New Yorker: Work Sucks. What Could Salvage It?

The New Yorker, May 1, 2024:

New books examine the place of work in our lives—and how people throughout history have tried to change it.

…The case against the dictatorship of bosses is, in fact, so ironclad that some business leaders have adopted it as a talking point. Their solution, however, is not union power or collective worker ownership of the means of production but, rather, self-employment. Benjamin C. Waterhouse, a historian at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a deft chronicler of executive-class escapades, tells the history of this clever ideological maneuver in his new book, “One Day I’ll Work for Myself: The Dream and Delusion That Conquered America.” The rise of neoliberal policymaking in the U.S. channelled the conservative work ethic––preaching submission to higher-ups and the embrace of drudgery––and, as Waterhouse shows, it also channelled what I call the entrepreneurial work ethic, the idealization of the self-employed and self-actualizing job creator as a model for much of the workforce to emulate.

Contrary to popular belief, the aspiration to self-employment is not intrinsic to the American character—it has a history. In Waterhouse’s telling, it is a product of the late twentieth century, particularly the economic crises of the seventies and eighties. During the prosperous decades after the Second World War, Waterhouse states, working for oneself wasn’t particularly appealing. Large corporations could afford to be relatively generous, at least to those workers (mostly white, mostly male) who executives felt were entitled to a decent standard of living. Workers desired, above all, a piece of this pie, which meant they often dreamed about “working for someone else.” In the March on Washington, Waterhouse writes, poor Black workers demanded not only “freedom” but “jobs,” a slogan which he contrasts with Richard Nixon’s program, a few years later, for “minority business enterprise.” At the other end of the class hierarchy, the young élites featured by William Whyte in “The Organization Man” evinced little interest in going into business by themselves, focussing their energies instead on climbing the corporate ladder.

Then, in the seventies, things fell apart: stagflation, oil shocks, jobless recoveries, financial turmoil. “The big, hierarchical corporations that had bestrode the business landscape in the 1950s and 1960s looked like outdated relics,” Waterhouse writes. The nation began to hearken to a new generation of business gurus and management experts who claimed that “the road to renewed growth would be paved by those brave risk-takers who embraced change and started their own companies.” The M.I.T. economist David Birch produced widely cited statistics popularizing the idea that small businesses were responsible for the vast majority of job creation in the U.S.––as high as eighty per cent. Birch’s studies had major methodological issues, as critics soon pointed out, and his findings were difficult to replicate, but the basic idea still rang true for a lot of Americans. “When upward promotion at a traditional job became out of reach for so many people,” as Waterhouse explains, the American Dream seemed to require “building a business yourself (or buying one), and reaping the rewards.”

Major corporations in industries like fast food and direct selling adopted organizational schemes such as franchising and independent contracting to depict themselves as engines of small-business creation, even when they continued to exert significant control over the working conditions and decision-making of their ostensibly “entrepreneurial” workforce. (The parallels to today’s gig-economy platforms are impossible to miss.) People who actually gave self-employment a try often found more of the same toil and precarity from which they hoped business ownership would allow them to escape.

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Decoding Culture (5-6-24)

01:00 Where does culture come from? https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n08/terry-eagleton/where-does-culture-come-from
02:00 Literary critic Terry Eagleton, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry_Eagleton
06:00 My favorite songs, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1_xDytEB1Q&list=PLhQp0uq1786ISg586sYF7k8cDug1-avU0
12:00 American Hearts by Air Supply
15:00 Work sucks – what could salvage it?, https://www.newyorker.com/books/under-review/work-sucks-what-could-salvage-it
28:00 Simon Kuper: Europeans have more time, Americans more money. Which is better?, https://www.ft.com/content/4e319ddd-cfbd-447a-b872-3fb66856bb65
32:00 Christians vibrate to the word ‘love’ while Jews vibrate to the word ‘law’
38:00 Almost all of our thoughts and feelings come from society
40:00 Culture vs politics
60:00 Non-Americans Are Revealing The Ways They Can “Spot An American Tourist From A Mile Away”, https://www.buzzfeed.com/hannahloewentheil/weird-things-american-tourists-do-gd
1:06:15 Elliott Blatt joins to talk about tipping and Facebook marketplace
1:09:00 Dublin, CA, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dublin,_California
1:13:00 Elliott’s encounter with a woman with lobster claws for arms
1:29:00 My Tiktok, https://www.tiktok.com/@lukeford613/

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NYT: Just How Dangerous Is Europe’s Rising Far Right? (5-5-24)

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Decoding The Anti-Israel, Pro-Palestine Campus Protests (5-5-24)

01:00 My analysis of campus protests: https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=154961
03:00 National Review: Since When Does Criminal Law Not Apply to College Campus Protests?,
https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/since-when-does-criminal-law-not-apply-to-college-campus-protests/
10:00 New York Times podcast on campus protests, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aV1_3EovQZs
13:00 Journalist Lydia Polgreen, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lydia_Polgreen
16:30 Victor Davis Hanson: Radical Far-Left Palestine protests threaten America, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doGEL3z_Z-w
29:00 Khalid Safir joins the show, https://www.bigquestionsanswered.com/

01:00 Khalid Safir joins the show, https://www.bigquestionsanswered.com/
05:00 Khalid Safir makes the case for marriage, https://twitter.com/KhalidSafirx
1:04:00 Khalid leaves the show
1:12:00 Personal connections fuel your ability to survive disasters such as crime, inflation and earthquakes
1:27:00 Stephen J. James joins the show, https://twitter.com/MuskMaximalist
1:40:00 Who are the pro-Palestine protesters?
1:45:00 Islam and Religious Studies Post-9/11, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=133478
1:51:00 The case for a rules-based international order
1:52:00 The case for aiding Ukraine
1:53:00 Aiding Ukraine to bleed Russia
1:58:00 Talking cybercurrencies such as Bitcoin
2:18:00 Dismissing medical advice for natural healing often leads to premature death
2:26:00 SJJ’s under-earning
2:43:00 Try Pro-Palestine riots in a small town, https://genius.com/Jason-aldean-try-that-in-a-small-town-lyrics
2:49:00 WP: “College students are dropping out in droves. Two sisters could fix that. A new AI tracks college students who are missing classes, running out of money or just feeling lonely.” https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/05/01/edsights-college-ai-student-retention/
2:50:30 NYT: Widening Racial Disparities Underlie Rise in Child Deaths in the U.S., https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/04/health/child-deaths-us-race.html
2:52:00 WP: “Brittney Griner’s ordeal riveted the nation.” https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2024/05/04/brittney-griner-memoir-coming-home-review/
2:56:00 WP: For Laura Loomer, a Trump comeback is everything, https://www.washingtonpost.com/style/power/2024/05/02/laura-loomer-donald-trump/
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/05/03/us/ucla-protests-encampment-violence.html
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/05/walter-kirn/678187/
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/05/pen-america-writers-gaza-israel/678272/
https://www.newyorker.com/news/fault-lines/a-generation-of-distrust
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-05-02/online-sleuths-rush-to-identify-the-men-who-attacked-ucla-camp
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-05-03/mocking-gaza-protesters-isnt-funny-its-dangerous
https://www.wsj.com/articles/mark-helprin-asks-are-americans-ready-for-war-novelist-scholar-0214b82b
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/05/03/january-6-documentary-00155780?cid=apn
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/05/03/biden-college-protest-violence-00156111?cid=apn
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2024/05/house-republicans-gwu-protest-boebert/678280/
https://www.wsj.com/us-news/education/college-protests-parents-angry-e93bb2ef?mod=education_news_article_pos2
https://www.nytimes.com/audio/app/2024/05/03/opinion/campus-protests-israel-gaza.html?referringSource=sharing
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/05/03/late-night-goes-soft-on-biden-00154694?cid=apn
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/05/college-activism-hypocrisy/678262/

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Pro Palestine campus protests at UCLA (5-3-24)

President Joe Biden said protest is fine but disruption is not. The essence of these campus protests has been disruption. The only reason these protests have captured the attention of the news is because of their disruption. Pro-Palestine speech is not going to be warmly received in America because Palestinians have not contributed anything to the world. Not many people in America will care about pro-Palestine or Pro-Israel speech on its own because Americans care primarily about Americans.

I learned in therapy that it is best to deal with problems when they are at a low level of intensity. It’s much harder to resolve disputes when intensity is 10/10. College president should have dealt with protesters once they broke the first window.

National Review: Since When Does Criminal Law Not Apply to College Campus Protests?

It’s a mistake to focus on the anti-semitism element of the college protests. Different groups have different interests. Instead, the focus should be enforcing the law to maximize the ability of unis to focus on their core missions of education and research. Expel the disrupters.

Interest groups such as Jews do themselves no favors when they focus publicly on their own narrow interest. With regard to the pro-Palestine campus protests, Jews should make the case for law enforcement rather than seek privileges from criticism. If the pro-Palestine or pro-black or pro-gay cause wants to win, they too should frame their case in terms of the general interest. People care primarily about themselves. They don’t care much about out-groups.

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