Pittsburgh

'Much better is this great irregularity than universal squalor. Without wealth there can be no Maecenas. The 'good old times' were not good old times.'" So wrote Andrew Carnegie, Pittsburgh's most storied son, in 1889 about the Industrial Revolution he helped spur and the tremendous wealth it created for his city and the world. To Carnegie and his latter-day capitalists gathered here for the G-20 summit this week, protesters say "hell no"—along with other words not suitable for a family newspaper.

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