I share the sentiment, though not necessarily the optimism. 

E

What Steve Jobs Understood That Our Politicians Don't - NYTimes.com
http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/06/what-steve-jobs-understood-that-our-politicians-dont/

As in most other big American cities, it would be hard to walk 100 feet in 
Washington and not slam into somebody who’s using something that Apple created 
— an iPhone or an iPad or a Macbook Pro. And so it’s staggering to contemplate 
just how little of Steve Jobs’s genius ever permeated the nation’s politics, 
and how much he understood about modern America that those who govern it still 
don’t.


Political Times

Matt Bai’s analysis and commentary.

After all, if you wanted to really get a picture of how the national culture 
has evolved in the last few decades, particularly in the urban areas that drive 
economic growth, you could do a lot worse than to study Apple’s string of 
innovations. Mr. Jobs understood, intuitively, that Americans were breaking 
away from the last era’s large institutions and centralized decision-making, 
that technology would free them from traditional workplaces and the limits of a 
physical marketplace.

This was the underlying point of “think different” — that our choices were no 
longer dictated by the whims of huge companies or the offerings at the local 
mall. This was the point of a computer that enabled you to customize virtually 
every setting, no matter how inconsequential, so that no two users had the 
exact same experience. This was the essential insight behind devices driven by 
a universe of new apps, downloaded in seconds depending on your lifestyle and 
interests.

At the same time, while Mr. Jobs saw a society moving inexorably toward 
individual choice, he also seemed to understand that such individuality breeds 
detachment and confusion. And so Apple sought to fill that vacuum by making 
itself into more than a manufacturer; it became a kind of community, too, with 
storefronts and stickers and a membership that enabled you to get your e-mail, 
or video-conference with your friends, or post a Web page of your vacation 
photos.

In his story about Mr. Jobs on the Times’s Web site, John Markoff quoted him as 
explaining his aversion to market research this way: “It’s not the consumers’ 
job to know what they want.” In other words, while Mr. Jobs tried to understand 
the problems that technology could solve for his buyer, he wasn’t going to rely 
on the buyer to demand specific solutions, just so he could avoid ever having 
to take a risk. This is what’s commonly known as leading.

If Mr. Jobs and Apple grappled successful with the complexities of modern life, 
however, then American politics, across the ideological spectrum, mostly wished 
them away. In our political debate, there is no compatibility between the 
notions of customization and community, the twin pillars of the digital age. 
It’s always one or the other.

Either we’re being told that centralized, 20th century systems can never be 
changed to accommodate more individual flexibility (like say, decoupling health 
care from employment), or we’re being told that all federal programs are 
wasteful and that everyone American should basically fend for himself. Either 
we’re supposed to rely entirely on large institutions, or we’re supposed to 
rely only on ourselves.

And no politician wants to really innovate without focus groups, to make a 
sustained argument for any solution that might entail risk or imagination. Our 
parties are less like Apple and more like General Motors, churning out this 
year’s streamlined model of the same cars they were asking you to buy 20 years 
ago. Even the circuitry of the democracy remains essentially unchanged; a 
nation of voters who can find their cars and pay their mortgages online still 
can’t envision the day when they can cast their votes from an iPad.

This cultural gulf, between Mr. Jobs’s America and the one our political 
leaders inhabit, is largely generational, and it goes long way toward 
explaining the enthusiasm among younger voters for Mr. Obama’s 2008 campaign. 
Mr. Obama’s campaign, conceived outside the party establishment and built on a 
platform of online membership, felt like a high-tech reimagining of politics. 
It seemed to presage an age of government that could champion both 
individuality and community, a government that made programs more responsive 
and flexible without eroding our sense of shared responsibility.

It’s safe to say that Mr. Obama no longer inspires much of that, at least 
partly because whatever more futuristic governing vision he might have had ran 
smack into economic realities and into the orthodoxies of both parties’ aging 
establishments. Three years later, he’s sounding a lot more like a conventional 
Democrat running for re-election and much less like a political innovator.

But generations will, inevitably, turn over, and Americans who grew up using 
Steve Jobs’s gizmos and apps will ultimately inherit a governing culture that 
feels dated and stifling. Perhaps then Mr. Jobs’s contributions to the American 
culture will at last reach the city were his Apple logo has become so visible, 
inspiring a government to try to think a little bit different, too.

(via Instapaper)



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