Steve Russell
5 min readSep 28, 2020

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$750 Worth of Equality

The Strongman from Pixabay

In France and in the European colonies of North America, two revolutions were fought over the same French ideas and key battles were turned by French naval cannon.

The principal idea on the rise was equality, which turned out to offer catchy slogans but few methods for governance. The ensuing chaos led to the rise of Napoleon in France; in post-revolution America, the same chaos produced only one strongman capable of pulling together all the important interests, the man who might have defeated George III to become George I if he cared to grasp for the main chance.

France’s return to autocracy as the newly minted United States continued to struggle with creating new democratic institutions could be explained by the “great man” theory or by economics or the peopling of the “new” continent might have created a politics sui generis. Some people point out the splendid equality of the guillotine, thought to be necessary to the French revolution but completely absent in North America.

In the Cherokee Nation, where I hold citizenship in addition to the U.S., you do not get to be an “elder” because you got old. It requires substantially more than age, and it’s not something you call yourself. It’s what others call you if they are so moved.

In addition to being born with a right to dual citizenship, I was born a writer. This is not intended as a boast. It’s a statement of fact, and it seems to me that winning some kind of genetic lottery is not an appropriate subject for a boast.

Like most Indian kids, I did not do well in the public schools. After 10 years of misery, I was able to quit for good, leaving me with a 9th grade education. If I had a buck for every time I was told I would never get a good job without a diploma I would have no need for a good job.

It would be futile to attempt a list of all the jobs I’ve had but it’s a useful cut to the chase to say I’ve had two careers. For 17 years, I was a trial court judge in Travis County, Texas. For the next 15 years, I was first an assistant professor at the University of Texas-San Antonio and then associate professor at Indiana University-Bloomington.

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Steve Russell

Enrolled Cherokee, 9th grade dropout, retired judge, associate professor emeritus, and (so far) cancer survivor. Memoir: Lighting the Fire (Miniver Press 2020)