Rebane's Ruminations
August 2018
S M T W T F S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  

ARCHIVES


OUR LINKS


YubaNet
White House Blog
Watts Up With That?
The Union
Sierra Thread
RL “Bob” Crabb
Barry Pruett Blog

George Rebane

[This is the transcript of my regular KVMR commentary broadcast on 8 August 2018.]

Used to be that for most jobs you had to show some serious education and experience in your background in addition to good appearance and character.  And things really got tougher during the depths of our last recession, employers could be real picky about whom they hired.  Well things have now changed, and the change confirms the new growth track that our economy has taken since the 2016 election.

According to some leading staffing firms, we hear of companies now hiring people, not necessarily on the basis of what they know, but how motivated and teachable they appear to be.  One such large firm “estimates one in four of (its over 10,000) employer clients have made drastic changes to their recruiting process since the start of the year, such as skipping drug tests or criminal background checks, or removing preferences for a higher degree or high-school diploma.”  Of course, one demonstration of teachability and motivation is what kind of skillsets you’ve been able to garner on your own.  (more here)

Several staffing firms are even turning down clients who are not aware of today’s jobs landscape, and refuse to budge on tight salaries, required education, and relevant experience.  Their message to such employers is “we can’t help you fish for the few underpaid or unaware applicants (still) left out there.”

Before we start celebrating this new twist in the employment picture, let’s consider the kind of people, specifically voters, that such hiring practices will produce.  Pre-educated hires will be taught a very narrow and focused set of skills in their new workplaces – initially, just enough to do the job.  From where would they then get the breadth that a broader education provides about our country, societal issues, basic civics, and fields other than the one in which they have landed?  My concern is that prematurely terminating an education will produce a lot of what may be called one-tune piano players – good at what they do, but knowledgeable in little else.

We already see examples of that when we look at today’s wealthy and prominent entrepreneurs who quit school early, pursued their dreams, and were successful beyond their wildest hopes.  And now that they’re rich, their uninformed opinions on matters way outside their fields are valued as if they were oracles on Mt Olympus.  But the overwhelming fraction of today’s young early hires will not become rich, and they will have to pick up their broader knowledge of the rest of the world and its happenings from backyard BBQ conversations, and whatever time they can spare after work from family and TV.  Not a promising path to becoming an intelligent voter, and a very promising way to become someone who will base their vote on a silver-tongued politician’s unexamined and most recently broadcast sound bite.

So let’s turn the page from this hiring surge and consider what more and more experts are saying about the longer term prospects for jobs, people who understand the increasing role of intelligent machines in the workplace.  As you have heard in these commentaries, machines are replacing humans at an increasing rate in all kinds of tasks imaginable.  In the latest (7aug18) issue of Forbes, Dr Kiran Garimella, chief scientist & CTO at a high-tech company, writes ‘Job Loss From AI?  There’s More to Fear’.  He points out that we have already started the transition from human to machine workers.  And the skills most “immune to AI” are also “the most impervious to mandatory formal training methods because they stem from innate passion or prodigy-like natural skills. Examples are higher math, theoretical physics, the higher levels of art and music, and so on.”  In short, not too many of us are blessed with those passions and natural skills, and even those workers will see “their role will become either minimal or move up the cognitive scale.”

Personal relevance remains the overarching issue.  Contented people have always found a good answer to ‘what do I do that sustains the community of which I am a part?’  When that question no longer has an answer, then social order becomes brittle, and all futures look uncertain and not very promising.  How many voters even now understand enough to prepare for such a future?

My name is Rebane, and I also expand on this and related themes on Rebane’s Ruminations where the transcript of this commentary is posted with relevant links, and where such issues are debated extensively.  However, my views are not necessarily shared by KVMR.  Thank you for listening.

