Then we as a society shuffle these credentialled people into exalted positions, provided they are from the right institutions, whereas if they are from the wrong institutions, they are discarded to suffer in lowly jobs earning only enough to pay off their student loans. This is all extremely cruel and pointless.
Do we really have enough knowledge remaining in the culture so that we can identify with each other up and down the ladder of the social strata? Sadly I think not. There are ever fewer people around with professional-style jobs who have any experience at all doing the “dirty work” of cooking, cleaning, repairing, driving, or otherwise doing what it takes to get by. And there are ever fewer “working-class” people who ever imagine an escape.
This has created strange chasms. The social classes no longer understand each other. Lacking understanding and empathy, a dismissive disdain is just around the corner. This is dangerous for freedom and the good society.
There is no getting around the whole issue of social strata. Perfect equality is a myth and unattainable. But equality in freedom itself is something modern societies rightly sought to attain. That’s what has been under attack, particularly in the last few years. These days, freedom is something you buy, not earn by virtue of your very humanity. That’s a huge tragedy, and a highly dangerous cultural condition.
What can be done about the lack of empathy between professional pursuits? Something needs to be done about the problem of whole generations of people never having worked in real jobs but instead being ensconced in classrooms until the age of 24 and older. This is ridiculous and dangerous.
To my mind, the real problem began in 1936 when FDR and the Congress banned what they called “child labor,” which was really a ban on teen labor in order to make the unemployment problem appear statistically less significant. It was not heavily enforced. The main point was to take millions off the labor rolls for statistical appearances.
But decades later, the enforcement became quite strict. If you have ever tried to get your teen a job, you know this. Their idleness is enforced by law, so instead they turn to pursuits both goofy and dangerous.
Gradually over the decades, youth jobs became associated with less social status. Fewer and fewer young people have ever done things like cut trees, repair roofs, install floors, cook and serve meals, work in retail, or anything else meaningful. These are the people protected from any discomfort at all.
If I had my way, I would repeal this ridiculous law and every law ever since, and then massively raise the status of youth work.
When I was young, I got away with finding great jobs from the age of 12 and onward. I loved every bit of it. I liked experiencing new things, having a boss that was not my mom or dad or teacher. Earning money for me was a mark of dignity and achievement.
Working a huge range of professions as a young person—I cleaned a department store, crushed boxes, washed dishes, delivered cosmetics as a runner, worked crazy contraptions like waxers, cement mixers, and slaved on my hands and knees digging stick pins out of carpets—infuses us with a sense of identity and connection to others. All work is worthy and wonderful and everyone should experience as much of it as possible.
I personally got around “child labor laws” by lying about my age. These days that is no longer possible. As a result, people are somehow protected from reality until they are well on their way to adulthood, and then stay that way the rest of their lives. This way lies disaster. It needs immediate fixing.
In other words, the kids really need to be put to work: mowing laws, cleaning gutters, serving food, building houses, paving streets, shining shoes, or whatever. The details don’t matter. What matters is that we find a path toward universal cultural and social empathy that is the bulwark of freedom. That will help the next generation but it does not address the problems we have right now, which are very real.
The idea of “us versus them” really must end. We are all human beings, and we are all working to assemble the best possible contribution to making life better for ourselves and for others.
If we don’t fix this problem, we will forever be vulnerable to manipulation by elites and their vision of a society of castes. This is not what freedom is and not what America is. Let’s work to find a path back toward mutual understanding toward each other, and come to recognize that the real enemy is not people with different vocations or even different religions and ideologies but the elites and masters in Washington who see a path toward a victorious hegemony that is endlessly dividing the rest of us against each other.