The elite revisited
With
the election results that would determine whether Scotland could leave the
United Kingdom hot off the press, one article caught my attention. The premise
of the pundit was that we were seeing an attempt by the common folk to shed
themselves of the failed governance of the elite. He went on to conclude that
that is what we are seeing throughout the Western World, even in our own
country, with the rise of movements like the Tea Party.
This
analysis reminded me of an article I read a few months ago concerning a shift
in Google’s hiring policies:
In a conversation with The New York
Times’ Tom Friedman, Google’s head of people
operations, Laszlo Bock, detailed what the company looks for. And increasingly,
it’s not about credentials.
Google looks for the ability to step back and
embrace other people’s ideas when they’re better. “It’s ‘intellectual
humility.’ Without humility, you are unable to learn,” Bock says. “Successful
bright people rarely experience failure, and so they don’t learn how to learn
from that failure.”Those people have an unfortunate reaction, Bock says:
“They, instead, commit the fundamental attribution error,
which is if something good happens, it’s because I’m a genius. If something bad
happens, it’s because someone’s an idiot or I didn’t get the resources or the
market moved. … What we’ve seen is that the people who are the most successful
here, who we want to hire, will have a fierce position. They’ll argue like
hell. They’ll be zealots about their point of view. But then you say, ‘here’s a
new fact,’ and they’ll go, ‘Oh, well, that changes things; you’re right.’”
Talent exists in so many places that hiring managers who
rely on a few schools are using it as a crutch and missing out. Bock says:
“When you look at people who don’t go to school and make
their way in the world, those are exceptional human beings. And we should do
everything we can to find those people.”
The above motivated me to revisit and resurrect my column of
a few years back on why commoners don’t like or trust our elite rulers.
In his column published in The Sun July 26, 2010, Richard Cohen bemoans the fact that politicians have to
dumb down their message and credentials in order to get elected. He claimed they have to hide their academic
degrees from prestigious universities and avoid their erudite vocabularies and play
down their intellectual abilities. He
seems puzzled as to why we commoners don’t appreciate these elitists.
When
writing for The Sun, for the most part, I have avoided
politics, but I can’t resist taking this opportunity to enlighten Mr. Cohen. To begin with, his column reflected the
condescending attitude of so many elitists.
We commoners may not be the smartest people on the planet, but there are
some things that insult our common sense.
Intuitively, we know it does not take a 2,000 page bill, unread by those
who voted on it, to reform health care or our financial institutions. In both instances, we were told it must be
passed so we can know what is in it. Such actions tell us it is not intellectual
aplomb that rules in our capital but rather political savvy and gamesmanship.
Secondly,
those who are elite, erudite, and graduates
of prestigious universities often promote an ideology unacceptable to us common
folk. They eschew the label liberal and prefer
to call themselves progressives. Either
way, the ideology goes way back.
The late Malcolm
Muggeridge, tells about his experience with progressives back in the
1920’s. He had grown up with a socialist
father, and Beatrice Webb, the famous British socialists, was his aunt, fore
runners of modern progressives.
As
a young reporter, he moved his family to Moscow, Russia, where he intended to
live out the rest of his life and contribute to the development of the great,
people’s utopian experiment known as Soviet communism. He was quickly disillusioned with this
progressive ideology. Even as the failures of the experiment became obvious,
there continued to be regular visits by American elitists, mostly college
professors and government bureaucrats, to Russia to get a glimpse of this
wonderful experiment.
Muggeridge
reports in his autobiography that these elitist so badly wanted this experiment
to be a success that they would believe just about anything they were told, and
so, he would try and see how far he could stretch their credulity. It was common for the visitors to ask why
there were so many lines of poor peasants at stores and government
offices. Muggeridge would explain that
these people were so committed to the grand experiment that they would work themselves
from morning to night to make it happen.
The only way the government could insure that the people would get some
rest was to engineer these long waits.
Yes, many of the elitists bought it, according to Muggeridge.
As
an ideology, progressivism has been around long enough that it has developed
its own unthinking fundamentalists. The
latest iteration of this ideology is being expressed by politicians like Barack
Obama, Harry Reid, and Nancy Pelosi. It
makes no difference that their progressivism has been tried and found wanting
around the world in a number of venues, these current progressive
fundamentalists are going to try it anyway.
Those
of us who live in what the elites dub fly over country, who graduated from
common state universities, or didn’t even get that far, see political games
being played with our borders, our taxes, our health care, our investments, our
jobs and our energy. We look at the
messes in our country and around the world, and we realize that these things
are the results of policies of the erudite, elitists who graduated from
prestigious universities, and we become suspicious of those who govern. We just want straight talk and solutions.
Mr.
Cohen might ask himself why an intellectual heavy weight like Bill Buckley
would rather, “entrust the government of the United States to the first 400
people listed in the Boston telephone directory than to the faculty of Harvard
University.” Why didn’t Buckley, an
erudite, intellectual elite, graduate of Yale University, trust people with his
qualifications to run the government?
What did he know that we don’t?
One
of my college professors and a lifelong friend and novelist, the late Robert O.
Bowen, once explained to me that a true intellectual is a person who observes
life going on around him, thinks carefully about what he observes, and learns
from it – nothing said about books.
So, Mr. Cohen, those of
us who are suspicious of the elite, the erudite, and those with credentials
from prestigious universities, are people who can learn from the past,
something the progressives you want us to embrace don’t seem to do.
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