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Drawing on extensive research and national survey data, sociologist
Donald I. Warren here presents an in-depth analysis of the Middle
American Radicals, who they are, what they believe, the major
targets of their grievances, and the likelihood of their political
mobilization. The evidence indicates that as many as one in five
Americans shares the Radical Center perspective, including people
who outwardly seem to have very little in common by way of
economic, occupational, or education status. Of particular
significance are the findings concerning potential support for the
various presidential candidates and for a third national political
party.
The old saw, "Gennany is the heart of Europe, Saxony the heart of
Germany," Treitschke derided as that "favorite, self congratulatory
phrase" parroted by reactionary Saxons. His ridicule is
understandable. He was born a Saxon, yet adored Prussia, which
forced his native kingdom into the Kaiserreich. Historians of this
century, also loyal in a sense to the German Empire, have dismissed
internal affairs of the federal states as parochial. Thus Saxony,
though wracked by political agitation more severe than in any other
German state during the last two decades of the Wilhelmian era, has
been generally looked upon as peripheral to the great national
issues of the day. Solid as Treitschke's grounds may in his time
have been for scoffing at the anachronism of Saxon particularism,
recent history has shown that Saxony was after all the heart of
Gennany in more than the geographic sense. It was by far the most
Lutheran region of Gennany and was often called the "model land" of
Liberalism, a way of life not to be confused with liberal democracy
in the M usterliindle, Baden, or in the Kingdom of Wiirttemberg. In
Land Sachsen the small independent entre preneur did not vanish
from the scene during the industrial boom of 1871-g0 as he did in
Rhineland-Westphalia.
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