Stampeding Black Elephants

NOV. 22, 2014

Tom Friedman

SYDNEY, Australia — I PARTICIPATED in the World Parks Congress in Sydney last week and learned a new phrase: “a black elephant.” A black elephant, explained the London-based investor and environmentalist Adam Sweidan, is a cross between “a black swan” (an unlikely, unexpected event with enormous ramifications) and the “elephant in the room” (a problem that is visible to everyone, yet no one still wants to address it) even though we know that one day it will have vast, black-swan-like consequences.

“Currently,” said Sweidan, “there are a herd of environmental black elephants gathering out there” — global warming, deforestation, ocean acidification, mass extinction and massive fresh water pollution. “When they hit, we’ll claim they were black swans no one could have predicted, but, in fact, they are black elephants, very visible right now.” We’re just not dealing with them at the scale necessary. If they all stampede at once, watch out.

No, this is not an eco-doom column. This one has a happy ending — sort of. The International Union for Conservation of Nature holds the parks congress roughly every 10 years to draw attention to the 209,000 protected areas, which cover 15.4 percent of the planet’s terrestrial and inland water areas and 3.4 percent of the oceans, according to the I.U.C.N.

I could have gone to the Brisbane G-20 summit meeting, but I thought this was more important — and interesting. A hall full of park exhibits and park rangers from America, Africa and Russia, along with a rainbow of indigenous peoples, scientists and environmentalists from across the globe — some 6,000 — focused on one goal: guarding and expanding protected areas, which are the most powerful tools we have to restrain the environmental black elephants. How so?

It starts with a simple fact: Protected forests, marine sanctuaries and national parks are not zoos, not just places to see nature. “They are the basic life support systems” that provide the clean air and water, food, fisheries, recreation, stable temperatures and natural coastal protections “that sustain us humans,” said Russ Mittermeier, one of the world’s leading primatologists who was here.

That’s why “conservation is self-preservation,” says Adrian Steirn, the South Africa-based photographer who spoke here. Every dollar we invest in protecting natural systems earns or saves multiple dollars back. Ask the people of São Paulo, Brazil. They deforested hillsides, destroyed their watersheds, and now that they’re in prolonged drought, they’re running out of water, losing thousands of jobs a month. Watch that story.

Walking around the exhibit halls here, I was hit with the reality that what we call “parks” are really the heart, lungs, and circulatory systems of the world — and they’re all endangered.

Onodelgerekh Batkhuu, the director of the Mongol Ecology Center, stops me to explain that Lake Hovsgol National Park in Mongolia, which holds 70 percent of the surface freshwater of Mongolia — 2 percent of the world’s freshwater — and is the headwaters for 20 percent of the world’s freshwater that is in Lake Baikal in Siberia, is now under huge pressure from hoteliers. “How do we get them to understand that the value of that lake staying pristine is more valuable than any hotels?” she asks.

John Gross, an ecologist with the U.S. National Park Service, who has worked in Yellowstone for 20 years, uses a NASA simulation to show me how the average temperature in Yellowstone has been rising and the impact this is having on the snowpack, which is now melting earlier each spring, meaning more water loss through evaporation and rapid runoff, lengthening the fire season. But, hey, it’s just a park, right?

People forget: Yellowstone National Park is “the major source of water for both the Yellowstone and the Snake Rivers,” said Gross. “Millions of people” — farmers, ranchers and communities — “need those two rivers.” Yellowstone’s snowpack is their water tower, and its forest their water filters. Its integrity really matters. What happens in Yellowstone, doesn’t stay in Yellowstone.

 

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Inequality, Unbelievably, Gets Worse

