Complex Systems Won’t Survive the Competence Crisis - Boldly Going where South Africa has gone before

Complex Systems Won’t Survive the Competence Crisis
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Ilya Mirnyy/Firefighter in field, 2020
At a casual glance, the recent cascades of American disasters might seem unrelated. In a span of fewer than six months in 2017, three U.S. Naval warships experienced three separate collisions resulting in 17 deaths. A year later, powerlines owned by PG&E started a wildfire that killed 85 people. The pipeline carrying almost half of the East Coast’s gasoline shut down due to a ransomware attack. Almost half a million intermodal containers sat on cargo ships unable to dock at Los Angeles ports. A train carrying thousands of tons of hazardous and flammable chemicals derailed near East Palestine, Ohio. Air Traffic Control cleared a FedEx plane to land on a runway occupied by a Southwest plane preparing to take off. Eye drops contaminated with antibiotic-resistant bacteria killed four and blinded fourteen.

While disasters like these are often front-page news, the broader connection between the disasters barely elicits any mention. America must be understood as a system of interwoven systems; the healthcare system sends a bill to a patient using the postal system, and that patient uses the mobile phone system to pay the bill with a credit card issued by the banking system. All these systems must be assumed to work for anyone to make even simple decisions. But the failure of one system has cascading consequences for all of the adjacent systems. As a consequence of escalating rates of failure, America’s complex systems are slowly collapsing.

The core issue is that changing political mores have established the systematic promotion of the unqualified and sidelining of the competent. This has continually weakened our society’s ability to manage modern systems. At its inception, it represented a break from the trend of the 1920s to the 1960s, when the direct meritocratic evaluation of competence became the norm across vast swaths of American society.

In the first decades of the twentieth century, the idea that individuals should be systematically evaluated and selected based on their ability rather than wealth, class, or political connections, led to significant changes in selection techniques at all levels of American society. The Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) revolutionized college admissions by allowing elite universities to find and recruit talented students from beyond the boarding schools of New England. Following the adoption of the SAT, aptitude tests such as Wonderlic (1936), Graduate Record Examination (1936), Army General Classification Test (1941), and Law School Admission Test (1948) swept the United States. Spurred on by the demands of two world wars, this system of institutional management electrified the Tennessee Valley, created the first atom bomb, invented the transistor, and put a man on the moon.

By the 1960s, the systematic selection for competence came into direct conflict with the political imperatives of the civil rights movement. During the period from 1961 to 1972, a series of Supreme Court rulings, executive orders, and laws—most critically, the Civil Rights Act of 1964—put meritocracy and the new political imperative of protected-group diversity on a collision course. Administrative law judges have accepted statistically observable disparities in outcomes between groups as prima facie evidence of illegal discrimination. The result has been clear: any time meritocracy and diversity come into direct conflict, diversity must take priority.

The resulting norms have steadily eroded institutional competency, causing America’s complex systems to fail with increasing regularity. In the language of a systems theorist, by decreasing the competency of the actors within the system, formerly stable systems have begun to experience normal accidents at a rate that is faster than the system can adapt. The prognosis is harsh but clear: either selection for competence will return or America will experience devolution to more primitive forms of civilization and loss of geopolitical power.

From Meritocracy to Diversity

The first domino to fall as Civil Rights-era policies took effect was the quantitative evaluation of competency by employers using straightforward cognitive batteries. While some tests are still legally used in hiring today, several high-profile enforcement actions against employers caused a wholesale change in the tools customarily usable by employers to screen for ability.

After the early 1970s, employers responded by shifting from directly testing for ability to using the next best thing: a degree from a highly-selective university. By pushing the selection challenge to the college admissions offices, selective employers did two things: they reduced their risk of lawsuits and they turned the U.S. college application process into a high-stakes war of all against all. Admission to Harvard would be a golden ticket to join the professional managerial class, while mere admission to a state school could mean a struggle to remain in the middle class.

This outsourcing did not stave off the ideological change for long. Within the system of political imperatives now dominant in all major U.S. organizations, diversity must be prioritized even if there is a price in competency. The definition of diversity varies by industry and geography. In elite universities, diversity means black, indigenous, or Hispanic. In California, Indian women are diverse but Indian men are not. When selecting corporate board members, diversity means “anyone who is not a straight white man.” The legally protected and politically enforced nature of this imperative renders an open dialogue nearly impossible.

However diversity itself is defined, most policy on the matter is based on a simple premise: since all groups are identical in talent, any unbiased process must produce the same group proportions as the general population, and therefore, processes that produce disproportionate outcomes must be biased. Prestigious journals like Harvard Business Review are the first to summarize and parrot these views, which then flow down to reporting by mass media organizations like Bloomberg Businessweek. Soon, it joins McKinsey’s “best practices” list and becomes instantiated in corporate policies.

Unlike accounting policies, which emanate from the Financial Accounting Standards Board and are then implemented by Chief Financial Officers, the diversity push emanates inside of organizations from multiple power centers, each of which joins in for independent reasons. CEOs push diversity policies primarily to please board members and increase their status. Human Resources (HR) professionals push diversity policies primarily to avoid anti-discrimination lawsuits. Business development teams push diversity to win additional business from diversity-sensitive clients (e.g. government agencies). Employee Resource Groups (ERGs), such as the Black Googler Network, push diversity to help their in-group in hiring and promotion decisions.

Diversity in Theory and Practice

In police academies around the country, new recruits are taught to apply an escalation of force algorithm with non-compliant subjects: “Ask, Tell, Make.” The idea behind “Ask, Tell, Make” is to apply the least amount of force necessary to achieve the desired level of compliance. This is the means by which police power, which is ultimately backed by significant coercive force, can maintain an appearance of voluntary compliance and soft-handedness. Similarly, the power centers inside U.S. institutions apply a variant of “Ask, Tell, Make” to achieve diversity in their respective organizations.

The first tactics for implementing diversity imperatives are the “Ask” tactics. These simply ask all the members of the organization to end bias. At this stage, the policies seem so reasonable and fair that there will rarely be much pushback. Best practices such as slating guidelines are a common tool at this stage. Slating guidelines require that every hiring process must include a certain number and type of diverse candidates for every job opening. Structured interviews are another best practice that requires interviewers to stick with a script to minimize the chance of uncovering commonalities between the interviewer and interviewee that might introduce bias. Often HR will become involved in the hiring process, specifically asking the hiring manager to defend their choice not to hire a diverse candidate. Because the wrong answer could result in shaming, loss of advancement opportunities, or even termination, the hiring manager can often be persuaded to prioritize diversity over competence.

