Re: Americans not qualified for available manufacturing jobs
I agree almost completely with your post.
What I would add is the following:
I think(not based on evidence, more an opinion) academic rigor has dropped like a stone outside of small numbers of elite institutions bucking the trend...all just anecdotal on my part...but I think for many there is some or a lot of truth to it.
And I think it's partially this lack of rigor......this sense of entitlement and sloth that has left the majority of the population in educational neutral for a couple decades.
Americans have been fat, dumb, and happy for a while now.....they have forgotten what real hunger & fear feels like.
I would use the example of Israel and India...different cultures and different attitudes....in Israel an overriding "back against the wall" fear has certainly helped generate considerable and profitable entrepreneurial activity on the back of Israel's desire to continue to exist...I've worked with a lot of Israelis over the years......that drive, while not in any way genetically programmed in, certainly must have been inculcated over a lifetime to where it almost appears to be in the DNA.....success in survival of the state turned into military and economic regional dominance.
In India gaining a precious slot in IIT could be the difference between pulling your entire family out of misery and into an affluent and very comfortable 3rd world life......eating regularly can be an outstanding motivator.
I don't foresee any mass concerted productive effort until the majority of folks are hungry and/or have their backs against the wall.
Spring Break became the modern equivalent of old world Roman debauchery.
Until the average American understands that the dirt poor Indian kid with the big brain who gains access to world class education in his own country and STAYS there may represent a far bigger threat to US workers quality of life and standard of living than if he is recruited to come here to study/produce and "take ther jobs!".
It's only been the last 5 years of so that I've personally seen a spike in young Americans doing what their Commonwealth peers have done for decades...which is travel and see the world.
I'm hoping this spike continues to the point that the average American 18 year old clearly sees that the time for complacency is over.......
The only answer I see is an oversimplistic and stolen one.......massive federal bailouts:
1.) A couple hundred targeted billion to higher education.....to keep it from collapsing, produce future workers with future skillsets, and for R&D to produce future product and business ideas.
2.) A couple hundred targeted billion to future infrastructure...what ever that means......that's Jetson's stuff, but probably really means futuristic light rail and bicycle lane type stuff to keep undereducated and underskilled working for a bit.
I'm sure it will be full of pork barrel earmarks that would make even a veteran special interest corrupted member of congress blush.
And I'm sure we'll have lots of poor quality science grads who add zero value as you suggest...but maybe if you put enough of them in a room long enough with some monkeys and typewriters something mediocre might come out.
I agree almost completely with your post.
What I would add is the following:
I think(not based on evidence, more an opinion) academic rigor has dropped like a stone outside of small numbers of elite institutions bucking the trend...all just anecdotal on my part...but I think for many there is some or a lot of truth to it.
And I think it's partially this lack of rigor......this sense of entitlement and sloth that has left the majority of the population in educational neutral for a couple decades.
Americans have been fat, dumb, and happy for a while now.....they have forgotten what real hunger & fear feels like.
I would use the example of Israel and India...different cultures and different attitudes....in Israel an overriding "back against the wall" fear has certainly helped generate considerable and profitable entrepreneurial activity on the back of Israel's desire to continue to exist...I've worked with a lot of Israelis over the years......that drive, while not in any way genetically programmed in, certainly must have been inculcated over a lifetime to where it almost appears to be in the DNA.....success in survival of the state turned into military and economic regional dominance.
In India gaining a precious slot in IIT could be the difference between pulling your entire family out of misery and into an affluent and very comfortable 3rd world life......eating regularly can be an outstanding motivator.
I don't foresee any mass concerted productive effort until the majority of folks are hungry and/or have their backs against the wall.
Spring Break became the modern equivalent of old world Roman debauchery.
Until the average American understands that the dirt poor Indian kid with the big brain who gains access to world class education in his own country and STAYS there may represent a far bigger threat to US workers quality of life and standard of living than if he is recruited to come here to study/produce and "take ther jobs!".
It's only been the last 5 years of so that I've personally seen a spike in young Americans doing what their Commonwealth peers have done for decades...which is travel and see the world.
I'm hoping this spike continues to the point that the average American 18 year old clearly sees that the time for complacency is over.......
The only answer I see is an oversimplistic and stolen one.......massive federal bailouts:
1.) A couple hundred targeted billion to higher education.....to keep it from collapsing, produce future workers with future skillsets, and for R&D to produce future product and business ideas.
2.) A couple hundred targeted billion to future infrastructure...what ever that means......that's Jetson's stuff, but probably really means futuristic light rail and bicycle lane type stuff to keep undereducated and underskilled working for a bit.
I'm sure it will be full of pork barrel earmarks that would make even a veteran special interest corrupted member of congress blush.
And I'm sure we'll have lots of poor quality science grads who add zero value as you suggest...but maybe if you put enough of them in a room long enough with some monkeys and typewriters something mediocre might come out.
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