NOV. 16, 2014
Steven Rattner

THE Democrats’ drubbing in the midterm elections was unfortunate on many
levels, but particularly because the prospect of addressing income inequality grows
dimmer, even as the problem worsens.
To only modest notice, during the campaign the Federal Reserve put forth
more sobering news about income inequality: Inflation-adjusted earnings of the
bottom 90 percent of Americans fell between 2010 and 2013, with those near the
bottom dropping the most. Meanwhile, incomes in the top decile rose.
Perhaps income disparity resonated so little with politicians because we are
inured to a new Gilded Age.
But we shouldn’t be. Nor should we be inattentive to the often ignored role
that government plays in determining income distribution in each country.
Here’s what’s rarely reported:
Before the impact of tax and spending policies is taken into account, income
inequality in the United States is no worse than in most developed countries and is
even a bit below levels in Britain and, by some measures, Germany.
However, once the effect of government programs is included in the
calculations, the United States emerges on top of the inequality heap.
That’s because our taxes, while progressive, are low by international
standards and our social welfare programs — ranging from unemployment
benefits to disability insurance to retirement payments — are consequently less
generous.
Conservatives may bemoan the size of our government; in reality, according
to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, total tax revenues in the United States this year will be smaller on a relative basis than
those of any other member country.
And income taxes for the highest-earning Americans have fallen sharply,
contributing meaningfully to the income inequality problem. In 1995, the 400
taxpayers with the biggest incomes paid an average of 30 percent in taxes; by
2009, the tax rate of those Americans had dropped to 20 percent.
Lower taxes means less for government to spend on programs to help those
near the bottom. Social Security typically provides a retiree with about half of his
working income; European countries often replace two-thirds of earnings.
Similarly, we spend less on early childhood education and care. And another
big difference, of course, is the presence of national health insurance in most
European countries.
All told, social spending in the United States is below the average of that of the
wealthiest countries. And other governments help their less fortunate citizens to a
greater extent than we do in ways that are not captured in the income statistics.
The United States, which is the only developed country without a national paid
parental leave policy, also has no mandated paid holidays or annual vacation; in
Europe, workers are guaranteed at least 20 days and as many as 35 days of paid
leave.
To his credit, President Obama has succeeded in keeping income disparities
from growing even wider, by such measures as by forcing tax rates on the
wealthiest Americans up toward fair levels.
Meanwhile, on the programmatic side, among the many meritorious aspects
of the much-maligned Affordable Care Act are its redistributionist elements:
higher taxes on investment income and some health care businesses are being
used to provide low-cost or free health care to a projected 26 million Americans
near the bottom of the income scale.
But much more can and should be done — like raising the minimum wage
nationwide and expanding the earned-income tax credit (a step supported by
Republicans).
Helping those in the middle, whose incomes have been battered by
globalization, will be harder and take longer. Expanded training programs and
better education should be the centerpiece of any strategy to improve the lives of the middle class. A more robust economic recovery will also help the middle class,
as will pro-growth policy initiatives like investment in infrastructure.
Critics from the right argue that doing more to level the income pyramid
would hurt growth. In a recent paper, the International Monetary Fund dismissed
that concern and suggested that a more equal distribution of income could instead
raise the growth rate because of the added access to education, health care and
other opportunities.
While some believe that the recent elections will stimulate both parties to
make progress on the mound of challenges, in my view, that’s a bit of a fantasy.
But we can’t stop talking about the problem of inequality, because then there really
would be no hope.

 