Within specialized professional services companies, senior-level recruiting will occasionally result in a resume collection where not a single diverse candidate meets the minimum specifications of the job. This is a terrible outcome for the hiring manager as it attracts negative attention from HR. At this point, firms will often retain an executive search agency that focuses on exclusively diverse candidates. When that does not result in sufficient diversity, roles will often have their requirements diluted to increase the pool of diverse candidates.

For example, within hedge funds, the ideal entry-level candidate might be an experienced former investment banker who went to a top MBA program. This preferred pedigree sets a minimum bar for both competence and work ethic. This first-pass filter enormously winnows the field of underrepresented candidates. To relax requirements for diversity’s sake, this will be diluted in various ways. First, the work experience might be stripped. Next, the role gets offered to MBA interns. Finally, fresh undergraduates are hired into the analyst role. Dilution works not just because of the larger field of candidates it allows for but also because the Harvard Admission Office of 2019 is even more focused on certain kinds of diversity than the Harvard Admission Office of 2011 was.

This dilution is not costless; fewer data points result in a wider range of outcomes and increase the risk of a bad hire. All bad hires are costly but bad hires that are diverse are even worse. The risk of a wrongful termination lawsuit either draws out the termination process for diverse hires or results in the firm adjusting by giving them harmless busy work until they leave of their own volition—either way, a terrible outcome for the organizations which hired them.

If these “Ask” tactics do not achieve enough diversity, the next step in the escalation is to attach carrots and sticks to directly tell decision-makers to increase the diversity of the organization. This is the point at which the goals of diversity and competence truly begin displaying significant tension between each other. The first step is the implementation of Key Performance Indicators (KPI) linked to diversity for all managers. Diversity KPIs are a tool to embarrass leaders and teams that are not meeting their diversity targets. Given that most organizations are hierarchical and pyramidal, combined with the fact that America was much whiter 50 years ago than it was today, it is unsurprising that senior leadership teams are less diverse than America as a whole—and, more pertinently, than their own junior teams.

The combination of a pyramid-shaped org chart and a senior leadership team where white men often make up 80 percent or more of the team means that the imposition of an aggressive KPI sends a message to the layer below them: no white man in middle management will likely ever see a promotion as long as they remain in the organization. This is never expressed verbally. Rather, those overlooked figure it out as they are passed over continually for less competent but more diverse colleagues. The result is demoralization, disengagement, and over time, departure.

While all the aforementioned techniques fall into the broad category of affirmative action, they primarily result in slightly tilting the scale toward diverse candidates. The next step is simply holding different groups to different standards. Within academia, the recently filed Students for Fair Admissions v. President and Fellows of Harvard College lawsuit leveraged data to show the extent to which Harvard penalizes Asian and white applicants to help black and Hispanic applicants. The UC System, despite formally being forbidden from practicing affirmative action by Proposition 209, uses a tool called “comprehensive admission” to accomplish the same goal.

The latest technique, which was recently brought to light, shows UC admissions offices using the applicants’ high schools as a proxy for race to achieve their desired goal. Heavily Asian high schools such as Arcadia—which is 68 percent Asian—saw their UC-San Diego acceptance rate cut from 37 percent to 13 percent while the 99-percent-Hispanic Garfield High School saw its UC-San Diego acceptance rate rise from 29 percent to 65 percent.

The preference for diversity at the college faculty level is similarly strong. Jessica Nordell’s End of Bias: A Beginning heralded MIT’s efforts to increase the gender diversity of its engineering department: “When applications came in, the Dean of Engineering personally reviewed every one from a woman. If departments turned down a good candidate, they had to explain why.”

When this was not enough, MIT increased its gender diversity by simply offering jobs to previously rejected female candidates. While no university will admit to letting standards slip for the sake of diversity, no one has offered a serious argument why the new processes produce higher or even equivalent quality faculty as opposed to simply more diverse faculty. The extreme preference for diversity in academia today explains much of the phenomenon of professors identifying with a minor fraction of their ancestry or even making it up entirely.

During COVID-19, the difficulty of in-person testing and online proctoring created a new mechanism to push diversity at the expense of competency: the gradual but systematic elimination of standardized tests as a barrier to admission to universities and graduate schools. Today, the majority of U.S. colleges have either stopped requiring SAT/ACT scores, no longer require them for students in the top 10 percent of their class, or will no longer consider them. Several elite law schools, including Harvard Law School, no longer require the LSAT as of 2023. With thousands of unqualified law students headed to a bar exam that they are unlikely to pass, the National Conference of Bar Examiners is already planning to dilute the bar exam under the “NextGen” plan. Specifically, “eliminat[ing] any aspects of our exams that could contribute to performance disparities” will almost definitionally reduce the degree to which the exam tests for competency.

Similarly, standards used to select doctors have also been weakened to promote diversity. Programs such as the City College of New York’s BS/MD program have eliminated the MCAT requirement. With the SAT now optional, new candidates can go straight from high school to the United States Medical Licensing Examination Step 1 exam in medical school without having gone through any rigorous standardized test whose score can be compared across schools. Step 1 scores were historically the most significant factor in the National Residency Matching Program, which pairs soon-to-be doctors with their future residency training programs. Because Step 1 scores serve as a barrier to increasing diversity, they have been made pass/fail. A handful of doctors are speaking out about the dangers of picking doctors based on factors other than competency but most either explicitly prefer diversity or else stay silent, concerned about the career-ending repercussions of pointing out the obvious.

When even carrot and stick incentives and the removal of standards do not achieve enough diversity, the end game is to simply make decision-makers comply. “Make” has two preferred implementations: one is widely discussed and the other is, for obvious reasons, never disclosed publicly. The first method of implementation is the application of quotas. Quotas or set-asides require the reservation of admissions slots, jobs, contracts, board seats, or other scarce goods for women and members of favored minority groups. Government contracts and supplier agreements are explicitly awarded to firms that have acronyms such as SB, WBE, MBE, DBE, SDB, VOSB, SDVOSB, WOSB, HUB, and 8(a).

Within large employers and government contractors, quotas are used for both hiring and promotions, requiring specific percentages of hiring or promotions to be reserved for favored groups. During the summer of 2020, the CEO of Wells Fargo, was publicly shamed after his memo blaming the underrepresentation of black senior leaders on a “very limited pool” of black talent was leaked to Reuters. Less than a month later, the bank publicly pledged to reserve 12 percent of leadership positions for black candidates and began tying executive compensation to reaching diversity goals. In 2022, Goldman Sachs extended quotas to the capital markets by adopting a policy to avoid underwriting IPOs of firms without at least two board members that are not straight white men.

