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Why do we call it pitchfork economics? (with Ganesh Sitaraman and Walter Scheidel)

Why do we call it pitchfork economics? (with Ganesh Sitaraman and Walter Scheidel)

FromPitchfork Economics with Nick Hanauer


Why do we call it pitchfork economics? (with Ganesh Sitaraman and Walter Scheidel)

FromPitchfork Economics with Nick Hanauer

ratings:
Length:
33 minutes
Released:
Dec 11, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

In 2014, venture capitalist Nick Hanauer warned his fellow plutocrats that our growing crisis of economic inequality would lead to an uprising or a dictatorship. Two years later, angry voters elected Donald Trump. In this inaugural episode of Pitchfork Economics, we explore why the pitchforks are coming, who they’re coming for, and how the stories we tell about the economy can change the economy itself.
ShownotesThe Pitchforks Are Coming… For Us Plutocrats: https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/06/the-pitchforks-are-coming-for-us-plutocrats-108014
Twitter: @nickhanauer 
Facebook: @CivicSkunkWorks @NickHanauer
Medium: https://civicskunk.works/
Ganesh Sitaraman: Professor of Law at Vanderbilt Law School and Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress. Co-founder and Director of Policy for the Great Democracy Initiative. Policy Director to Elizabeth Warren, 2011-2013. Author of The Crisis of the Middle Class Constitution: Law in the Age of Small Wars, named one of the New York Times’ 100 notable books of 2017.
Twitter: @ganeshsitaraman 
Walter Scheidel: Historian at Stanford. The most frequently cited active-duty Roman historian adjusted for age in the Western Hemisphere, Scheidel is the author or (co-)editor of 20 books, including The Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality.
Twitter: @walterscheidel
Released:
Dec 11, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Any society that allows itself to become radically unequal eventually collapses into an uprising or a police state—or both. Join venture capitalist Nick Hanauer and some of the world’s leading economic and political thinkers in an exploration of who gets what and why. Turns out, everything you learned about economics is wrong. And if we don’t do something about rising inequality, the pitchforks are coming.