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Job Growth, but No Raises

By NY Times THE EDITORIAL BOARD NOV. 7, 2014
The employment report for October, released on Friday, reflects a steady-as-shegoes
economy. And that is a problem, because for most Americans, more of the
same is not good enough. Since the recovery began in mid-2009, inflationadjusted
figures show that the economy has grown by 12 percent; corporate
profits, by 46 percent; and the broad stock market, by 92 percent. Median
household income has contracted by 3 percent.
Against that backdrop, the economic challenge is to reshape the economy in
ways that allow a fair share of economic growth to flow into worker pay. The
October report offers scant evidence that this challenge is being met. Worse, the
legislative agenda of the new Republican congressional majority, including
corporate tax cuts and more deficit reduction, would reinforce rather than reverse
the lopsided status quo.
The economy added 214,000 jobs last month, in line with its performance
over the past year. Consistent growth is certainly better than backsliding, but
growth is still too slow: At the current pace, it will take until March 2018 for
employment to return to its pre-recession level of health.
Even then, more jobs would not necessarily mean higher pay. Updated figures
by the National Employment Law Project, a labor-advocacy group, show that
about 40 percent of the private-sector jobs created in the last five years have paid
hourly wages of $9.50 to $13, and 25 percent have paid between $13 and $20.
Those findings are underscored by the new jobs report, which shows that nearly all
of the private-sector job gains were in restaurants, retail stores, temporary work,
health care and other low-to-moderate-paying fields.
Wages have barely kept up with inflation for several years running, and there
are no economic or political forces to push them up. Working people can make
more when employers bump up hours, which in October averaged a post-recession
high of 34.6 hours a week. Workers also will see their paychecks go further as gas
prices fall. But they are not getting ahead in any real sense.
None of this was inevitable. When the private sector is unable or unwilling to
create good jobs at good pay, government is supposed to use stimulus to spur
employment. It is also the job of government to enact and enforce polices like
robust minimum wages and legal protections for union organizing. But the 2009
stimulus, too small to begin with, was offset by federal spending cuts beginning in
2011, while job-enhancing policies have gone nowhere, in large part because of
Republican opposition.
Other forces that undermine broad prosperity bear examination. Trade with
nations that manipulate their currency, exploit workers and damage the
environment to gain unfair advantages costs Americans jobs. An outsized financial
sector feeds bubbles and busts that devastate employment. Republican leaders
have identified new trade deals and less financial regulation as priorities, but a
heedless push on those fronts ignores the negative job-related consequences.
The economy is not working for those who rely on paychecks to make a living,
which is to say, almost everyone. Steady gains in the October jobs report, while
welcome, do not change that basic fact. Nor will policies currently on the horizon.

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The Midterms Were Not a Revolution

By FRANK LUNTZ NOV. 5, 2014
ON election night 1994, as Republicans recaptured the House for the first time in
40 years, I stood in the audience and watched my client Newt Gingrich, who would
soon become speaker of the House, declare the beginning of the “Republican
revolution.”
I knew immediately that the smartest man I had ever worked for was making
the worst rhetorical blunder of his career. Nobody voted Republican to start a
revolution. They did so because they were fed up with a Democratic president
overreaching on health care and a government seemingly incapable of doing even
the smallest thing effectively. We all know what happened when Mr. Gingrich tried
to turn his rhetoric into action.
Sound familiar? No one is quite saying “revolution” this week, but
Republicans across the country, in their glee over Tuesday’s elections, are coming
dangerously close to making the same mistake.
True, there will now be more Americans under Republican representation
than at any time in decades. And the re-elections of G.O.P. governors in blue states
like Michigan and Wisconsin are certainly a validation of their policies. It was a
tsunami; someone needs to get the Democrats a towel. But that anti-Democrat
wave was not the same as a pro-Republican endorsement. In many races that went
from blue to red, Republican success was hardly because of what the G.O.P. has
achieved on Capitol Hill. In fact, if Americans could speak with one collective voice
— all 310 million of them — this is what they said Tuesday night: “Washington
doesn’t listen, Washington doesn’t lead and Washington doesn’t deliver.” Purple
states tossed out their Democratic senators for being too close to Washington and
too far from the people who put them there.

The current narrative, that this election was a rejection of President Obama,
misses the mark. So does the idea that it was a mandate for an extreme
conservative agenda. According to a survey my firm fielded on election night for
the political-advocacy organization Each American Dream, it was more important
that a candidate “shake up and change the way Washington operates.”
I didn’t need a poll to tell me that. This year I traveled the country listening to
voters, from Miami to Anchorage, 30 states and counting. And from the reddest
rural towns to the bluest big cities, the sentiment is the same. People say
Washington is broken and on the decline, that government no longer works for
them — only for the rich and powerful.
They voted out those who promised to do more in favor of those who said they
would do less, but do it better. That’s why the Democratic candidates for governor
who condemned their opponents for spending too little on education,
transportation and programs for the poor and unemployed still lost. The results
were less about the size of government than about making government efficient,
effective and accountable. Our election night survey showed that 42 percent chose
their Senate candidate because they hated the opponent more. One pre-election
poll had over 70 percent willing to throw everyone out and start fresh.
Winning on Election Day is not the end. The objective can’t be just to bide
time for the next election; that’s a losing strategy. The mission has to be a
restoration of confidence in the future. The question is: What can Republicans at
all levels do to make this happen, and avoid repeating the mistakes of the past?
First, hold Washington accountable. From the cover-ups of veterans dying
while being denied care to using the I.R.S. to target conservative groups, recent
scandals highlight the chasm between hard-working taxpayers and Washington.
But this also means holding your colleagues accountable. No turning a blind eye to
broken promises. If you’re truly different, act truly differently.
Second, make the people’s priorities your priorities. In our survey, the top
priorities were making the government more efficient and controlling spending. So
tackle deficits and the national debt, and root out the waste and abuse of
government programs. Reduce the crippling red tape and regulations that are
strangling small businesses. As the House majority leader, Kevin McCarthy, said,
show that a Republican Congress has both the wisdom to listen and the courage to
lead.