When diversity still refuses to rise to acceptable levels, the remaining solution is the direct exclusion of non-diverse candidates. While public support for anti-discrimination laws and equal opportunity laws is high, public support for affirmative action and quotas is decidedly mixed. Hardline views such as those expressed in author Ijeoma Oluo’s Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America—namely that any white man in a position of power perpetuates a system of white male domination”—are still considered extreme, even within U.S. progressive circles.

As such, when explicit exclusion is used to eliminate groups like white men from selection processes, it is done subtly. Managers are told to sequester all the resumes from “non-diverse” candidates—that is, white males. These resumes are discarded and the candidates are sent emails politely telling them that “other candidates were a better fit.” While some so-called “reverse discrimination” lawsuits have been filed, most of these policies go unreported. The reasons are straightforward; even in 2023, screening out all white men is not de jure legal. Moreover, any member of the professional managerial class who witnesses and reports discrimination against white men will never work in their field again.

Even anonymous whistleblowing is likely to be rare. To imagine why, suppose incontrovertible evidence was produced that one’s employer was explicitly excluding white male candidates, and a lawsuit was filed. The employer’s reputation and the reputation of all the employees there, including the white men still working there, would be tarnished. That said, we can expect to see more lawsuits from men who feel they have little to lose.

This “Ask, Tell, Make” framework, under various descriptions, is the method by which individuals with a vested interest in more diversity push their organizations toward their preferred outcome. Force begins requesting modest changes to recruiting to make it “more fair.” Force ends with the heavy-handed application of quotas and even exclusion. The American system is not a monolith, however, which means that the strength of the push and its effects on competency is not distributed evenly.

Competency Is Declining From the Core Outwards

Think of the American system as a series of concentric rings with the government at the center. Directly surrounding that are the organizations that receive government funds, then the nonprofits that influence and are subject to policy, and finally business at the periphery. Since the era of the Manhattan Project and the Space Race, the state capacity of the federal government has been declining almost monotonically.

While this has occurred for a multitude of reasons, the steel girders supporting the competency of the federal government were the first to be exposed to the saltwater of the Civil Rights Act and related executive orders. Government agencies, which are in charge of overseeing all the other systems, have seen the quality of their human capital decline tremendously since the 1960s. While the damage to an agency like the Department of Agriculture may have long-term deadly consequences, the most immediate danger is at safety-critical agencies like the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

The Air Traffic Control (ATC) system used in the U.S. relies on an intricate dance of visual or radar observation, transponders, and radio communication, all with the incredible challenge of keeping thousands of simultaneously moving planes from ever crashing into each other. Since air controlling is one of the only jobs that pays more than $100,000 per year and does not require a college diploma, it has been a popular career choice for individuals without a degree who nonetheless have an exceptionally good memory, attention span, visuospatial awareness, and logical skills. The Air Traffic Selection and Training (AT-SAT) Exam, a standardized test of those critical skills, was historically the primary barrier to entry for air controllers. As a consequence of the AT-SAT, as well as a preference for veterans with former air controller experience, 83 percent of air controllers in the U.S. were white men as of 2014.

That year, the FAA added a Biographical Questionnaire (BQ) to the screening process to tilt the applicant pool toward diverse candidates. Facing pushback in the courts from well-qualified candidates who were screened out, the FAA quietly backed away from the BQ and adopted a new exam, the Air Traffic Skills Assessment (ATSA). While the ATSA includes some questions similar to those of the BQ, it restored the test’s focus on core air traffic skills. The importance of highly-skilled air controllers was made clear in the most deadly air disaster in history, the 1977 Tenerife incident. Two planes, one taking off and one taxiing, collided on the runway due to confusion between the captain of KLM 4805 and the Tenerife ATC. The crash, which killed 583 people, resulted in sweeping changes in aviation safety culture.

Recently, the tremendous U.S. record for air safety established since the 1970s has been fraying at the edges. The first three months of 2023 saw nine near-miss incidents at U.S. airports, one with two planes coming within 100 feet of colliding. This terrifying uptick from years prior resulted in the FAA and NTSB convening safety summits in March and May, respectively. Whether they dared to discuss root causes seems unlikely.

Given the sheer size of the U.S. military in both manpower and budget dollars, it should not come as a surprise that the diversity push has also affected the readiness of this institution. Following three completely avoidable collisions of U.S. Navy warships in 2017 and a fire in 2020 that resulted in the scuttling of USS Bonhomme Richard, a $750 million amphibious assault craft, two retired marines conducted off-the-record interviews with 77 current and retired Navy officers. One recurring theme was the prioritization of diversity training over ship handling and warfighting preparedness. Many of them openly admit that, given current issues, the U.S. would likely lose an open naval engagement with China. Instead of taking the criticism to heart, the Navy commissioned “Task Force One Navy,” which recommended deemphasizing or eliminating meritocratic tests like the Officer Aptitude Rating to boost diversity. Absent an existential challenge, U.S. military preparedness is likely to continue to degrade.

The decline in the capacity of government contractors is likewise obvious, with the largest contractors being the most directly impacted. The five largest contractors—Lockheed Martin, Boeing, General Dynamics, Raytheon Company, and Northrop Grumman—will all struggle to maintain competency in the coming years.

Boeing, one of only two firms globally capable of mass-producing large airliners, has a particularly striking crisis unfolding in its institutional culture. Shortly after releasing the 737 MAX, 346 people died in two nearly identical 737 MAX crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia. The cause of the crashes was a complex interaction between design choices, cost-cutting led by MBAs, FAA issues, the MCAS flight-control system, a faulty sensor, and pilot training. Meanwhile, on the defense side of the business, Boeing’s new fuel tanker, the KC-46A Pegasus is years behind on deliveries due to serious technical flaws with the fueling system along with multiple cases of Foreign Object Debris left inside the plane during construction: tools, a red plastic cap, and in one case, even trash. Between the issues at ATC and Boeing, damage to the U.S.’s phenomenal aviation safety record seems almost inevitable.

After government contractors, the next-most-affected class of institutions are nonprofit organizations. They are entrapped by the government whose policies they are subject to and trying to influence, the opinions of their donor base, and lack of any profit motive. The lifeblood of nonprofits is access to capital, either directly in the form of government grants or through donations that are deemed tax-deductible. Accessing federal monies means being subject to the full weight of U.S. diversity rules and regulations. Nonprofits are generally governed by boards whose members tend to overlap with the list of major donors. Because advocacy for diversity and board memberships are both high-status positions, unsurprisingly board members tend to voice favorable opinions of diversity, and those opinions flow downstream to the organizations they oversee.

