The wealthy and powerful few have dominated the masses throughout most of human history. This is starkly visible now more than ever—today, the gulf between oligarchs and the average citizen is larger than any gap that existed during European serfdom or the slave society of Imperial Rome. We have arrived at the most blatant version of oligarchy that most modern states have endured, with politicians bought and paid for across the political spectrum.
The strange thing we aren’t in open revolt against this system. In fact, we keep voting to prop it up. Why?
In The Blind Spot, political scientist Jeffrey A. Winters delivers an urgent, incisive account of how we reached this era of in-your-face oligarchy, exposing how modern democracy was developed to protect the interests of the ultra-rich. By tracing the evolution of oligarchy across the globe and through modern history, he demonstrates how the rule of the wealthy isn’t just a flaw in our democracy, it has been built into its very foundations. Now, in an extraordinary paradox, we exist in a state of “participatory inequality”: a world in which 99.99% of us participate openly and freely—democratically, even—in our own ongoing exclusion and disenfranchisement.
But powerful change can begin when we have a clear understanding of where we are, and where we deserve to be. As well as shining a light just how bad our political reality has become, The Blind Spot introduces bold ideas for how we might shift the balance of power. While the rich and powerful do not cede power quietly, this period of shocking inequality is, Winters shows, an opportunity for transformation.
Jeffrey Alan Winters is an American political scientist at Northwestern University, specialising in the study of oligarchy. He has written extensively on Indonesia and on oligarchy in the United States. His 2011 book Oligarchy was the 2012 winner of the American Political Science Association's Luebbert Award for the Best Book in Comparative politics.
Oligarchy as “the politics of wealth protection” is not a definition but it's a good slogan. I’m also down for pushing “Wealth Defence Industry”. There isn’t much meat here, tho. The book is a collection of US historical vignettes and anecdotes – mostly tax-related - of the rich going overboard trying to protect their money. It’s certainly entertaining to read (hence 3*), but the narrative isn’t accompanied by any arguments or built into a theory. The perspective is also very slanted – we get no serious presentation of the arguments from the other side, only: the rich are straight baddies and a social cost.
I received an advanced reader copy of The Blind Spot: How Oligarchs Dominate Our Democracy, and it’s one of the clearest explanations I’ve seen of how concentrated wealth quietly shapes everything around us.
What stuck with me is the argument that this isn’t a breakdown of democracy; it’s happening through it. The idea that oligarchic influence isn’t a flaw but a built-in feature of the system is hard to ignore once the author lays it out.
The historical comparisons and modern examples make the case feel grounded, not theoretical. It connects policy, money, and influence in a way that actually makes sense and makes you question more than you probably expected going in.
As someone who leans Democrat, I agreed with a lot of it, but what makes this strong is that it doesn’t rely on outrage. It’s measured, well-argued, and confident in its analysis.
If you want to better understand why inequality persists and how power really operates behind the scenes, this is absolutely worth your time. It’s direct, insightful, and sticks with you.
Very detailed. My only pain point is the chapters are very long, especially the one on the history of the United States and how we got to this point; it would have benefited from breaking it up because there is a lot covered.
This book was odd. The introduction was good, and lays out its main argument that the wealthy use their political power to avoid paying taxes above all else. No doubt this is well established in social science literature, but the rest of this book is just not compelling.