Recommended Reading – Articles
Three articles suitable for an election year where our elite embraces a variety of oligarchic policies because they benefit themselves personally and despite evidence that these policies are inefficient, socially harmful, anti-democratic and corrupting of the body politic.
Charles Murray –The New American Divide
America is coming apart. For most of our nation’s history, whatever the inequality in wealth between the richest and poorest citizens, we maintained a cultural equality known nowhere else in the world—for whites, anyway. “The more opulent citizens take great care not to stand aloof from the people,” wrote Alexis de Tocqueville, the great chronicler of American democracy, in the 1830s. “On the contrary, they constantly keep on easy terms with the lower classes: They listen to them, they speak to them every day.”
Americans love to see themselves this way. But there’s a problem: It’s not true anymore, and it has been progressively less true since the 1960s.
…..Similarly large clusters of SuperZIPs can be found around New York City, Los Angeles, the San Francisco-San Jose corridor, Boston and a few of the nation’s other largest cities. Because running major institutions in this country usually means living near one of these cities, it works out that the nation’s power elite does in fact live in a world that is far more culturally rarefied and isolated than the world of the power elite in 1960.
And the isolation is only going to get worse. Increasingly, the people who run the country were born into that world. Unlike the typical member of the elite in 1960, they have never known anything but the new upper-class culture. We are now seeing more and more third-generation members of the elite. Not even their grandparents have been able to give them a window into life in the rest of America.
Pete Kofd – Rise of the Praetorian Class
….The Praetorian Class includes members of the Armed Services, federal, state and local law enforcement personnel as well as numerous militarized officials including agents from the DEA, Immigrations, Customs Enforcement, Air Marshalls, US Marshalls, and more. It also includes, although to a lesser extent, various stage actors in the expanding security theater such as TSA personnel. The main mission of the Praetorian Class is to keep the order of the day. This requires displaying an intimidating presence in their interactions with the Economic Class.
As the Praetorian Class ascends, the clear, albeit unstated, message that emerges is that actions and events in the Economic Class only occur with its tacit consent. Whether driving on roads, traveling in the air, visiting public land, walking down the street or even living in your own home, every action you take is predicated on its permission. By preconditioning the populace to enforcement of its edicts, most of which are completely arbitrary, the Praetorian Class sets itself up for a high degree of autonomy in its actions. This is confirmed by the fact that consequences for malfeasance within the Praetorian Class are almost never observed, and when it happens, it typically becomes a grotesque spectacle in which one of their own is sacrificed as an example, so as to keep appearances of effective internal controls.
Daron Acemoglu –Why Do Nations Fail?
….That got me onto a path of research that has been trying to understand, theoretically and empirically, how institutions shape economic incentives and why institutions vary across nations. How they evolve over time. And the politics of institutions, meaning, not just economically which institutions are better than others, but why is it that certain different types of institutions stick?
What I mean by that is, it wouldn’t make sense, in terms of economic growth, to have a set of institutions that ban private property or create private property that is highly insecure, where I can encroach on your rights. But politically, it might make a lot of sense.
If I have the political power, and I’m afraid of you becoming rich and challenging me politically, then it makes a lot of sense for me to create a set of institutions that don’t give you secure property rights. If I’m afraid of you starting new businesses and attracting my workers away from me, it makes a lot of sense for me to regulate you in such a way that it totally kills your ability to grow or undertake innovations.
So, if I am really afraid of losing political power to you, that really brings me to the politics of institutions, where the logic is not so much the economic consequences, but the political consequences. This means that, say, when considering some reform, what most politicians and powerful elites in society really care about is not whether this reform will make the population at large better off, but whether it will make it easier or harder for them to cling to power.
Walter Russell Meade – Establishment Blues
….The American people aren’t perfect yet and never will be — but by the standards that matter to the Establishment, this is the best prepared, most open minded and most socially liberal generation in history. Unsatisfactory as the American people may be from the standpoints of Georgetown and Manhattan, this is as good as it gets. Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt and Harry Truman could only dream of the kind of sophisticated and cosmopolitan understanding that folks in Peoria have now compared to the old days.
The American people are less prejudiced, more globally aware and more willing to meet other cultures and societies halfway than ever before. Minorities today are better protected in law and more fairly treated by the public than ever in our history. No previous generation has been as determined to give women a fair chance in life, or to attack the foul legacy of racism. The American people have never been as religiously tolerant as they are today, as concerned about the environment, or more willing to make sacrifices around the world to promote the peace and well being of humanity as a whole.
