Rather than lifting and engaging in physical labor, men were now dressed in suits and completing spreadsheets. To compound this emasculation, machines were now completing a lot of the work that men used to do, leaving many to search for a meaning to both their lives and their work. This comes very close to describing a problem with the role of “work” in modern society, but even in the 19th century, the work was largely soulless and only ordered towards the dollar.
Julius Evola describes the issue spot on in Revolt Against the Modern World. He writes
“The comforts available to everyone and the super production of consumerist civilization that characterize the USA have been purchased with the enslavement of millions of people to the automatism of work…. Instead of the type of artisan, for whom every job was an art and whose work carried an imprint of personality, we have today a herd of pariah who dumbly witness the work of machines, the secrets of which are known only to the person in charge of repairing them”.
Evola wrote this in 1934, but it became a mainstream concern in the 1950’s and has yet to be remedied. Men transitioned from physical labor to pressing buttons on machines that they did not understand. In the past there was a real, spiritual meaning to the work one did. Evola mentions the artisan, which is a perfect example of a trade where the worker left a unique imprint on his work. In general, a society of robots only working for the dollar is not healthy or beneficial to the society in the long term.
The issue of the worker has been a main topic of contention in the past and likely will be important going forward. As long as society prioritizes the almighty dollar over the spiritual direction of society, work will continue to be a mundane task which people tolerate in order to provide for their family. High wages are definitely important, and the growth of the family is critical for society. So long as there is a culture that worships profit above all, the Elite class will not pay a single dollar more than they have to and will go to extreme lengths to keep their cheap labor because their true religion is profit and they will never apostatize. While campaigns such as that of Bryan and Sanders are considered “for the worker”, they are generally materialist in nature and tend to miss the real issues at play.