Posted in ,

4 responses to “Bar to Employment is Lowered”

  1. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    This was supposed to be here –
    The producer price index showed prices up 3.3 percent compared with a year earlier. That’s a decline from 3.4 percent in June. Economists had expected producer prices to rise.
    Initial jobless claims fell declined by 6,000 a seasonally adjusted 213,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. Economists had expected the rate to rise to 220,000.
    The four-week moving average of claims, considered a more reliable measure of the labor market because it smooths out week-to-week volatility, fell to 214,250. That is equal to the 48-year low set in May, according to Schwab’s Randy Federick.
    https://www.breitbart.com/education/2018/08/09/jobless-claims-unexpectedly-fell-and-inflation-ticked-down-suggesting-strong-u-s-economy-unfazed-by-trade-war/
    😉

    Like

  2. Scott Obermuller Avatar

    I’m going to have to disagree with the notion that voters coming online will be less intelligent voters due to more and more of them not having to have college or university educations. Rolling out of high school into the working world or military and then the career will be just fine as much as it ever has been. They are, first of all – earning a living and paying taxes. A 22 or 23 year old coming out of a university with little or no actual world experience these days is usually way behind some one who has spent 3 years in the military and is now producing value in the free market as far as understanding how to vote.
    Yes – there was a time when a proper education from an accredited 4 year school was good indicator of a well rounded and learned person.
    No longer. Much has been written lately about Sarah Jeong. Let me tell you the racists tweets are nothing compared to the twisted shit she believes. She has repudiated (somewhat) the tweets but stands by the most asinine set of beliefs imaginable.
    https://www.nationalreview.com/2018/08/sarah-jeong-boring-typical-product-higher-education/
    A graduate of UC Berkeley and Harvard Law School, she now sits on the editorial board of the most prestigious (cough, cough) newspaper in this nation. Also run by graduates of the most prestigious schools in the country. She is a complete loon.
    As one example, she believes that “…we learned that due process is what we get in lieu of justice.” Yeah, let’s get rid of that ‘due process’ BS! We wants what we wants!
    Sound like a reasonable, educated voter to you?
    It gets worse – way worse.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M4-TxYLQ_L0
    Columbia U is one of the premier universities in the country. I know lots of folks that never went to college that are better educated than these idiots.
    Look – a good, well rounded 4 year degree is great if you have a plan, don’t go into stupid debt and find (somehow) a good college or university as far as being an educated voter is concerned. But the idea that a lack of a college degree these days means that you probably won’t be voting intelligently is just nonsense. Most of what you need to know about govt and how to vote you should have been taught by the time you graduated from high school. I learned more about the Constitution in the 8th grade than anything Obama ever learned. A good voter is engaged, well read and applies common sense to the issues. Dirt poor totally uneducated farmers in the 1800s knew more about how to run a govt than most of the people actually running the govt these days.

    Like

  3. George Rebane Avatar

    ScottO 543pm – Good points Scott. But what you’re really saying is that the damage is already to have an electorate that is as well-rounded as it was in yesteryear. And, of course, you may be on the mark when national measures of dumbth are considered. I’m not arguing comparisons with, say, military experience. All I’m saying is that whatever residual benefit modern education has for our young, abbreviating even that cannot do anything positive toward producing the most well-rounded young people of which our society is still capable. To argue the other side of that is to claim that it would be better if our public schooling should consist of, say, only K-8 (something akin to the real old days), and then get the young ‘uns out there into the workforce.

    Like

  4. Bonnie McGuire Avatar

    So true Scott. Many years ago a retired teacher told us that that (in his opinion) the smartest people were the streetwise ones who have had all sorts of experiences learning many things in the real world. Even some professors said that youngsters graduating from high school should get a little experience in the real world to figure out what they want to go into. Unfortunately, too many running our gov went from high school to college (paid by mom and pop) and haven’t the slightest knowledge about the real world paying real taxes. I say real because those in gov pay their taxes from taxes collected from the private sector. I have the greatest admiration and respect for those who create, build, and know how to do everything we need that makes our lives and country wonderful!

    Like

Leave a comment