• UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    But it also ended in the 20s.

    Okay, so you’re talking about the 1890s-1920s “Progressive” Era of Prohibition and Sufferage.

    Not the 1930s-70s New Deal / Great Society period of progressivism that was great for middle class white people and maybe a little less great for African Americans, East Asians, and American Natives who had to claw their way into a post-industrial standard of living against all the best efforts of the settlers.

    Again, I might suggest you look back at the history of the T.Roosevelt to Wilson administration and reconsider whether this is the benchmark for progress you’ve been sold on.

    • ZombiFrancis@sh.itjust.works
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      14 hours ago

      Okay, so you’re talking about the 1890s-1920s “Progressive” Era of Prohibition and Sufferage.

      Yeah, as that’s what that time period is called: “Progressive Era”.

      Not the 1930s-70s New Deal / Great Society period of progressivism

      No, I am not referring to the period following Prohibition Era and the Great Depression which was an intermediate (1920s-1930s) before New Deal.

      If you’re taking issue with the ‘Progressive Era’ being called ‘Progressive’ then sure. I get you then. It mostly just achived women’s suffrage as a meaningful milestone, as I said.

      • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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        13 hours ago

        Yeah, as that’s what that time period is called: “Progressive Era”.

        The top level comment is referring to the New Deal/Great Society period, which followed the depression and the tariffs that the post itself is referencing. There’s some confusion because “Progressive Era” was capitalized in that top level comment, but that’s not what they were actually referencing.