Nonprofits—including universities, charities, and foundations—exist in an overlapping ecosystem with journalism, with individuals tending to freely circulate between the four. The activities of nonprofits are bound up in the same discourses shaped by current news and academic research, with all four reflecting the same general ideological consensus. Finally, lacking the profit motive, the decision-making processes of nonprofits are influenced by what will affect the status of the individuals within those organizations rather than what will affect profits. Within nonprofits, the cost of incompetent staffers is borne by “stakeholders,” rather than any one individual.

While all businesses subject to federal law must prioritize diversity over competency at some level, the problem is worse at publicly-traded corporations for reasons both obvious and subtle. The obvious reason is that larger companies present larger targets for EEOC actions and discrimination lawsuits with hundreds of millions of dollars at stake. Corporations have logically responded by hiring large teams of HR professionals to preempt such lawsuits. Over the past several decades, HR has evolved from simply overseeing onboarding to involvement in every aspect of hiring, promotions, and firings, seeing them all through a political and regulatory lens.

The more subtle reason for pressure within publicly-traded companies is that they require ongoing relationships with a spiderweb of banks, credit ratings agencies, proxy advisory services, and most importantly, investors. Given that the loss of access to capital is an immediate death sentence for most businesses, the CEOs of publicly-traded companies tend to push diversity over competency even when the decline in firm performance is clear. CEOs would likely rather trade a small drag on profits margins than a potentially career-ending scandal from pushing back.

Whereas publicly-traded corporations nearly uniformly push diversity, privately-held businesses vary tremendously based on the views of their owners. Partnerships such as the Big Four accounting firms and top-tier management consultancies are high-status. High-status firms must regularly proclaim extensive support for diversity. While the firms tend to be highly selective, partnerships whose leadership is overwhelmingly white and male have generally capitulated to the zeitgeist and are cutting standards to hit targets. Firms often manage around this by hiring for diversity and then putting diversity hires into roles where they are the least likely to damage the firm or the brand. Somewhat counterintuitively, firms with diverse founders are often highly meritocratic, as the structure harnesses the founder’s desire to make money and shields them from criticism on diversity issues.

The most notable example of a diverse meritocracy is Vista Equity Partners, the large private equity firm founded by Robert F. Smith, America’s wealthiest black man. Robert F. Smith is one of the most vocal advocates for and philanthropists to historically black U.S. colleges and universities. It would be reasonable to expect Vista to prioritize diversity over competency in its portfolio companies. However, Vista has instead been profiled for giving all portfolio company management teams the Criteria Cognitive Aptitude Test and ruthlessly culling low-performers. Given the amount of value to be created by promoting the best people into leadership roles of their portfolio companies, one might imagine this to be low-hanging fruit for the rest of private equity, yet Vista is an outlier. Why Vista can apply the CCAT without a public outcry is obvious.

The other firms that tend to still focus on competency are those that are small and private. Such firms have two key advantages: they fall below the fifteen-employee threshold for the most onerous EEOC rules and the owner can usually directly observe the performance of everyone inside the organization. Within small firms, underperformance is usually obvious. Tech startups, being both small and private, would seem to have the right structure to prioritize competency.

The American System Is Cracking

Promoting diversity over competency does not simply affect new hires and promotion decisions. It also affects the people already working inside of America’s systems. Morale and competency inside U.S. organizations are declining. Those who understand that the new system makes it hard or impossible for them to advance are demoralized, affecting their performance. Even individuals poised to benefit from diversity preferences notice that better people are being passed over and the average quality of their team is declining. High performers want to be on a high-performing team. When the priorities of their organizations shift away from performance, high performers respond negatively.

This effect was likely seen in a recent paper by McDonald, Keeves, and Westphal. The paper points out that white male senior leaders reduce their engagement following the appointment of a minority CEO. While it is possible that author Ijeoma Oluo is correct, and that white men have so much unconscious bias raging inside of them that the appointment of a diverse CEO sends them into a tailspin of resentment, there is another more plausible explanation. When boards choose diverse CEOs to make a political statement, high performers who see an organization shifting away from valuing honest performance respond by disengaging.

Some demoralized employees—like James Damore in his now-famous essay, “Google’s Ideological Echo Chamber”—will directly push back against pro-diversity arguments. Like James, they will be fired. Older, demoralized workers, especially those who are mere years from retirement, are unlikely to point out the decline in competency and risk it costing them their jobs. Those who have a large enough nest egg may simply retire to avoid having to deal with the indignity of having to attend another Inclusive Leadership seminar.

As older men with tacit knowledge either retire or are pushed out, the burden of maintaining America’s complex systems will fall on the young. Lower-performing young men angry at the toxic mix of affirmative action (hurting their chances of admission to a “good school”) and credentialism (limiting the “good jobs” to graduates of “good schools”) are turning their backs on college and white-collar work altogether.

This is the continuation of a trend that began over a decade ago. High-performing young men will either collaborate, coast, or downshift by leaving high-status employment altogether. Collaborators will embrace “allyship” to attempt to bolster their chances of getting promoted. Coasters realize that they need to work just slightly harder than the worst individual on their team. Their shirking is likely to go unnoticed and they are unlikely to feel enough emotional connection to the organization to raise alarm when critical mistakes are being made. The combination of new employees hired for diversity, not competence, and the declining engagement of the highly competent sets the stage for failures of increasing frequency and magnitude.

The modern U.S. is a system of systems interacting together in intricate ways. All these complex systems are simply assumed to work. In February of 2021, cold weather in Texas caused shutdowns at unwinterized natural gas power plants. The failure rippled through the systems with interlocking dependencies. As a result, 246 people died. In straightforward work, declining competency means that things happen more slowly, and products are lower quality or more expensive. In complex systems, declining competency results in catastrophic failures.

To understand why, one must understand the concept of a “normal accident.” In 1984, Charles Perrow, a Yale sociologist, published the book, Normal Accidents: Living With High-Risk Technologies. In this book, Perrow lays out the theory of normal accidents: when you have systems that are both complex and tightly coupled, catastrophic failures are unavoidable and cannot simply be designed around. In this context, a complex system is one that has many components that all need to interact in a specified way to produce the desired outcome. Complex systems often have relationships that are nonlinear and contain feedback loops. Tightly-coupled systems are those whose components need to move together precisely or in a precise sequence.

The 1979 Three Mile Island Accident was used as a case study: a relatively minor blockage of a water filter led to a cascading series of malfunctions that culminated in a partial meltdown. In A Demon of Our Own Design, author Richard Bookstaber added two key contributions to Perrow’s theory: first, that it applies to financial markets, and second, that regulation intended to fix the problem may make it worse.