Third, stop blustering and fighting. Americans despair of the pointless
posturing, empty promises and bad policies that result. Show that you are more
concerned with people than politics. Don’t be afraid to work with your opponents
if it means achieving real results. Democrats and Republicans disagree on a lot,
but there are also opportunities of real national importance, like national security
and passing the trans-Atlantic trade deal.
Aside from a small activist constituency, Americans are not looking for
another fight over same-sex marriage or abortion. This isn’t to say that voters want
their leaders to co-opt their convictions. People are simply tired of identity politics
that pit men against women, black against white, wealthy against poor. More than
ever, they want leadership that brings us together.
This isn’t about pride of ownership regarding American progress; this is about
progress, period. Americans don’t care about Democratic solutions or Republican
solutions. They just want common-sense solutions that make everyday life just a
little bit easier. But they can’t get their houses in order until Washington gets its
own house in order.

Frank Luntz, a communications adviser and Republican pollster, is president of Luntz Global Partners, a consulting firm.

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The Myth of the Free Press

Posted on Oct 26, 2014

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The Imperative of Revolt

Truthdig – The Imperative of Revolt

Posted on Oct 19, 2014

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How 14 People Made More Money Than the Entire Food Stamp Budget for 50,000,000 People

The Richest 14 Made Enough Money to Hire Two Million Pre-School Teachers or Emergency Medical Technicians

Billions of dollars of wealth, derived from years of American productivity, have been transferred to a few financially savvy and well-connected individuals who have spent a generation shaping trading rules and tax laws to their own advantage. It’s so inexplicably one-sided that the 2013 investment earnings of the richest 1% of Americans ($1.8 trillion) was more than the entire budget for Social Security ($860 billion), Medicare ($524 billion), and Medicaid ($304 billion).
Why Does So Little of Our National Wealth Go to Feed People or Provide Jobs?

The fruits of American productivity go to the richest Americans, who can afford to hold onto their fortunes, defer taxes indefinitely, and then pay a smaller capital gains rate when they eventually decide to cash in. Worse yet, they can stash their winnings overseas, tax-free. It is estimated that $7.6 trillion of personal wealth is hidden in tax havens. That means, stunningly, that $1 of every $12 of worldwide wealth is hidden in a haven.

America has no wealth tax, no financial speculation tax, no means of stopping the rampant redistribution of money to the rich. As Noam Chomsky said, The concept of the Common Good that is being relentlessly driven into our heads demands that we focus on our own private gain, and suppress normal human emotions of solidarity, mutual support and concern for others.
Who Are These People Taking All the Big Money?

A review of the richest 20 shows that opportunism and ruthless business practices and tax avoidance, rather than entrepreneurship, vaulted these individuals to the top:

Bill Gates used someone else’s operating system to start Microsoft.

According to the New York Post, Warren Buffett’s company, Berkshire Hathaway, “openly admits that it owes back taxes since as long ago as 2002.”

Koch Industries is jeopardizing our clean air and water, moving its toxic waste to Detroit and Chicago, trying to take away the minimum wage, seeking to take down renewable energy initiatives, and laying off thousands of workers.

Walmart makes $13,000 in pre-tax profits per employee (after paying salaries), yet takes a taxpayer subsidy of $5,815 per worker.

Jeff Bezos has spent millions of dollars per year on lobbyists, lawyers, and political campaigns to maintain Amazon’s tax-free sales in order to undercut competitors and drive them out of business.

Larry Page and Sergey Brin are the founders of Google, which has gained recognition as one of the world’s biggest tax avoiders, a master at the “Double Irish” revenue shift to Bermuda tax havens, and a beneficiary of tax loopholes that bring money back to the U.S. without paying taxes on it.

