Jayme A. Sokolow is an independent scholar and businessman who holds a Ph.D. in History from New York University. He is the author of four previous books on American history and the history of the Western Hemisphere, three eBooks on developing government proposals, and articles on history and business development. He lives in Silver Spring, Maryland.
A Nation of Inconsistencies is a social history of the creation of a new American society from 1789 to 1860, told through the lives of ordinary men and women from all parts of the country and all levels of society. The American Revolution destroyed certain kinds of hierarchy and popularized a strong commitment to liberty and opportunity, political equality for white males, a government of the people, and the rule of law. But as Americans created a republican society that was unique in the world, they also built a dual state where white males redistributed wealth from African-Americans in the form of slavery and from indigenous peoples in the form of land to themselves and their families. For African-Americans and Indians, the United States was not a republican society but a predatory state that expropriated their labor and territories to help build a liberal, prosperous democratic society for others.
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