The Future of Human Experiences (HX)
I have a confession. Although my family would have been considered working poor (my dad worked odd jobs in construction, sawmills and factories), I was able to attend a university, pay my tuition by working on a dairy farm and graduate. This ultimately opened doors to membership among the “elite” by way of a college degree and a job with a living wage.
First, we cannot begin to understand the minds and actions of large numbers of American workers without first understanding there are two different Americas, one made up of a less educated or under-employed workforce suffering through deindustrialization, economic pain, reduced opportunities and community decay, while the other consists of highly educated, advantaged and elite individuals experiencing rapid wage increases and fortuitous and abundant career opportunities.
- The USA experienced a significant decline in manufacturing employment across the country. Manufacturing jobs declined by 3.4 million between 2001 and 2007 and by an additional 2.3 million during the Great Recession, for a total of 5.7 million jobs lost.
- The decline in “good” manufacturing jobs that paid a living wage, dealt a heavy blow to non-metropolitan areas.
- They saw elites and existing political systems doing nothing to address the long-term decline in their quality of life.
- Increases in trade with China led to many closures of US businesses and large job losses in low-tech manufacturing industries such as textiles, apparel, furniture, and toys.
- Globalization and foreign competition further reduced wages.
- New technologies automated the more routine tasks such as clerical occupations and factory work resulting in even lower wages and more reductions in “good” jobs.
- New innovations, AI and automation not only reduced jobs, but increased the wage gap between the top and the bottom earners.
- As AI innovations emerged, they focused mostly on replacing or reducing employed humans, rather than increasing the productivity of existing humans.
- Technological innovations, globalization, market forces, plus cloud-based ecosystems all seemed to work against America’s less educated workers.
- Employers encouraged workers to embrace new technologies and automation only to have these negatively impact their jobs, wages and future opportunities.
- During these painful times for the less educated, the opportunities and wages for elites – the professionals and leaders in managerial, engineering, finance, consulting, and design occupations increased. In fact, the top 10% of earners experienced rapid income increases during this same period.
- The role of trade unions also diminished significantly during these times leaving workers with less voice, influence and power to negotiate better wages and benefits.
- Increasingly the traditional political party of the working person, the Democrats, redirected their focus to issues supporting emerging constituent groups including African Americans; women’s rights activists; pro-choice advocates, proponents of ethnic diversity, sexual freedom and self-expressive individualism.
- Less educated white Americans increasingly felt disenfranchised, marginalized and ignored within their traditional political party affiliations.
- They saw elites focusing on saving trees, forests, plants, animals, clean air, clean water, etc., but not on solving their own suffering.
- Many of these less educated workers were socially conservative, Christian and religiously observant. They felt increasingly out of place and disrespected by the elites inside this transforming political party.
- The less educated workers increasingly felt maligned, beleaguered and mocked by the more educated.
- Science was increasingly weaponized to contradict or oppose their religious beliefs, rituals, practices, mental frameworks and traditions.
- They believed that elites wanted to restrict their freedoms, and to control and regulate how they worshiped and lived their lives. Covid-19 restrictions, lockdowns and regulations proved this point in their minds.
- They believed “godless” elites wanted to tell them how to behave—and, worse, how to think. When they complained, elites accused them of racism, ignorance and xenophobia.
- They saw elites using laws and government to make them act in violation of their deepest religious beliefs—making the Little Sisters of the Poor cover contraception, forcing public schools to allow entrance to bathrooms based on gender identity, etc.
- They felt elites held them in contempt.
- Resentment among the less educated and underemployed increasingly grew at the intersection of race, culture, class, and geography.
- They believed elites wanted to take their guns away from them for the purpose of controlling them. For many people, guns represented a “societal equalizer” that gave them power and control over life and death and afforded freedoms.
- Many small towns and rural communities, with their youth immigrating to bigger metropolitan areas with more opportunities, questioned whether they had any future. A sense of loss weighed on them – especially when they saw other areas rising and prospering.
- Non-metropolitan areas resented an elite culture that seemed to bask in the light and influence of big city liberal America, rather than around industrial centers and traditional conservative small-town America.
- They believed elites had rewritten the rules for success to favor themselves.
- They believed that elites had established a meritocracy based on their education, families, university and professional networks, resources, and inside knowledge of the rules and an understanding of technologies and the new economy.
- They didn’t respect the opinions of elite experts, believing they were biased against them and sought to manipulate and control.
- They didn’t respect the elite media they believed was not accurately reporting their reality and human experience.
- They were drawn to news and media sources, and politicians that identified with and empathized with their pain, grievances, struggles and human experience.
- They thought elites were hypocrites. Elites claimed to support free speech—until someone said something they didn’t like.
- Less educated workers have reasons to fear the future. Too few leaders are focused on improving their very real human experience.
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