introduction of three mutations of society-wide
communication systems during the relatively brief history of the United States.
Specifically, we refer to the social order instigation of new transportation
systems that in turn altered the very fabric of the social order itself. In the
nation’s history, there have been three distinct paradigm shifts regarding
transportation on a national scale: the intercontinental railroads, the
interstate highway system and commercial aviation. Each of these transitions,
while grounded in technology, forced or enabled major shifts in the social
orders of the day.
The introduction of new technology on a
broad scale often encompasses a problem of infrastructure.
While an element of the technology may be individual or personal in size and
scope, the technology itself may require a significant infrastructure in order
to achieve its full utility. Such was the situation with credit cards that we
discussed in previous chapters. To achieve ubiquity of application, it was
necessary to standardize and then deploy the infrastructure through which
credit cards function. Likewise, in the deployment of telephone payment cards,
France Telecom had to stimulate development of virtually the entire supporting
industry. Our point here is that to address certain classes of infrastructure
deployment, nothing less than stimulus from the prevailing social order will
suffice. Such was certainly the case with the relevant transportation systems.
Each offers a metaphorical illustration of the current computer network
situation.
At the beginning of the Civil War in
1861, the United States was essentially comprised of two nations separated by a
broad landscape populated by indigenous peoples. These Native Americans
presented quite advanced civilizations organized along tribal boundaries.
However, their technological capabilities were significantly inferior to that of
the United States that existed along the west coast and the eastern reaches of
the North American Continent. In the early days of the Civil War, two major
railroad companies were given incentives by the federal government to build
railroads linking the eastern United States to the west coast. These incentives
included land, in the form of broad right-of-ways for the railroad tracks, and
direct financial payments to offset the cost of laying track. The societal goal
for these incentives was largely driven by commerce. Content production in the
east sought markets in the west. Populating the ostensibly “available” lands
with immigrant populations required large scale transportation facilities from
each coast of the country. Moreover, capital needs in the east sought the
wealth of the west; wealth in the form of raw materials to fuel industrial
production. Again, massively enhanced transportation facilities were needed. In
the end, of course, the societal outcome was significantly greater than the
original goals.
In the most basic terms, the completed
railroads turned the two distinct regions of the country into a contiguous
nation. Resolution on the battlegrounds of the Civil War in turn affirmed the
primacy of The Union over the individual states. Even more profound, this
unification of both physical and social structure of the United States dealt a
death knell to any hope of independence of the Native American tribes.
Frederick Jackson Turner offers an overview of the conquest of the frontier and
its resulting impact on American society in his writings published under the
title History, Frontier, and Section:
Three Essays. The end result was a truly united set of states that were
individually encompassed by many distinct cultural sections of country all tied
together by the railroads. At the beginning of the Civil War, travel from the
east coast to Europe was quicker and easier than was travel to the west coast.
Likewise, commerce between the west coast and Mexico and countries in Asia was
more common than that with the eastern reaches of the country. By the early XXth
Century, with the completion of the transcontinental railroad system and the
ensuing conquest of The West, the United States comprised an interconnected
social order that spanned the breadth of the continent.
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