The biggest shortcoming of the theory is that it takes competency as a given. The idea that competent organizations can devolve to a level where the risk of normal accidents becomes unacceptably high is barely addressed. In other words, rather than being taken as absolutes, complexity and tightness should be understood to be relative to the functionality of the people and systems that are managing them. The U.S. has embraced a novel question: what happens when the men who built the complex systems our society relies on cease contributing and are replaced by people who were chosen for reasons other than competency?

The answer is clear: catastrophic normal accidents will happen with increasing regularity. While each failure is officially seen as a separate issue to be fixed with small patches, the reality is that the whole system is seeing failures at an accelerating rate, which will lead in turn to the failure of other systems. In the case of the Camp Fire that killed 85 people, PG&E fired its CEO, filed Chapter 11, and restructured. The system’s response has been to turn off the electricity and raise wildfire insurance premiums. This has resulted in very little reflection. The more recent coronavirus pandemic was another teachable moment. What started just three years ago with a novel respiratory virus has caused a financial crisis, a bubble, soaring inflation, and now a banking crisis in rapid succession.

Patching the specific failure mode is simultaneously too slow and induces unexpected consequences. Cascading failures overwhelm the capabilities of the system to react. 20 years ago, a software bug caused a poorly-managed local outage that led to a blackout that knocked out power to 55 million people and caused 100 deaths. Utilities were able to restore power to all 55 million people in only four days. It is unclear if they could do the same today. U.S. cities would look very different if they remained without power for even two weeks, especially if other obstructions unfolded. What if emergency supplies sat on trains immobilized by fuel shortages due to the aforementioned pipeline shutdown? The preference for diversity over competency has made our system of systems dangerously fragile.

Americans living today are the inheritors of systems that created the highest standard of living in human history. Rather than protecting the competency that made those systems possible, the modern preference for diversity has attenuated meritocratic evaluation at all levels of American society. Given the damage already done to competence and morale combined with the natural exodus of baby boomers with decades worth of tacit knowledge, the biggest challenge of the coming decades might simply be maintaining the systems we have today.

The path of least resistance will be the devolution of complex systems and the reduction in the quality of life that entails. For the typical resident in a second-tier city in Mexico, Brazil, or South Africa, power outages are not uncommon, tap water is probably not safe to drink, and hospital-associated infections are common and often fatal. Absent a step change in the quality of American governance and a renewed culture of excellence, they prefigure the country’s future.
 
I still think there's a tremendous amount of potential for people who've stayed grounded in reality. But the farther you get away from actually grappling with life with your hands, and dealing with people in a way that uplifts them, the more you saw off your own legs in the sense of doing business. When it comes to people working, that's simple, they just need a good goalpost and they'll adhere to it, humans are good at that. What I'm worried about is competency in leadership, how the person living a more comfortable and coddled life than almost anyone throughout the entirety of human history will have the wherewithal to actually make the various gears turn without rust and gunk building up, in a metaphorical sense. Not worried about one gear, we're not that bad off, but I am definitely worried about the "computer" that handles all these functions at once, especially when it feels life is too short to look at each mechanism accurately and instead substitute some lack-luster and soulless metering that can't adapt and can't inspire. That's where the real competency crisis lies.
 
I know a guy. Let’s call him Dave. It’s not his name. Dave has just retired at 71 ish. Dave wanted to retire a while back but his job is basically designing and looking after a very specific set of electrical stuff and control systems at nuclear power plants. Dave’s a lovely bloke, and very smart. But not just smart, Dave is dedicated and a very safe pair of hands. If you were wanting a man to look after a critical bit of nuclear infrastructure then a man like Dave is who you’d want. Old school engineer. Unflappable. Can fix any problem, and is always there
Dave retired so late becasue literally nobody else in the uk could do his job and he was paid a quite astounding amount of money to carry on past retirement until he managed to train someone to do it. Dave has quietly confided to me that the replacement isn’t as good but he’s getting on and wants to live out his final years fixing classic cars and playing with his grandkids
I am not on Dave’s level of competence or skill but even at my level, I see this happening. The people with the combo of skill, and resilience and ability to handle these complex issues without crying or trooning out are boomers or older gen x. There are a very few millennials and even fewer younger ones who I’d trust with anything very critical. The kids coming up who are smart are so badly educated they have no background. Sometimes you’ll say something and realise they have no idea what you mean - and this is critical knowledge for the job. It’d be like a bridge engineer with a PhD in bridge design, who’s never built a bridge and never heard of Tacoma narrows but expects to be design lead. And he has a breakdown every week and can’t manage conflict
We’re screwed
I get it;
But vice versa, the millineal generation is one thats also barely had a chance in the job market, has gone through (now 2) "once in a lifetime recessions", and hasn't had much of a chance.

Some have succeeded, but the job market is increadibly different to how it was when the boomers were younger. Places don't want entry level staff anymore, they hadn't for years, and they rarely want to train from the ground up, or from a basic high school or university degree. Foot in the door positions are even competitive now, and the job markets so bad, people are even willing to work internships for free.

You have all this going on for years, with companies that would rather import scab labour from India, Pakistan, Singapore, and the third world at large, and people seem shocked that this generation has a lack of training, or many have just fucked off and gone into more basic trades or whatever else they can do, if they didnt make it as programmers or something more complex.

Suddenly its "why arent young people trained anymore?"

Maybe its because for the past decade, an entry level job has required 10+ years of microsoft visio and javascript programming.

I can remember my dad getting into IT, being someone with an arts major, and his boss just approaching him in the early 90s and asking if he wanted to be "trained on computers". Simple, as.

We have nothing like that now.

I understand that companies are under the squeeze too, have to cut costs, and need people starting to start on the ground and running- but thats the consequences of the system we currently live under. A generation has largely skipped out on learning, because opportunities were just offshored, outsourced, or imported. The boomers probably realized this as it was happening, but could or did do nothing.

Whenever boomers go "why arent youth as trained as we were" I just roll my eyes a bit.


If we're talking about Saffa, he has an interesting view- but his video can basically be summarized by "shit was bad for years, people were deluded, youth had no shot in Saffa and moved on and out of the country because of how dangerous it was and how few jobs there were"

"There's a reason why my high school reunion was in the UK"

While the broader West isnt Saffa, there are a lot of parallels. The time to train and get most millennials enthused about the system was probably about a decade ago. We do have some people who made it into the system, but so many didnt, so many just found other ways to survive, others neeted, others just accepted wagedom after numerous rejections, and even others just bounced out of the West in general.