Zuckerberg, like Gates, was an opportunist, overcoming superior competition with his Harvard connection, gaining better financial support, and — allegedly — hacking competitors’ computers to compromise their user data.

Job Creators?

As for the argument that Microsoft, Google, etc. created products and jobs: It was the industry that did it, supported by decades of research and innovation, and involving tens of thousands of American workers, from scientists to database clerks. Our nation’s winner-take-all philosophy makes it look like one person did the work of all these contributors. That’s wrong as can be, especially for this year’s version of the richest Americans.

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Derek Jeter, and Our Own Mortality

Dan Rather Become a fan
Host, ‘Dan Rather Presents’

Sept 30, 2014

The baseball great Jackie Robinson was famously quoted as saying, “athletes die twice.” And I found that thought echoing in my mind as I watched the final games of Derek Jeter. What must this past season have been like for a man with still so much life before him, hearing all those eulogies to his youth? “Ballplayer” is the only identity Jeter has ever known, and now, at an age when many are only getting started, he will have to redefine his life.

Throughout his career Jeter has earned a reputation for being circumspect with the press, for keeping his private life private, along with his thoughts, hopes, and fears. As a journalist you want people to talk but I always respected Jeter’s short answers and silence. He was, as so many fans and commentators have noted, a throwback to a time when the mark of a professional was do your job well and let that speak for itself. But one always wondered whether Jeter was so quiet because he didn’t have much to say or whether he had a lot to say but was keeping it to himself. I always sensed the latter, and now, after some remarkably un-Jeter-like press conferences, we are getting a window into this man who for two decades lived in the spotlight without casting much of a shadow. We have learned that this star athlete, who played on baseball’s biggest stage and whose private life glittered with the bright lights of Hollywood, is human like the rest of us. He spoke of holding back tears and some of the uncertainty of what’s to come. And that glimpse of vulnerability seemed to only raise his mythic status.

But this outpouring of emotions surrounding Jeter is much more than just about him, or even baseball. We tear up at a Gatorade commercial not just because we will miss Jeter playing shortstop but because we recognize that we are all moving towards our own final curtain. Twenty years, we think, has it all gone by so fast? We measure the milestones in our own lives over that time: births, and deaths, graduations, marriages, and divorces, new jobs, retirements, and everything else that marks the human condition.

I think it is poignant that Jeter’s departure from a game that was once accurately called America’s Pastime comes at a moment when our nation’s current most popular sport, football, is facing so much controversy. Growing up in Texas, I played football and have always loved the strategy and power of the gridiron. But I always thought that baseball captured the better instincts of our republic. When I would travel the world and hear some of the negative stereotypes about the United States, I would often shake my head and think to myself if only they understood baseball. Americans have no appreciation or sense of history? Tell that to the guys at the bar arguing over whether Clayton Kershaw is better than Sandy Koufax. Americans are impatient? Tell that to the father who brings his daughter to Cubs games, year after year. Americans don’t appreciate nuance? Tell that to the fans wondering what the pitcher is going to throw after setting up a hitter with two consecutive sliders in the dirt.

But more than the games or players themselves, it is the baseball season that I find so resonant. It starts in spring, when, as I heard one Mets fans say, “spring hopes eternal” (or maybe the punctuation should read “Spring! Hope’s eternal”). The season, then, peaks through the long days of summer, only to invariably wind down with the coming chill of fall. And if your team is really good, it cheats death for a couple weeks into the postseason — closer to winter. Baseball is a game where the best teams will have losing streaks and the best hitters will fail more than they succeed. It’s a game where you don’t have to be freakishly tall or big to succeed. And throughout it all, it is a game that marks time. One former Major League outfielder told me what he misses most about his playing days was the sense of seasons. Over those 162 games, he would find comfort in tracking the shift of the arc of the sun in the sky, as human beings have been doing since before recorded history. It’s no wonder that the renaissance of baseball stadium architecture returned the game to one that is best played outdoors.

