Republicans don’t like us to talk about inequality. But we all know there’s a growing gap between rich and poor. And Wednesday on The Last Word, Timothy Noah joined Lawrence O’Donnell for a fascinating, in-depth discussion of the issue.
Noah—a writer for The New Republic and the author of a new book, The Great Divergence: America’s Growing Inequality Crisis and What We Can Do About It—said Republicans have used a sequence of tactics to try to deflect concern over the problem since it began to generate mainstream media attention last year.
“First they tried to deny that the issue even existed,” he said. “Then they tried to say it’s justified by the fact that upward mobility in the United States is so much swifter than elsewhere. Which turns out not to be true—the U.S. lags most other western democracies when it comes to mobility. And finally they’ve just given up and said, let’s not talk about it at all.”
Indeed, as O’Donnell noted, Mitt Romney dismissed concern over the issue as “envy” in an NBC News interview earlier this year.
Noah went on to recount how we got here.








