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Read the following passage and answer the following question: Woodrow Wilson was referring to the liberal idea of the economic market when he said that the free enterprise system is the most efficient economic system. Maximum freedom means maximum productiveness; our? openness is to be the measure of our stability. Fascination with this ideal has made Americans defy the? Old World categories of settled possessiveness versus unsettling deprivation, the cupidity of retention versus the cupidity of seizure, a? status quo defended or attacked. The United States, it was believed, had no status quo ante. Our only station was the turning of a stationary wheel, spinning faster and faster. We did not base our system on property but opportunity—which meant we based it not on stability but on mobility. The more things changed, that is, the more rapidly the wheel turned, the steadier we would be. The conventional picture of class politics is composed of the Haves, who want a stability to keep what they have, and the Have-Nots, who want a touch of instability and change in which to scramble for the things they have not. But Americans imagined a condition in which speculators, self-makers, runners are always using the new opportunities given by our land. These economic leaders (front-runners) would thus be mainly agents of change. The nonstarters were considered the ones who wanted stability, a strong referee to give them some position in the race, a regulative hand to calm manic speculation; an authority that can call things to a halt, begin things again from compensatory staggered? starting lines. Reform in America has been sterile because it can imagine no change except through the extension of this metaphor of a race, wider inclusion of competitors, ?a piece of the action, as it were, for the disenfranchised. There is no attempt to call off the race. Since our only stability is change, America seems not to honour the quiet work that achieves social interdependence and stability. There is, in our legends, no heroism of the office clerk, no stable industrial workforce of the people who actually make the system work. There is no pride in being an employee (Wilson asked for a return to the time when everyone was an employer). There has been no boasting about our social workers—they are merely signs of the system‘s failure, of opportunity, denied or not taken, of things to be eliminated. We have no pride in our growing interdependence, in the fact that our system can serve others, that we are able to help those in need; empty boasts from the past make us ashamed of our present achievements, make us try to forget or deny them, move away from them. There is no honour but in the Wonderland race we must all run, all trying to win, none winning in the end (for there is no end).
It can be inferred from the passage that the author most probably thinks that giving the disenfranchised “a piece of the action” is
a compassionate, if misdirected, legislative measure
an example of Americans’ resistance to profound social change
an innovative program for genuine social reform
a monument to the efforts of industrial reformers
Correct answer is [b]. Note the context: “it can imagine no change”. We can say by this statement that they were resistant to any change. [a] option contradicts this statement that’s why it is not correct. [c] produces the same phenomenon of change.
By: Gaurav Rana ProfileResourcesReport error
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