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What is the Greatest Force Shaping Our Age? | Ricochet.com | 06.25.13
On the front page of Saturday’s Wall Street Journal, two unrelated articles pointed to a greater story.
The first concerned a 15- or 16-year-old factory girl in Bangladesh. Her name was Mahinur Akhter. She survived five weeks of burial in the collapsed garment factory where she had worked. A seamstress, she had earned $90-100 a month, essential to her family. Her father died in a traffic accident last year. She now struggles with fear of returning to rickety industrial buildings versus the needs of her mother and siblings. But the tragedy of the factories is part of a greater story of hope.
“For millions” in Bangladesh, the article noted, “global demand for cheap garments provides a chance to lift their families from destitution.” It continued:
The second article concerned protests in Brazil. It focused on a young man, 14 to 15 years older than Ms. Akhter:
My point is that these two young people are part of the greatest force of our age — the rise of a global middle class. By “middle class” I don’t mean a family with a house in the suburbs, two cars in the garage and 2.5 children. Twentieth- and 21st-century America. The global middle class’s standards are far more modest. But in shaping their countries and the world, this burgeoning population is no less powerful than the American middle class (actually North American — Canada went through the same revolution at the same time as we did) has been here and globally.
The young Tunisian street vendor who set himself afire protesting oppressive corruption in his country was an example of the new middle class in motion, as was, in many respects, the entire Arab Spring. So are the massive population movements that have sparked debates over immigration in the U.S., U.K. and throughout Europe. So are the dynamism of and widespread unrest in China.
Many decades ago, in his classic volume Political Man, political scientist Seymour Martin Lipset wrote that rapid rises of wealth tended to spawn periods of radical politics. Lipset’s observation suggests that Islamofacism, too, may be an evil cousin in this otherwise enormously constructive family.
At root, of course, the global middle class is the child of two parents: the rule of law and free markets, both of which set up house and spawned offspring in hitherto unanticipated parts of the world following the Reagan-Thatcher revolutions of the 1980s and the subsequent collapse of the Soviet Union. And as with all conceptions, to the union of law and markets came a thing divine: the breath of life that is the human spirit.
Some time ago I wrote about the implications of these developments. Since then, age has not withered them nor custom staled their infinite variety. And their child, the global middle class, has grown into the most vital and hopeful force in our times.