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May 9th, 2024

Insight

Take 'Rich Men North of Richmond' Seriously

 Dan McCarthy

By Dan McCarthy

Published August 22, 2023

 Take 'Rich Men North of Richmond' Seriously

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You don't need a college degree to understand what's happening in our country.

Oliver Anthony, the songwriter behind the viral hit "Rich Men North of Richmond," didn't even finish high school. But his song is the most intelligent political commentary of the year.

That's because there are two parts to it, though most critics and many admirers have only picked up on one.

The song isn't simply a class-war complaint. The trouble with the rich men north of Richmond isn't that they're rich; it's that "they all just wanna have total control / Wanna know what you think, wanna know what you do."

Anthony, real name Christopher Anthony Lunsford, is a throwback to the folk libertarianism that gave us the American Revolution.

There's a social and spiritual level to the song beyond its obvious economics.

Maybe that's easy to miss because Anthony's biography sounds like something Hollywood would dream up for a working-class troubadour.

He lives in a trailer in Farmville, Virginia.

He cracked his skull working in a North Carolina paper mill, spent six months unemployed, plunged into depression and tried to drown his suffering in alcohol.

And he can really sing: "Rich Men North of Richmond" has poignant lyrics, but its appeal lies as much in the simple catchiness of its sound, and Anthony's voice puts auto-tuned pop stars to shame.

It would make a great movie, but Anthony's life shouldn't be reduced to a caricature, and neither should the message of his song.

Look at the first verse: "Overtime hours for bulls—- pay" is the line that catches everyone's attention.

If low pay is the problem, the obvious solution is more money, so some economic conservatives say Anthony (or the song's version of him) should just pack up and move wherever jobs pay more, while progressives would simply mandate higher wages or provide generous welfare benefits.

Those answers don't address what Anthony actually sings about, which isn't just money but "sellin' my soul ... So I can sit out here and waste my life away / Drag back home and drown my troubles away."

The song's economic agenda is in fact notably Reaganite, as Anthony directs his ire at inflation ("dollar ain't s—"), taxes ("it's taxed to no end") and welfare as a substitute for work ("if you're 5-foot-3 and you're 300 pounds / Taxes ought not to pay for your bags of fudge rounds").

That's not just a rejection of progressive nostrums; it's a powerful rejoinder to complacent conservatives who think that moving to Florida is a substitute for sound monetary policy and an anti-tax agenda designed to appeal to people like Anthony, not just rich men north of Richmond.

Moving from one end of the country to the other doesn't help anyone escape inflation, and writing off workers angry about their taxes and how they're spent is a surefire way for Republicans to lose the House, the Senate and the Electoral College, regardless of how prosperous things might seem in certain red states.

Anthony's song is a warning to the populist right as well, however.

The rich men north of Richmond have created conditions in which wealth accrues to the financial sector, the highly educated and the politically connected.

In the context of Virginia, "north of Richmond" is a synonym for the suburbs of Washington, D.C., which wield enormous political power and economic sway over the state.

This is the "total control" Anthony sings about.

The problem with the people north of Richmond isn't only their progressive politics or their self-dealing as insiders in a system they control; it's also that control itself — the sense that the destiny of men like Oliver Anthony is decided faraway, where they have no voice.

Americans felt that way during the revolution: They had no representation in a Parliament an ocean away, where decisions about taxes, trade and the entire economic life of the colonists — to say nothing of their religious and political lives — were made by strangers.

If the counties (and states) north of Richmond were red instead of blue and treated the working men south of Richmond with magnanimity rather than neglect or contempt, there would still be a problem because what those men need isn't patronage; it's control over their own lives and a say in their fate of their own communities.

No wage will ever be high enough if the men who earn it aren't free.

"Rich Men North of Richmond," like populism itself, is about control, not wages.

(COMMENT, BELOW)

Previously:
08/16/23: How America Kills Its Own
08/08/23: The Biden Pardon That Can Spare America
08/01/23: Harding, a consevative for the ages
07/25/23: Demography Destiny, for Us and China
07/18/23: The Frontrunner Who Looks Like a Loser Is Biden
07/11/23: Britain's Bad Example for American Conservatives
07/05/23: Could We Still Win a Revolutionary War?
06/27/23: Civilizations Clash -- in Ukraine and at Home
06/20/23: China Comes for the Caribbean
06/13/23: Fertility, Family and Bio-Socialism
06/06/23: From American Dream to Orwell's Nightmare
05/23/23: Ukraine war is an existential struggle --- for the West
05/23/23: Learn the Right Midterm Lessons -- or Lose in 2024
05/16/23: Feinstein Today Is Biden Tomorrow
05/09/23: Trump, DeSantis and Political Courtship
05/02/23: RFK Jr.'s Threat to Biden
04/25/23: Biden's Lost Generation
04/25/23: Who's In Charge of Clarence Thomas?
04/11/23: Beyond AI, Our Cyborg Future
04/04/23: 2024: 3 Leaders, 1 Way to Win
03/28/23: Climate Science Makes a Bad Religion
03/21/23: All the Conspiracy That's Fit to Print