I’m kind of a crazy association thinker (or maybe just crazy in general). I’m also pretty obsessive about public policy and its relationship to politics, so you could only imagine how my wheels started turning as I saw Titanic 3D today. While most people just take the movie at its gushy face value, I relate it to the era of bull-moose progressivism that the film takes place in. After all, nothing happens in a vacuum; the behaviors and interactions of the Titanic passengers reflect the social stratification that was prevalent at the time. The attitude of the day, championed by Teddy Roosevelt, was that big businesses and corrupt trusts ran amok, and needed to be reigned in by an activist government. At the same time, progressives such as Roosevelt didn't buy into Marxism, and believed that jungle-capitalism would anger the public into embracing radical utopian schemes such as socialism. Reforms were needed to appease the public, and open them up to a kindlier, gentler market. The progressive warnings against unbridled capitalism are echoed throughout the movie; it is interesting to wonder if James Cameron was aware of this. In the free-for-all leading up to the Titanic’s sinking, Rose’s arrogant fiancee, Cal, tries bribing an officer into letting him onto a lifeboat. The officer eventually rejects Cal’s money, though, since a soon-to-be-dead man doesn’t have much use for green-backs. Given the gravity of the situation, its surprising that the officer would even go for the bribe in the first place, but Cal is instead shocked when the officer later refuses him. From this scene of the movie, it seems like the upper class folk like Cal worship the almighty dollar, to the point of trying to strike a deal at death’s doorstep.
The expectation that the officer should take the money, death notwithstanding, has parallels in Upton Sinclair’s 1906 classic The Jungle, in which meat-packers are expected to take their low-paying jobs in the face of deadly working conditions. Progressives and socialists alike viewed this dollar-induced-irrationality as a tragic consequence of laissez-faire capitalism. If Upton Sinclair and Teddy Roosevelt sat down together to watch the Titanic, they would be horrified at the guns and gates used to keep lower classes from boarding the lifeboats. The threat of force, combined with the iron bars separating the steerage section of the ship from the top, made Jack and Rose’s escape nearly impossible. In this case, the moneyed interests of the ship teamed up with the officers and personnel of the Titanic to gain lifeboat access; the nexus of money and coercion proved to be fatal to scores of lower-class families trying to escape the ship. Cal’s bribery of the officer in charge of the lifeboats shows that pathology and irrationality are often found at the intersection of money and power privilege.
The injustices shown in the blockbuster-hit are simply echoes of the tensions that existed in the world of the progressive era. Often, progressives and “reformers” scapegoated the free-enterprise system, when in fact government force and crony capitalism were to blame. Would the meatpacking industry have continued to mistreat their workers if police had not violently put down workers strikes against them? Following the publication of Sinclair’s The Jungle, meat sales plunged and many European markets shut their doors to American beef. This might’ve spelt the end for the misbehaving meatpacking industry, but the government responded with a bill providing taxpayer-funded certification for beef. The industry, known for mistreating workers and selling a faulty product, was able to expand its market share through restoring confidence in its products.
Today, stomach-offending gobbledygook like “pink slime” is branded as food, and the government monopoly over meat inspection has been hijacked by the industry. Thanks to the nefarious partnership of the USDA and big meat, companies have been barred from using rapid testing for mad cow disease, and there is deceptive labeling abound. Can we really be surprised, though? Whether on board the Titanic, in meat-packing plants, or in the corrupt offices of regulatory agencies, the combination of industry money and government power holds down the interest of the common man. Once we correctly diagnose the problem as crony capitalism, perhaps “reformers,” social critics, and movie producers will realize that voluntary cooperation and a marketplace of capital and ideas are they key to keeping society afloat.

