During the end of The Gilded Age, technology and innovation expanded, and the United States was thought of as becoming a growing empire. With this growing empire came a lot of changes, trends and differences in opinions. Theodore Roosevelt, Ida M. Tarbell, and Upton Sinclair, sat down to discuss the continuing problems that started with the Gilded Age.
Theodore Roosevelt was an astounding opinion leader and was someone people considered to be as the prominent head of the Progressive Era. He discussed with Ida M Tarbell, and Upton Sinclair about his frustrations towards the lands resources “So many people of this country blindly believe that our resources are inexhaustible, but they would be incorrect in believing so. ” he would say, “With the growth of technology, the resources The United States needs is far too great and harmful for our Nation.”
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Tarbell, fueled with anger on this whole topic, would slam her book on the table. “While we are on the topic of national resources, ” she would exclaim, “The coal-oil business is primarily owned by Mr. Rockefeller, a robber baron himself.” She would then proceed to discuss his unethical, cheating, and deliberate rigging of railroad prices and other distrustful practices against competitors in the oil trade.
Upton Sinclair would be hanging on the edge of his seat eating up every word, waiting for his turn to talk. He would then slam his Journal, The Jungle, on the table. “- And while we are on the topic of horrible and unethical practices of the rich man taking advantage of the poor, lets discuss the conditions of the working man in the meat industry.” He continued to discuss the gruesome, shocking, and awful treatments that the men had to deal with on a daily, reading an excerpt from his article, “Let a man so much as scrape his finger pushing a truck in the pickle rooms, and he might have a sore that would put him out of the world; all the joints in his fingers might be eaten by the acid, one by