By contrast, we have never had an Establishment that was so ill-equipped to lead. It is the Establishment, not the people, that is falling down on the job.
Here in the early years of the twenty-first century, the American elite is a walking disaster and is in every way less capable than its predecessors. It is less in touch with American history and culture, less personally honest, less productive, less forward looking, less effective at and less committed to child rearing, less freedom loving, less sacrificially patriotic and less entrepreneurial than predecessor generations. Its sense of entitlement and snobbery is greater than at any time since the American Revolution; its addiction to privilege is greater than during the Gilded Age and its ability to raise its young to be productive and courageous leaders of society has largely collapsed.
January 22nd, 2012 at 10:58 am
Zen, you’ve probably already read this book, but I’ve been studying the concept of energy expenditure in Joseph Tainter’s concept of energy expenditure developed in his book The Collapse of Complex Societies (1990).
We, as a people, have a finite amount of energy to use. While some have argued that we’ve wasted blood and treasure in these endeavors, the problem is actually greater: we’ve expended massive amounts of energy (intellectual capital, time, resources).
There is a point of diminishing returns that happens quickly after a regime change where any additionally external effort (COIN, CT, Nation-building, etc) is scaled back exponentially.
Consider how much effort has been placed into these wars for limited gains, and then compare that by asking the question
Where could we be better expending our energy?
January 23rd, 2012 at 3:04 am
Hi Mike!
.
I have – after John Robb reviewed it I picked up a copy:
.
https://zenpundit.com/?p=3632
.
You hit it on the head with diminishing returns. Starting from a state of economic simplicity, adding complexity through specialization and even bureaucracy greatly multiplies societal productivity – up to a point. Beyond that, adding more complexity s a drain, especially where in non-market situations there’s no “natural” way to liquidate this complexity or respond to feedback signals the way companies do by going bankrupt or losing profits, market share or valued employees. Bureaucracies are very hard to get rid of even when they are horribly counterproductive and wasteful.
.
Specifically to your point on military/FP, Less is more. The only cost-effective interventions (wars of choice, not WWII situs) are done on a shoestring, leverage applied like jujitsu to the pressure point. When I was reading Walter LeFeber”s Inevitable Revolutions, looking past his leftist agenda, it was amazing how many of the successful interventions undertaken by the US (that LeFeber was condemning) were laughably small, hastily improvised, operations by the USMC or the CIA. Some of them are also in Boot’s Savage Wars of Peace. Contrast this with the “big show” interventions like Vietnam or Iraq
January 23rd, 2012 at 2:00 pm
The fact has been identified that America has less class mobility than the majority of other European or European descended countries.
The problem is that America does not have a clue as to how to change it, and the trend is worsening.
The juxtaposition between the top two articles makes me think that Zen sees the growth in the wealth of the few and the increasingly paramilitary appearance of law enforcement are not an accident.
Am i reading to much into this…
January 23rd, 2012 at 5:20 pm
I think it’s worth noting that these problems, whilst not as acute in Europe, certainly still there and continue to impact upon our politics. In the UK the current Conservative Government has a large number of what Charles Murray describes as third generation elites (or a lot more in our case). Our current Chancellor is a Baronet, a brief glance at Wikipedia reveals him to be the 17th of that line, so a little removed from the common man. Many others in both the major Parties are in a similar position, and the lobbying class is also heavily interwoven with the weathy and the political classes (who are increasingly wealthy in themselves).
There’s a good post up on Kings of War at the moment which talks about our desire not to lose being much stronger than our desire to win. Inherently elites have these same drives, but in their case they stand to lose power, money, titles and so forth, and they have both the means and the drive therefore to “lock in” their success through legislation.
Consider laws like SOPA and ACTA, both concieved of by the lobbyists of the entertainment industry. Here you have a perfect example of industries (and by extension those who run those industries) seeking to lock in a particular business model which has created a great deal of weath for them and their friends. These pieces of legislation have been shown to cause harm to innovation and opportunities to create new wealth (as well as breaking the internet in the case of SOPA, which could be a big deal), yet SOPA was almost passed without any real discuss, and ACTA almost certainly will pass.
What is encouraging is that there is “society” as a whole, particularly in the US and Europe is swiftly waking up to the power they have, particularly over the electorate. Ultimately politicians want to keep their jobs, and if they realise that the public truly are liable to hold them to account they do need to compromise.
However, I do think that America has unique problems to worry about, as its the only society I think where a lobbyist (Former Senator Chris Dodd) could say this and not cause enormous problems: