It’s time to stop listening to rich, overconfident men
The election of Donald Trump has caused a great deal of introspection among decent Americans, along with no small number of arguments about its cause. While the relative roles of…
The election of Donald Trump has caused a great deal of introspection among decent Americans, along with no small number of arguments about its cause. While the relative roles of race, sex, class and the economy in America have gotten by far the most attention, one of the most overlooked shocks is the sheer credulity of so much of the electorate.
It’s not just that Trump is a tire fire of bigoted grievances. He’s also such an obvious liar about essentially everything that it’s hard to fathom how even his base doesn’t see through it. It’s one thing for a politician to tell a voting block deplorable things they agree with, in language that the most deplorable people in the country would like to normalize in polite society if they could get away with it. It’s quite another for that voting block to be so easily conned.
But while this phenomenon is most salient when discussing Trump and the Republican base, the rest of the country isn’t entirely immune, either. America has been ingesting and reflecting the policy preferences of rich men at least since the 1970s: from obsessions with deficit reduction to deregulation, the Democratic Party has also seen itself shackled to a series of policies gravely intoned by Very Serious Men without much scrutiny or pushback.
It turns out that the problem is culture-wide: rich men love to pretend they know what they’re talking about, even when they haven’t a clue:
The effect is not unique to American society–in fact, the differences in both gender and class tend to be smaller in the United States compared to other English-speaking countries.
Still, it’s impossible to shake the perception that not only Donald Trump’s presidency itself, but the failures of the past forty years of bipartisan economic decision-making, owe themselves in large part to the tendency of rich (usually white) men to oversell their own expertise–often for self-interested reasons. Combined with structural racism and sexism, as well as the tendency of wealthy people and corporate executives toward sociopathy and lack of empathy, and it seems that we would be better off paying far less attention to what rich men say about almost anything.
If Donald Trump can get away with claiming brilliance on so many matters and so many people believe him, just how many other wealthy men born of privilege are successfully passing themselves off as experts in matters about which they know little, and leveraging their wealth and power toward status quo policies backed by comparatively little evidence?
And just how badly has our political system been skewed in their favor as a result at the expense of all the rest of us?
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