The United States of America could easily today say that the "Golden Age" of this country was during the 1950s and 1960s when the Middle Class was the power and base of the country. Before these two decades, this country underwent an expansion and was more concerned with covering this huge continent in government much less in forming any sort of cohesive society or class. During the Industrial Revolution, the country went through enormous growth in the upper class. The forming of such wealth dynasties as the Rockefellers, DuPonts, Mellons, Vanderbilts, and Posts. The Gilded Age was defined by American heiresses marrying penniless titled nobility of England. One of the more famous unions was that of Jenny Jerome to Lord Randolph Churchill, who heir managed to save Western Civilization.
After the two World Wars of the 20th Century, the middle class rose to prominence. The country rose in stature in the world and became a huge cause for democracy and self-governing. That may have been mutated into something not so grand as what it had originally been planned, but the hope was that the country if by no other reason than by existing by example, could cause change for good in the world.
Not surprisingly, the Greeks believe the middle class was also the strength of a country or in their case a city-state:
Aristotle envisions the middle class not just as morally superior to the elite but also as more stable and reliable than the poor. And a city-state governed by the middle classes is superior not just to oligarchies but also to tribal peoples, often nomadic and without permanent settlements, who define their political existence by precivilizational ties of blood and marriage
I totally agree. It is the middle class that understands the balance of human life. When a class of persons is working hard to maintain a business or land by keeping their heads about them the entire time of their life, they tend to be much more practical in every aspect of life. Whereas the elite tends to have too much time to get into trouble or think of excessiveness in almost any area of life, the middle class can not be consumed by those degenerative thoughts as they will soon fail, within a very short time. This keeps the middle class sane, and on a focused, clear path toward making a life that is not only good but can often be successful and most of all something of benefit to had to the next generation.
On top of the middle class is so fabulous, is in my case (as an older American) having been handed a free and fair world hardly fought with the blood and lives of many Americans as a gift to the future generations, who have the responsibility to pass on those same freedoms to their children. But without the citizen participation, there will be nothing but shambles to pass on.
For socialism kills everything. And it kills everything very rapidly, like unimpeded cancer.
There is a whole section in "The Dying Citizen" written by Hanson as almost homage to the middle-class after the Aristotle quote in Chapter 1.
According to Euripides, there are three classes of citizens:
There are three groups of People:
There are the rich who are never satisfied....
There are the poor who, because their daily bread is never enough, are dangerous....
And...there is a third. This one is between them. It's there to keep the order, it's there to keep the city safe.
"America needs a brushfire, a moral and spiritual brushfire. And brushfires burn from the bottom up." ~ Bob Woodson