The Wealth Gap or the National Debt: Which Is Worse for the Republic?

Two figures, fifty years apart, tell the story of an American republic that cannot bring itself to decide. The top one percent now holds 31.7 percent of household wealth — the highest concentration since records began in 1989. Federal debt has crossed 99 percent of GDP, on track to break the 1946 wartime record by 2030. The public debate sees one figure or the other; almost no one looks at them together. This essay does. It treats each pattern alone, then together, then renders a candid verdict — in three parts, because the question has three answers and the citizens of a republic are owed all of them. The closest historical analogue is not 1929. It is the Gilded Age proper, 1873 to 1893, when a republic ran two patterns at once until something forced an answer. The data is on the table. The levers are named. What has been deferred is what comes due.

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Courage and Consequence – A Teenager’s Answers Under Cross-Examination Shaped a Nation

Nineteen years old. No lawyer. Could neither read nor write. Sixty trained theologians and a bishop who was both judge and accuser. Four months of cross-examination at Rouen in January 1431. That was what the English Crown assembled to break Joan of Arc.
They could not. Day after day she gave them answers they could not prosecute. They threatened her with torture. The judges voted eleven to three to set the instruments aside. She was too coherent to break.
The trained theologians of the University of Paris are remembered for one thing — they failed. The transcript they wrote down to convict her became the record of their failure.
A peasant teenager who could not read Latin answered the institutional Church of late medieval Europe — and the Church’s own court, twenty-five years later, declared their proceedings iniquitous and false. Joan of Arc needs to be remembered.

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Courage and Consequence – A Commoner Met the King and Did Not Bow

A roof-tiler from Kent. A fourteen-year-old king. An army of commoners arrayed in formation outside London. A dagger taken from another man’s belt. Eight days from chosen captain to severed head on a pole. That was the price Wat Tyler paid for stating his terms at Smithfield on June 15, 1381. He dismounted before the boy king, took his hand, and called him brother. He named the demands on the record, in his own name, before the king’s clerks. He was dead before sundown. The mayor who killed him was knighted. The boy king is remembered in chronicle and history. The man who faced him is named in the chronicles only to spell his death. But the words he made them write down outlasted them all. He carried a peasant’s program from a market field into the permanent record of England. Wat Tyler needs to be remembered.

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Why Republics Fail – A Reader’s Anthology

What the Founders Knew, What They Read, and Why It Still Matters
The literature on republican failure spans two and a half thousand years. Polybius diagnosed the cycle of constitutions before Rome had fallen. By 1787, the American Founders had read every authority who had written on the question.
The Constitution they produced was, in significant part, an applied engineering response to two thousand years of documented republican collapse. Faction, demagoguery, military politicization, corruption, civic decay, the cycle from democracy through mob rule to tyranny — they had names for all of it and cases to cite.
The bibliography of republican failure remains open. Fifteen works, from Polybius to Madden’s forthcoming Princeton volume, frame what every generation needs to know about the conditions that destroy self-government.
The Founders read because they knew the odds. This reading list keeps the odds visible.
A republic, if you can keep it.
The keeping begins with reading.

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Courage and Consequence – A Prison Diary Written Toward the Arena

A Prison Diary Written Toward the Arena
A twenty-two-year-old mother. An infant son still nursing. A pagan father who came to the prison four times, weeping, with the child in his arms. A pinch of incense for the emperor — that was all Rome wanted.
She refused. She wrote it all down — the conversations, the dreams, the morning she decided her son would stay with her father.
She handed the manuscript to a fellow Christian the night before they killed her in the arena.
The empire that condemned her is remembered in every history of Roman Africa.
The procurator who sentenced her has his name in the textbooks.
The diary she left — the earliest extended prose by a woman to survive into Western literature — is read by almost no one outside the church.
She was the first woman in the West whose voice survived the page she wrote it on.
Vibia Perpetua needs to be remembered.

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