Published 2 days ago • loading... • Updated 2 days agoShow Less IconGuest column: Is the United States becoming a rich man's country, an oligarchy? Summary by Kokomo TribuneDemocrats and Republicans tend not to discuss politics at social events. Recently, however, conversation at a local restaurant converged into two shared concerns: growing income inequality and oligarchy, the excessive influence of the wealthy.Share menu4 Articles4 ArticlesAllLeft4CenterRightSearch IconSort IconCommercial NewsKokomo TribuneLean LeftView articleCaret Right IconNews and TribuneLean LeftView articleCaret Right IconPharos-TribuneLean LeftView articleCaret Right Icon+3 Reposted by 3 other sourcesLean LeftFactualityOwnershipGuest column: Is the United States becoming a rich man's country, an oligarchy?Democrats and Republicans tend not to discuss politics at social events. Recently, however, conversation at a local restaurant converged into two shared concerns: growing income inequality and oligarchy, the excessive influence of the wealthy.2 days agoRead Full ArticleThink freely.Subscribe and get full access to Ground NewsSubscriptions start at $9.99/yearSubscribeCoverage DetailsTotal News Sources4Leaning Left4Leaning Right0Center0Last Updated1 day agoBias Distribution100% LeftBias Distribution Too Big Arrow IconToo Big Arrow IconCaret Up Icon100% of the sources lean Left100% LeftL 100%Factuality Info IconTo view factuality data please Upgrade to PremiumOwnership Info IconTo view ownership data please Upgrade to VantageKokomo Tribune broke the news 2 days ago on Friday, June 12, 2026.Too Big Arrow IconCaret Down IconSources are mostly out of (0)Similar News TopicsUnited States Plus IconShow AllSimilar News TopicsUnited States Plus IconShow All