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Modern World History 3.10 Captains of Industry 52 Views
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Description:
The Rockefellers, the Morgans, the Carnegies...these were just a few of the Captains of Industry, also known as Robber Barons. We can probably guess which one they put on their LinkedIn profiles.
Transcript
- 00:04
Remember this guy? Sure you do. Mr. John D. Rockefeller, [The photo of John D. Rockefeller appears on the screen]
- 00:08
founder of Standard Oil, and steamroller of all oil competition. [A hand tries to grab oil rig from John D. Rockefeller and fails]
- 00:12
Rockefeller was ultimately worth billions. [gold bricks are placed in vault]
- 00:14
Now, he and captains of industry like him, didn't keep all that money for themselves.
- 00:19
They founded universities and built hospitals. [The image of Rockefeller Institute appears on the screen]
Full Transcript
- 00:22
They donated to the arts.
- 00:24
The put libraries in tiny little towns like Lusk, Wyoming. [A priest moves towards Rockefeller and other industrialists]
- 00:27
Well, someone should have given these guys sainthood, right?
- 00:29
Eh, not so fast.
- 00:30
These captains of industry were also called robber barons for a reason. [Businessmen sit on workers' shoulders]
- 00:35
They turned the industries they dominated into monopolies, so that no other person had a prayer of making any money in them. [A man stands on a railway platform and prays to God]
- 00:40
Not only was the greed of the robber barons bad for consumers, who had no choice but to buy from these men if they wanted certain products, [A girl walks down the street]
- 00:47
but it was ultimately bad for the economy and bad for the American political system.
- 00:50
Many people looked at the Morgans and Carnegies of the world and decided that it was unfettered capitalism [The speaker addresses the workers, while the businessman prompts something to him]
- 00:55
that had allowed these men to become really freakin' wealthy at the expense of everyone else, [hierarchy chart of the society is presented on the screen]
- 01:00
particularly the workers who labored for them at ridiculously low wages.
- 01:04
And so socialism and communism, here in America, were born. [babies cry in the cradle]
- 01:08
Socialism is an economic system where the government controls some of the means of production.
- 01:12
The idea is that this allows more people to benefit when goods are produced. [girls stand in a fuel station and give thumps up]
- 01:16
Social democracy is the political extension of socialism, and its proponents work to change the law so that more industries
- 01:22
can be government-owned and more laborers can earn more money under the least onerous working conditions possible. [A worker stands near a coal mine entrance]
- 01:28
Now, socialism isn't about kicking the individual out of the business sphere entirely. [A leg kicks a guy]
- 01:33
It's about mixing the public and private ownership of the means of production.
- 01:37
Specifically, socialists think the government should own those industries
- 01:40
and produce those goods that every person should have fair and affordable access to,
- 01:44
like transportation and healthcare. [A moving bus stops near a girl]
- 01:45
However, we don't recommend stringing the words “socialism” and “healthcare” together at your dinner table. [A family eats dinner]
- 01:50
Your Grandpa may just keel over there. [An old man falls down from his chair]
- 01:52
Then, there's communism.
- 01:54
When you think of communism, you probably think of dead royalty and Stalin's mustache and Russian reversals. [Stalin's photo pops up]
- 01:59
When we think of communism, we think of
- 02:01
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels and their magnificent facial hair. [The images of Friedrich & Karl Marx appears on the screen]
- 02:05
These two German philosophers used their pens and beards
- 02:07
to encourage the workers of the world to unite, overthrow the robber barons, and take all the goodies for themselves. [Image shows unity of workers]
- 02:13
Sounds like a wacky TV cartoon to us though. [A hand enters from window, grabs a businessman and throws him]
- 02:15
See, in communism, there is no public or private ownership. It's the people who own the means of production.
- 02:21
Any surplus, then, goes back to the people themselves.
- 02:23
Furthermore, if every person in an economic system is a worker and an owner and a consumer,
- 02:28
then traditional social classes can no longer exist.
- 02:31
This was some seriously radical food for thought, and it made the laborers of the world hungry for change. [mine worker is hungry]
- 02:37
Too bad some countries went a little overboard
- 02:38
on communism there in the buffet line.
- 02:41
Well, maybe try some potato salad next time.
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