|
Mobility Vs. Nobility By Michael Kinsley, in
the LA Times and Washington Post, Sunday, June 5, 2005 The 20th century added
two, somewhat vaguer, elements to the myth. One is that even material
inequality will be limited, at the bottom end, by social guarantees against
absolute deprivation or vertiginous plunges. Another is that prosperity will
gradually make us all more equal even in the material sense. Three of the nation's
top newspapers have been examining the national myth recently. The Wall Street
Journal has looked at social mobility. In recent decades, financial inequality
has been increasing, not shrinking. That didn't matter, many said, because studies
show a constant shuffling of the deck. Where you are today
says little about where you might be tomorrow and even less about where your
offspring will be in 25 years. But it turns out these
studies were flawed. Where you are is the best predictor of where your children
will be. And immobility over generations is what congeals financial differences
into old-fashioned, European-style social class. This is where the New
York Times takes up the story. The Journal series
included a wonderful story, straight out of Trollope, about a vulgar arriviste
trying to crash the absurd charity-ball society of Palm Springs. Less fun, but
more telling, was a Times piece comparing three victims of heart attacks. The
Times series has been especially good at capturing the subtle ways that
privilege manifests itself and gets transmitted over generations. It's not just
money. It's not just IQ or education or blue blood or even good values. It's
how all these combine into knowing which hospital to ask for when the ambulance
arrives. The Los Angeles Times
takes over with a scary look at downward mobility. The national myth imagines
the ascent from poverty to the middle class as a ratchet. But sliding out of
middle-class prosperity is getting easier every day. You can do it by
losing your job, by having an accident or other health emergency, by
squandering your savings. Globalization and technology may make everyone better
off on average (I believe they do), but they land like a boulder on individuals
who lose their jobs to foreigners and machines. Health care becomes
more costly, and employers get stingier about paying for it. And President Bush
wants to make Social Security more of an opportunity to do well and less of a
guarantee against doing disastrously. In short, if insurance is shifting risks
from individuals to society, what has been going on lately is the opposite:
shifting risks from society back onto the individual. Of the many questions
raised by all this, the most pressing is: What happened to The Post? If The Post
wants in, there are still rich veins to mine. For example, The Post might
reexamine the role of civil equality as a consolation prize for economic
inequality. This conceit seems to be eroding in two ways. First, money
is playing an ever-larger role in the mechanics of democracy. Second, whole
areas of life that were part of everyday democracy have fallen to the empire of
money. People increasingly go to schools with people of their own class, live
in class-sifted neighborhoods, hold their Fourth of July picnics in their own
back yards rather than the public park. Meanwhile, despite
months of superb reporting by three great newspapers, the question of how
closely our national reality resembles our national myth remains open. Does it matter whether your place in life
is determined by your IQ or your schooling or your parents' wallets? All of these are beyond your control. As we learn more about
the human mind, even qualities such as self-discipline seem to be a matter of
luck, not grit. The
problem, in short, may not be that reality is receding from the national myth.
The problem may be the myth. The
writer is editorial and opinion editor of the Los Angeles Times. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/03/AR2005060301464.html http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-kinsley5jun05,1,443987.column?coll=la-util-op-ed |
_______________________________________________ Futurework mailing list [email protected] http://fes.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework
