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The Kentucky Cycle | Historical Context
There is a greater difference than is often thought between the mid to late 1980s and early 1990s, on the one hand, and the later 1990s, on the other. The 1980s saw the creation of huge personal wealth for some; but this was contrasted with the widespread problems of unemployment, homelessness, and lack of universal healthcare, as well as the expansion of the national debt to grotesque proportions. To many, the Reagan-Bush era in American politics seemed meaner than those of the 1970s; the policies of ‘‘trickle-down economics’’ and bankrupting the Soviet-bloc countries seemed...
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- The Kentucky Cycle: Introduction
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- The Kentucky Cycle: Robert Schenkkan Biography
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- The Kentucky Cycle: Historical Context
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