After Jeter’s remarkable game-winning hit in his final at bat at Yankee stadium, he walked out to his spot at shortstop to take in the view. It is a view that none of the rest of us will ever experience. And yet anyone who has ever sat at a desk on a final day of work for those last few minutes, or hugged a daughter before walking her down the aisle, or took one last tour of a childhood home after selling it following the death of a parent, knows what Jeter was feeling. We want time to stop — just for a second, but it won’t. And yet the beauty of the circle of life is that it is unbroken. The arc of the sun in the sky continues on its prescribed path. And come spring there will be a new shortstop taking in the view at Yankee Stadium.

As for Derek Jeter, I am eager to see what the future holds. I hope that he continues to feel freer to share his thoughts. For with baseball, and life, no matter how much you think you know, there’s always more to learn. And I think on both fronts Number 2 can teach us a lot.

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Startling Adult Friendships

There Are Social and Political Benefits to Having Friends

Sept 19, 2014 David Brooks

Somebody recently asked me what I would do if I had $500 million to give away. My first thought was that I’d become a moderate version of the Koch brothers. I’d pay for independent candidates to run against Democratic or Republican members of Congress who veered too far into their party’s fever swamps.

But then I realized that if I really had that money, I’d want to affect a smaller number of people in a more personal and profound way. The big, established charities are already fighting disease and poverty as best they can, so in search of new directions I thought, oddly, of friendship.

Ancient writers from Aristotle to Cicero to Montaigne described friendship as the pre-eminent human institution. You can go without marriage, or justice, or honor, but friendship is indispensable to life. Each friendship, they continued, has positive social effects. Lovers face each other, but friends stand side-by-side, facing the world — often working on its behalf. Aristotle suggested that friendship is the cornerstone of society. Montaigne thought that it spreads universal warmth.

These writers probably romanticized friendship. One senses that they didn’t know how to have real conversations with the women in their lives, so they poured their whole emotional lives into male friendships. But I do think they were right in pointing out that friendship is a personal relationship that has radiating social and political benefits.

In the first place, friendship helps people make better judgments. So much of deep friendship is thinking through problems together: what job to take; whom to marry. Friendship allows you to see your own life but with a second sympathetic self.

Second, friends usually bring out better versions of each other. People feel unguarded and fluid with their close friends. If you’re hanging around with a friend, smarter and funnier thoughts tend to come burbling out.

Finally, people behave better if they know their friends are observing. Friendship is based, in part, on common tastes and interests, but it is also based on mutual admiration and reciprocity. People tend to want to live up to their friends’ high regard. People don’t have close friendships in any hope of selfish gain, but simply for the pleasure itself of feeling known and respected.

It’s also true that friendship is not in great shape in America today. In 1985, people tended to have about three really close friends, according to the General Social Survey. By 2004, according to research done at Duke University and the University of Arizona, they were reporting they had only two close confidants. The number of people who say they have no close confidants at all has tripled over that time.

People seem to have a harder time building friendships across class lines. As society becomes more unequal and segmented, invitations come to people on the basis of their job status. Middle-aged people have particular problems nurturing friendships and building new ones. They are so busy with work and kids that friendship gets squeezed out.

So, in the fantasy world in which I have $500 million, I’d try to set up places that would cultivate friendships. I know a lot of people who have been involved in fellowship programs. They made friends that ended up utterly transforming their lives. I’d try to take those sorts of networking programs and make them less career oriented and more profound.

To do that, you have to get people out of their normal hunting grounds where their guard is up. You also probably want to give them challenging activities to do together. Nothing inspires friendship like selflessness and cooperation in moments of difficulty. You also want to give them moments when they can share confidences, about big ideas and small worries.

So I envision a string of adult camps or retreat centers (my oldest friendships were formed at summer camp, so I think in those terms). Groups of 20 or 30 would be brought together from all social and demographic groups, and secluded for two weeks. They’d prepare and clean up all their meals together, and eating the meals would go on for a while. In the morning, they would read about and discuss big topics. In the afternoons, they’d play sports, take hikes and build something complicated together. At night, there’d be a bar and music.

You couldn’t build a close friendship in that time, but you could plant the seeds for one. As with good fellowship programs, alumni networks would grow spontaneously over time.