Only, for a decade later, for the boomers to realize they apparently now needed this generation. Constant "well, we refuse to train anyone local, lets just import someone from India to do the job" fucked over the boomers, honestly. Short sighted solutions for immeduate financial survival or "profit" (whichever one floats your boat) have damning effects down the line.
 
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I know a guy. Let’s call him Dave. It’s not his name. Dave has just retired at 71 ish. Dave wanted to retire a while back but his job is basically designing and looking after a very specific set of electrical stuff and control systems at nuclear power plants. Dave’s a lovely bloke, and very smart. But not just smart, Dave is dedicated and a very safe pair of hands. If you were wanting a man to look after a critical bit of nuclear infrastructure then a man like Dave is who you’d want. Old school engineer. Unflappable. Can fix any problem, and is always there
Dave retired so late becasue literally nobody else in the uk could do his job and he was paid a quite astounding amount of money to carry on past retirement until he managed to train someone to do it. Dave has quietly confided to me that the replacement isn’t as good but he’s getting on and wants to live out his final years fixing classic cars and playing with his grandkids
I am not on Dave’s level of competence or skill but even at my level, I see this happening. The people with the combo of skill, and resilience and ability to handle these complex issues without crying or trooning out are boomers or older gen x. There are a very few millennials and even fewer younger ones who I’d trust with anything very critical. The kids coming up who are smart are so badly educated they have no background. Sometimes you’ll say something and realise they have no idea what you mean - and this is critical knowledge for the job. It’d be like a bridge engineer with a PhD in bridge design, who’s never built a bridge and never heard of Tacoma narrows but expects to be design lead. And he has a breakdown every week and can’t manage conflict
We’re screwed
Excellent example. I have another, I know someone named "Kelly" who helps design flying death machines. Kelly has been doing this for over 40 years. Kelly wants to retire as well yet can't as he cannot find a competent replacement. Usually a good one leaves after 3-5 years at the company as they jump for more money elsewhere vs. A stable employment at Kelly's company.

Kelly told me about a hire from a HBCU who quite literally couldn't do the work assigned. He told me it takes the company about 1 year to make a good engineer out of a fresh graduate. After 1 year this guy still wasn't cutting it. It took Kelly 5 YEARS to eventually fire him as HR freaked out about firing a POC.

The West should never apologize for being a developed, safe place founded and maintained by white men. Fuck the diversity obsessed retards, that can suck down bacteria and protozoa infested water in their favorite diverse shithole and enjoy 3 hours of electricity a day.
 
I would like to posit that the practical application group are also probably the group of people most likely to figure out how the system has been set up to be specifically hostile to them and are the ones most likely to say "Fuck all of this shit." and go do something like Find a Wagie tier job that will pay the bills with a part time job and play Videh games with the rest of their time.
This is hauntingly accurate, because I know multiple people this description fits like a glove. Scorned by the system to the point where they've checked out of society and just wanting to get by on escapism not caring if the rest of it burns.
Shit man, it applies to a bunch of us in this very thread.
 
What if we had an education system where we taught ourselves? Like we had the coursework and guidance, but it's expected that the older students would teach the younger students, and collaborate between themselves to learn their coursework, with the teacher explaining and clarifying more complicated things and helping when they get stuck?
There's a certain line of thought of this method when it comes to teaching; it reinforces the student who's more learned, while giving instruction to the learner. One of the hurdles is you need a classroom of agreeable students to buy into it; otherwise the more learned kid is gonna feel like they're wasting their time (why aren't I learning anything) and both are gonna be wondering what the hell the teacher is even there for.

I'm not saying this is impossible; but I am saying we'd have to rewrite the past 60+ years of what public schooling has taught us what school should be. We'd also need a more homogenous classroom for harmony; Juan who's illiterate in English and Jamal who just wants to be about pimpin' and hoes, they're not welcome.

Maybe its because for the past decade, an entry level job has required 10+ years of microsoft visio and javascript programming.

I can remember my dad getting into IT, being someone with an arts major, and his boss just approaching him in the early 90s and asking if he wanted to be "trained on computers". Simple, as.
A lot of those jobs that get posted are purposed to fail; because they want the cheap H1-B. They'll throw in a shit ton of "requirements," but then post something like $15/hour. Anyone with several years of experience and at least one higher level cert knows they're worth more than minimum wage; so the position goes unfulfilled. Eventually, when enough time passes, the company goes to the feds and says "We couldn't fill this position with home grown labor, we need foreigners." It's all a fucking game.
 
otherwise the more learned kid is gonna feel like they're wasting their time (why aren't I learning anything
I'd argue that the learned kid *is* learning. He's learning how to see things in a different perspective, how to explain his knowledge to others, how to guide and instruct others, and how to study - for when he's in university and NEEDS to study. Imagine if you had a boss that learned those skills as a kid and has built on them over the years.
 
I'd argue that the learned kid *is* learning. He's learning how to see things in a different perspective, how to explain his knowledge to others, how to guide and instruct others, and how to study - for when he's in university and NEEDS to study. Imagine if you had a boss that learned those skills as a kid and has built on them over the years.
I'm not disagreeing, but when it comes to "by the book" teaching, you generally separate students into three groups; young children, older children, and adults. Young children usually don't have the issue because they're doing stuff with other kids and their brains aren't as developed, adults are less likely to have the issue because they know they're there to learn and will take any help they can get.

But when it comes to older children, especially when it comes to years of rebellion, puberty, social classes, and the like; you need a different approach to keep the peace in the classroom.

You're not wrong with the idea, but even if explained like that, if the kid gets bored and feels one way, it can be a chore to get them to go with it.
 
This is hauntingly accurate, because I know multiple people this description fits like a glove. Scorned by the system to the point where they've checked out of society and just wanting to get by on escapism not caring if the rest of it burns.
I mean the escapism isn't just a matter of escapism...its indulging in your innate skillset and instincts.

Video games are intrinsically learning by doing, you aren't just getting a dopamine hit from the beep boop, you are soothing the lizard part of your brain that wants you to learn new things in the way that you know how to learn new things.

You're not wrong with the idea, but even if explained like that, if the kid gets bored and feels one way, it can be a chore to get them to go with it.
I would say that you would have to pick the ones that have potential to do something with the extra experience in leadership, and actual potential not "My Daddy is Joe Biden so I get an extra boost."
 
I'd argue that the learned kid *is* learning. He's learning how to see things in a different perspective, how to explain his knowledge to others, how to guide and instruct others, and how to study - for when he's in university and NEEDS to study. Imagine if you had a boss that learned those skills as a kid and has built on them over the years.
This phenomenon has been tried and tested in the public schools for some time and it's been a complete, unmitigated disaster. They intentionally hold back smart students and keep them in general population classrooms so that they'll teach the idiots in the class. All it does is regress the whole class to the mean. The idiots look smarter but the smart students get held back.

