Up front I would like to say that I usually don't write pieces like this, pieces that are perhaps overly simplistic and provocative and lacking a more balanced and nuanced view of things. But in the best spirit of provocation to encourage the dialog... here goes!
I keep seeing statistics and voices calling out that the economic disparities between rich and poor in this country continue to widen. It makes me wonder... in a democratic society where (at least politically) âmajority rulesâ, how come the most wealthy among us, âthe one percentersâ as they have recently been coined, seem to continue to call the shots on a government financial policy? Why doesn't at least a majority of the âninety-nine percentersâ come to an agreement and vote for a more equitable path forward?
There are a number of explanations out there for this, which in my opinion have at least some merit.
1. Many of us still believe in the âAmerican Dreamâ of becoming âone percentersâ ourselves so we don't want to diminish that hallowed group we aspire to.
2. In our society, âmoney is powerâ, and with the expense of running political or legislative campaigns, the wealthy in this country can exercise tremendous political power relative to their numbers.
3. There is a persistent Calvinist ideological thread in the U.S. that accepts that there will always be âwinnersâ and âlosersâ, and that the presence of so many âlosersâ is the greatest inspiration encouraging all of us to try harder, to excel and join the ranks of the âwinnersâ.
Along with the above, I would put forward at least a fourth reason why the vision of the majority is not asserting itself in our political process and legislative action. Most of us have been âschooledâ in a public education system to be passive recipients of approved knowledge, accepting external authority from our superiors telling us what to do and when to do it, while we are told to sit quietly and attentively in our seats. Thirteen years of such âtrainingâ in preparation for the adult world, and no wonder we generally fail to assert our political will!
This while most of us who are part of the âone percentersâ, have been raised in an environment away from these public schools, an environment where we are trained instead with an expectation that we will be in the seat of power and wield it. We have an expectation that we must actively leverage our power to maintain and even enhance it. Here is radical educator John Taylor Gatto calling out the components of an elite education that are not found in conventional public schools.
And in a more recent book, The Education of Millionaires, author and Forbes blogger Michael Ellsberg, he calls out hisseven âcore success skillsâ gleaned from his study of the most economically successful among us...
* Learn How to Sell
* Learn Marketing
* The "Right" Way to Network with Big Wigs
* Define Your Vision
* Invest in Yourself
* Build the Brand of "You"
* Take an Entrepreneurial Mindset
Look at the stories of the most successful of the entrepreneurs among us who by leveraging their energy and innovative ideas, rise into that top economic percentile of Americans. Those stories, including those of Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and others, usually involve avoiding, rather than staying in, conventional public education.
Our public school system seems to excel instead at creating academic winners and losers, and among the winners, train up the âapparatchiksâ (or a âmass of clerksâ as Gatto has said) that will pull down an upper-middle class income doing the high-powered grunt work for âThe Manâ. That actually is not surprising to me given that one of the key visionaries of the U.S. public education system was Horace Mann, whose vision was significantly influenced by his study of the Prussian education system in the early 19th century. The Prussians developed perhaps the first mandatory universal education system in the world, with a three-tiered system of schools as follows...
Tier 1 â For the children of the Prussian aristocratic elite (their âone percentersâ) to train them to be entrepreneurial, strategic and visionary leaders of society
Tier 2 â For the top ten percent of the rest of the country's youth (the âwinnersâ of the non-elite) to be the âknowledge workersâ as professionals, industrial managers and the middle-level military officers
Tier 3 â The rest of the rest (the âlosersâ) to be the worker-bees of the economy and rank and file foot soldiers of the army
Having the social privilege of being white, combined with the economic privilege of solid middle-class âknowledge workerâ jobs, my partner Sally and I were able to let our kids follow their instincts and leave school in their early adolescence before they were completely transformed into either academic âwinnersâ or âlosersâ. Directing their own development after that point, in the enriched environment that we had the privilege to provide them, they are both now launched into adulthood with living-wage jobs, aspirations based on who they are as unique human beings, and the tested agency to set goals and effectively move towards manifesting those goals.
I hope they both can live up to their professed beliefs in equity and the democratic process and leverage their agency to join with other like-minded people to challenge the logic of âThe Manâ that keeps the âone percentersâ on top of still formidable pyramid of undemocratic power and privilege.