People these days are flocking to conferences, ideas festivals and cruises that are really about building friendships, even if they don’t admit it explicitly. The goal of these intensity retreats would be to spark bonds between disparate individuals who, in the outside world, would be completely unlikely to know each other. The benefits of that social bridging, while unplannable, would ripple out in ways long and far-reaching.

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Becoming a Real Person

SEPT. 8, 2014
David Brooks
This summer, The New Republic published the most read article in that
magazine’s history. It was an essay by William Deresiewicz, drawn from his new
book, “Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and the Way to a
Meaningful Life.”
Deresiewicz offers a vision of what it takes to move from adolescence to
adulthood. Everyone is born with a mind, he writes, but it is only through
introspection, observation, connecting the head and the heart, making meaning of
experience and finding an organizing purpose that you build a unique individual
self.
This process, he argues, often begins in college, the interval of freedom when
a person is away from both family and career. During that interval, the young
person can throw himself with reckless abandon at other people and learn from
them.
Some of these people are authors who have written great books. Some are
professors who can teach intellectual rigor. Some are students who can share work
that is intrinsically rewarding.
Through this process, a student is able, in the words of Mark Lilla, a professor
at Columbia, to discover “just what it is that’s worth wanting.”
Deresiewicz argues that most students do not get to experience this in elite
colleges today. Universities, he says, have been absorbed into the commercial
ethos. Instead of being intervals of freedom, they are breeding grounds for
advancement. Students are too busy jumping through the next hurdle in the
résumé race to figure out what they really want. They are too frantic tasting
everything on the smorgasbord to have life-altering encounters. They have a terror
of closing off options. They have been inculcated with a lust for prestige and a fear
of doing things that may put their status at risk.
The system pressures them to be excellent, but excellent sheep.
Stephen Pinker, the great psychology professor at Harvard, wrote the most
comprehensive response to Deresiewicz. “Perhaps I am emblematic of everything
that is wrong with elite American education, but I have no idea how to get my
students to build a self or become a soul. It isn’t taught in graduate school, and in
the hundreds of faculty appointments and promotions I have participated in, we’ve
never evaluated a candidate on how well he or she could accomplish it.”
Pinker suggests the university’s job is cognitive. Young people should know
how to write clearly and reason statistically. They should acquire specific
knowledge: the history of the planet, how the body works, how cultures differ, etc.
The way to select students into the elite colleges is not through any mysterious
peering into applicants’ souls, Pinker continues. Students should be selected on
the basis of standardized test scores:the S.A.T.’s. If colleges admitted kids with the
highest scores and companies hired applicants with the highest scores, Pinker
writes, “many of the perversities of the current system would vanish overnight.”
What we have before us then, is three distinct purposes for a university: the
commercial purpose (starting a career), Pinker’s cognitive purpose (acquiring
information and learning how to think) and Deresiewicz’s moral purpose (building
an integrated self).
Over a century ago, most university administrators and faculty members
would have said the moral purpose is the most important. As Mary Woolley, the
president of Mount Holyoke, put it, “Character is the main object of education.”
The most prominent Harvard psychology professor then, William James, wrote
essays on the structure of the morally significant life. Such a life, he wrote, is
organized around a self-imposed, heroic ideal and is pursued through endurance,
courage, fidelity and struggle.
Today, people at these elite institutions have the same moral aspirations.
Everybody knows the meritocratic system has lost its mind. Everybody —
administrators, admissions officers, faculty and students — knows that the
pressures of the résumé race are out of control.

But people in authority no longer feel compelled to define how they think
moral, emotional and spiritual growth happens, beyond a few pablum words that
no one could disagree with and a few vague references to community service. The
reason they don’t is simple. They don’t think it’s their place, or, as Pinker put it,
they don’t think they know.
The result is that the elite universities are strong at delivering their
commercial mission. They are pretty strong in developing their cognitive mission.
But when it comes to the sort of growth Deresiewicz is talking about, everyone is
on their own. An admissions officer might bias her criteria slightly away from the
Résumé God and toward the quirky kid. A student may privately wrestle with
taking a summer camp job instead of an emotionally vacuous but résumé-padding
internship. But these struggles are informal, isolated and semi-articulate.
I’d say Deresiewicz significantly overstates the amount of moral decay at elite
universities. But at least he reminds us what a moral education looks like. That is
largely abandoned ground.

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