Students get binned for a reason.
 
This phenomenon has been tried and tested in the public schools for some time and it's been a complete, unmitigated disaster. They intentionally hold back smart students and keep them in general population classrooms so that they'll teach the idiots in the class. All it does is regress the whole class to the mean. The idiots look smarter but the smart students get held back.

Students get binned for a reason.
... Well darn. I figured it would be a good theory. Maybe if there's a heavy level of trust and cooperation but it would be more complicated to execute then I'd like.
 
There's a principle in cybernetics which is that cybernetic systems do not scale. What that means is the sort of feedback->response->feedback->response loop which works with small systems, lets say humans in a group, doesn't scale up as the size of the system increases.

Centralised intelligence can't handle big systems because the input and analysis and response is a bottle neck. By the time you've understood the situation, analysed and issued new orders, the situation itself has changed. Things like the economy are just too complex.

What DOES scale is distributed intelligence. Define principles and ways of interacting with other nodes and let local systems self-manage. Why isn't this done? Because people want power. Sometimes the problem is recognized. The Tories in the UK made efforts to devolve power to local councils. But all too often it isn't.

Also, it is often the case that the people in charge are the ones who didn't have the capability of actually doing the necessary tasks so fell to telling others to do them instead. That problem is endemic in my field and I am sure the case in others, also. At some point "Manager" stopped being the most senior person who did the job and became someone who had studied management and got plopped in at a high level of an industry they didn't understand. Don't get me wrong, there are valuable skills to be taught in how to manage large projects, businesses, etc. But they are things which help someone who understands the work more than a substitute for it.
 
This phenomenon has been tried and tested in the public schools for some time and it's been a complete, unmitigated disaster. They intentionally hold back smart students and keep them in general population classrooms so that they'll teach the idiots in the class. All it does is regress the whole class to the mean. The idiots look smarter but the smart students get held back.

Students get binned for a reason.
Case in point, and I'm angry enough about it to double post, Common Core!

When I looked into what it actually was I was horrified. Really, genuinely disturbed and freaked out. I can think of few things more deleterious to actual real learning than that. It penalizes smart children who develop a real understanding, literally penalizes it, and instead enforces rote memorization of a process. I mean this quite objectively and completely - multiple murderers have caused less harm than the proponents of Common Core. I 100% mean that without irony or doubt.

Common Core has to be deliberately designed to weed out smart kids. There is no other explanation. If I had been taught that way I would absolutely and without doubt be worse at maths than I am today and there's a real chance it would have catastrophically damaged my love of learning.

I'm not a hateful person but I hate Common Core right from my gut. It is child abuse.
 
Places don't want entry level staff anymore, they hadn't for years, and they rarely want to train from the ground up,
That’s been going on a long time - I left academia and with a PHD and a couple of post docs and a decent publication record. I managed to time it to hit a recession (I’ve been through a couple) and scraped an entry level admin slave job in pharma.
These days it’s even worse. I’m getting qualified MDs as assistants. Yet with a decent track record people are calling you constantly for jobs. It’s a very strange market . I make a point of training good people up so they can move up, but that’s not done these days either. Men don’t want to mentor anyone who could metoo them (and I don’t blame them tbh) and just no one trusts anyone any more. All the cancel culture plus the insane race focus has killed collegial relationships at work. Anyone who isn’t out of control has their head down and their mouth firmly shut.
 
Common Core has to be deliberately designed to weed out smart kids. There is no other explanation. If I had been taught that way I would absolutely and without doubt be worse at maths than I am today and there's a real chance it would have catastrophically damaged my love of learning.
You're not wrong, it was designed to ruin standards
.
 
Lots of impotent whining about 'diversity', 'meritocracy', 'retention', which only detracts from the problem, which is a structural one. The state/the non-governmental operator of a complex system should anticipate how many people with a specific skillset are needed AND will be needed in the future. If you expect future shortages, pour money into training NOW. If a complex system cannot be safely operated to the point it is likely to result in loss of life or substantial economic damage, it should be taken over by the state and/or shut down. If a system is so complex, only 0.0005% of the population have the skills to keep it running - you've failed at the system design or training its future operators or both. Into the garbage the system goes. Hyperbolised scaremongering of the sort here
The path of least resistance will be the devolution of complex systems and the reduction in the quality of life that entails. For the typical resident in a second-tier city in Mexico, Brazil, or South Africa, power outages are not uncommon, tap water is probably not safe to drink, and hospital-associated infections are common and often fatal.
renders your entire wall of text vapid.

Honestly, the article gave me 'PWWWEASE DON'T FIRE ME' vibes and made me feel second-hand embarrassment. The author is one whiny faggot.
 
That’s been going on a long time - I left academia and with a PHD and a couple of post docs and a decent publication record. I managed to time it to hit a recession (I’ve been through a couple) and scraped an entry level admin slave job in pharma.
These days it’s even worse. I’m getting qualified MDs as assistants. Yet with a decent track record people are calling you constantly for jobs. It’s a very strange market . I make a point of training good people up so they can move up, but that’s not done these days either. Men don’t want to mentor anyone who could metoo them (and I don’t blame them tbh) and just no one trusts anyone any more. All the cancel culture plus the insane race focus has killed collegial relationships at work. Anyone who isn’t out of control has their head down and their mouth firmly shut.
The “problem” with training is that we’re in a job market that incentivizes job-hopping if you want to maximize your salary. For the kinds of complex systems we’re talking about, 3-5 years of experience is probably around the minimum timeline for when you START to really understand what you’re working on, but nowadays staying at the same job for 5+ years when you’re in your 20s-early 30s is considered somewhat unusual.

It’s a vicious cycle because in this kind of environment, employers are also incentivized to shell out big bucks for someone with the required experience as opposed to promoting internally - you can either spend a lot of time and money training someone who might be a useful asset in 5 years, only for them to leave the company for a higher-paying job using the training you just paid for as part of their credentials, or you can pay a high salary to an outsider who has a proven track record and will be productive from day one.

The whole system is fundamentally fucked, the only “solution” I see is a near-total collapse and rebuild from the ground up.
 
The whole system is fundamentally fucked, the only “solution” I see is a near-total collapse and rebuild from the ground up.

