Without an Education, You Don’t Have an Economy, Stupid
How profit-minded shortsightedness gutted the pipeline that made American power possible — and what it will take to rebuild it
There’s a particular kind of stupidity that doesn’t look like stupidity at all. It looks like efficiency. It looks like optimization. It looks like shareholder value and quarterly earnings and the disciplined elimination of anything that doesn’t immediately contribute to the bottom line.
It is the stupidity of a man who burns his house down for warmth.
Over the last fifty years, the dominant logic of American business increasingly made exactly this trade — systematically dismantling the educational and industrial pipeline that created economic dominance, in pursuit of profits that depended on that pipeline existing. We offshored the factories. We defunded the trade schools. The prevailing message became: making things is for people who couldn’t do anything better. And now we are staring at a shipbuilding gap with China so severe that Senator Tim Sheehy — a former Navy SEAL — recently described it as “quite scary,” noting that China builds ships 230 times faster than we do.









































