Oppression In Thomas Paine's America

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In his 1791 publication, Rights of Man, Thomas Paine, an American revolutionary and pamphleteer, characterized America as a just nation where “the principles of society and the rights of man” unite all Americans together. Paine painted an ideal image of America, one founded on unity, equality, and freedom that appears ludicrous to some and visionary to others; however, by combining certain elements of Paine’s America and casting out others we can paint a more vivid picture of contemporary America as only some aspects of Paine’s America remain true. In today’s America, as Paine stated, “the poor are not oppressed” as we see many politicians and citizens dedicate time and effort toward assisting the poor and developing plans to help them out …show more content…

During the Civil War, slaves were treated as mere objects and were used to do work and were whipped and abused. This was true oppression, being forcefully kept in hardship and difficult circumstances by their unjust and authoritative masters. In contrast, the poor are not abused by any “master” nor are they kept in hardship by any unjust or manipulative authority, rather quite the opposite: they are upheld by just and righteous authority. Every four years, when the presidential debates roll around, one of the primary questions candidates are asked is how they will help to decrease poverty rates in America. President Barack Obama, who just recently finished his term, passed the Affordable Care Act, increasing taxes in order to provide free healthcare to the poor. He also used the money earned from taxes to provide welfare, essentially free money, to the poor to help them acquire basic necessities and improve their quality of living. President Donald Trump, who was recently sworn in only five days ago, has made a plan to move many offshore and foreign jobs for American companies back to the U.S., in order to give the lower class more job opportunities to better their conditions. Trump has promised to bring back 25 million jobs in order to help put the poor to work and get them more money. While different parties may have different means to assist the poor economically, Paine’s …show more content…

We face different challenges and have different beliefs. While we all share a common appreciation for freedom as Americans, unlike Paine, it is not such concord and agreement alone that makes America unique. Rather, it is the diversity, the discord, that has shaped and shapes America today as the great country Thomas Paine envisioned. If all Americans were completely “brought into cordial unison,” there would be no change, no innovation, no desire nor need for betterment. With everyone in agreement, we would be surpassed by all other nations, as we would be satisfied with the ordinary, not striving for the best. While dissent is a danger to America, causing division and preventing progress, it is discord that fuels innovation and leads to improvement and success. Such discord, that Paine rejected in his vision of America, is one of the defining characteristics of today’s America that makes it a world power today, constantly striving to do

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