I'm convinced all of this is a controlled demolition of the West. We'll eventually be living in Brazil standards and have 12 hours of electricity per day. I doubt the Politicians and their billionaire donors in their gated districts with security are going to be worrying how we are living. They'll just keep telling you you have to be poor because of global warming while they laugh it up at their seaside mansions.
barack-michelle-obama-house-2-1575929542.jpg
 
Have scanned this some, been thinking about it while doing the usual Friday stuff.

My background - five years as acquisition manager for large-scale computer-based training systems, plus some contracting.

There's virtually no human endeavor ever where mistakes and fuckups haven't happened, and won't happen . Sometimes the mistakes have bad effects, sometimes good effects. Just goes with human involvement.

As a rule the more we need a system to do the more complex it becomes. For our purposes, a system is a combination of hardware/software/human interface, intended to accomplish a task/tasks. System specifications can be incredibly detailed and complex, sometimes in volumes. And some systems require integration, which brings its' own set of fuckups/problems.

In a perfect world, all systems of all types are continually upgraded and replaced. This obviously doesn't always happen, for two interconnected reasons - money and politics. That's why you get the need for people who know COBOL, for example. An organization that had their shit together, operating with logic instead of politics, would have long since chucked that shit out.

In my opinion, from what I have seen and experienced in seven decades of life, it isn't that things fuck up, but that things work well so often. For example, much prefer driving our 2017 Hyundai to driving a 1970 Cadillac. Has most of the features and has no temperamental carburetor or bias-belted tires. Vastly more reliable. When I watched TV greatly preferred the 32-inch flat screen TV to any top-of-the-line 1980 color TV, things have improved so much. In the same direction, suggest for every time there's a low-quality hire fucking up, there are more doing their jobs well. When I need something fixed, on almost every occasion anywhere I go things are fixed right the first time. Should an error occur, it's addressed.

The US Navy trains people off the street to be nuclear technicians. Very long, very demanding training. When was the last time you heard of a nuclear-powered Navy ship's propulsion system crumping?

Am speaking in generalities. When something or someone fucks up on you, your personal anger rate is 100%. Would also say the vast majority of people still take pride in their work, for their own reasons. That's pretty much what I see in life.

I keep seeing the glass as half-full instead of half-empty.
 
The state/the non-governmental operator of a complex system should anticipate how many people with a specific skillset are needed AND will be needed in the future. If you expect future shortages, pour money into training NOW. If a complex system cannot be safely operated to the point it is likely to result in loss of life or substantial economic damage, it should be taken over by the state and/or shut down. If a system is so complex, only 0.0005% of the population have the skills to keep it running - you've failed at the system design or training its future operators or both.
The problem being, most of our "complex systems," don't require super advanced training to maintain. We had an unofficial poster in the Air Wing, it showed a wrench turner doing his job and had the text; "It takes a PhD to design, a Bachelor's to break, and a High-School Diploma to fix." And that's an unconventional truth for the Collegiate Complex who pushes degrees for everyone. You don't need everyone to be a Nikolai Tesla or Werner Von Braun, you only need one or at most a team of them depending on what you want to do; everyone else doesn't need super training. You let the big brains with all the fancy letters and paper to their name design things, you let people try it out and break it, and you repeat this process until you have something that works and at the same time, documented what made it fail and what got it working to create a manual for it. You then use this manual to train the maintainers.

It's like when Elon fired over half of the Twitter staff; you don't need hundreds of people to "maintain" a social media company. You need a few eggheads to plan and formulate new ideas/change, a handful of paper pushers, and the rest are gonna be system and database admins keeping the shit working. You don't need 200 mid-20's women to sit around and have team building exercises all day.

But also, the problem isn't education as much as it is society/laziness. In the article itself, it talked how Boeing couldn't get their FOD (Foreign Object Debris) under control, with their workers just leaving shit laying around. That isn't school learning, that's not being beaten into submission or having the threat of federal prison for bringing an aircraft down problem. They're not just hiring the "uneducated," they're hiring the lowest bidder, which often means not understanding or adhering to standards. Which means leaving your trash laying around, because you're too fucking stupid to find a trash can and put it away.
 
That’s been going on a long time - I left academia and with a PHD and a couple of post docs and a decent publication record. I managed to time it to hit a recession (I’ve been through a couple) and scraped an entry level admin slave job in pharma.
These days it’s even worse. I’m getting qualified MDs as assistants. Yet with a decent track record people are calling you constantly for jobs. It’s a very strange market . I make a point of training good people up so they can move up, but that’s not done these days either. Men don’t want to mentor anyone who could metoo them (and I don’t blame them tbh) and just no one trusts anyone any more. All the cancel culture plus the insane race focus has killed collegial relationships at work. Anyone who isn’t out of control has their head down and their mouth firmly shut.
Jobs are desperate for already trained staff,

and toss non-trained, casually trained, or basic people in the shitter.

Roles that may have once been around where a person could learn from the ground up (whether due to complexity increasing or cost, probably a combination of both) just don't exist anymore.

Most people here have made peace with that and either moved on within the job market (bootstraps) or moved away from it (neets).

The only part that actually irks me is when boomers are like "why cant we find qualified staff anymore??"

Again, its just eye rolling to me, honestly.

It wasn't in most company's corporate budget to include training anyone from the ground up anymore, and this became the norm across our economy for the past two decades.

Used to be that if you had a university degree, you at least showed you had the competence and ability to learn, to be consistent with something for a number of years, and had some "professional references" in teachers, peers, etc. You hopefully had a general idea of your field and could be further trained. We don't have qualified staff and companies are desperate to get anyone qualified, because we didnt give this generation the opportunity to train outside of academics and internships, while telling them university was the key.

Now, degrees are watered down, and not going to play "which came first, chicken or the egg",

but in terms of the mercenary attitude of everyone (and who caused it), companies laying off staff that have been there for 40 years, entire branches gone after recessions, people getting the shaft when theyve dedicated themselves to a company- that happening to the parent generation turned most millennials rightfully sour on the concept of corporate loyalty.

The only thing I would wish to change is give respect where it is due, and if someone is willing to train you, at least stick around for a bit after.

This is also why the curious situation of hundreds of people applying for jobs, or should say thousands, with hiring managers desperate to find mid-level people to fill entry level positions is pretty indicative of a systemic failure that still hasnt fully manifested.

I can remember my first corporate gig, and realizing I could make the same money working at a bar with my normal salary and tips, with a fraction of the stress- even before the pandemic. If it wasnt for supporting a family, and if I was still a single guy, Id probably take that over being overworked, underappreciated, underemployed, and probably tossed out at the next recession. Realizing that we also have the complex problem of tons of neets who dont even have a girlfriend, I think that equation is going to turn out pretty badly for companies in the immediate future, and just result in more H1Bs.
 
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