Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

The Crash and Burn of Credentialism
Brownstone Institute ^ | July 7, 2022 | Jeffrey A. Tucker

Posted on 07/07/2022 12:25:56 PM PDT by Heartlander

The Crash and Burn of Credentialism

The word credentials is derived from Latin for “believe” as in “Credo in unum deum” meaning “I believe in one God.” To have credentials is to have credibility, which is to say that people can and should trust you. 

We saw this throughout the pandemic. If you did not have the right piece of paper – if you just wanted rights and liberties – your opinions did not count. Actually, even if you did have the right piece of paper and you disagreed with the professional consensus, you also did not count. And through this method, only one opinion prevailed. Those willing to say what Anthony Fauci wanted said rose to the top. Those who disagreed were cast aside. 

So the credentialed elites had their way. And here we are with results about which no one seems pleased. Indeed, the long knives are out for all those people in whom we believed. 

Perhaps we need another word, because credentials are being discredited by the day. They have led us down a destructive path. This applies not only to epidemiologists but also economists and public health officials and nearly every other field of expertise, particularly that which tied its credibility to the government’s pandemic response, which has ended in calamity for the world. 

Politicians (Boris and Biden among the latest) are going down in flames but that’s just the beginning. Just as Henry Kissinger predicted on April 3, 2020, an aggressive response could and would lead to a wholesale loss of legitimacy for everyone involved. His warnings – born of his experience in watching Vietnam lead to a similar disaster – were ignored. Instead we ended up with his worst-case scenario: “a world on fire.”

I’ve earlier described the split in American political life as one between Patricians and Plebeians, recalling the ancient designations. One group rules and the other follows. This is not so much about ideology as it is control. To put a fine point on it, those who are ruled are fed up. They once trusted. They believed. They let their betters – those with credentials – have a go at it. And look at the mess they made! 

It’s impossible to decouple the current economic and political crisis in America today from pandemic policy, which is why Brownstone Institute puts such emphasis on this topic at a time when both parties and most intellectuals want to pretend like it never happened. They are culpable, of course, so they wish to rewrite the history of our times as if the “public health measures” were perfectly normal and fine. 

They were not. Their uselessness in mitigating disease was matched only by their brutality in dividing and demoralizing the population. The inflation of our times is directly caused by the pandemic response. The wild increases in public debt are utterly unsustainable. The educational losses are unbearable to contemplate. The health consequences of wrecked immune systems are more obvious by the day. 

The ever-astute Covid-policy critic Alex Berenson has drawn our attention to a fascinating commentary that appeared in the New Yorker. The article is the usual attack on Ron DeSantis but it delves deeper and signals to the credentialled classes that something is very wrong:

When I asked Republican activists and operatives about the rise of the school issues, they told a very similar story, one that began with the pandemic, during which many parents came to believe that their interests (in keeping their kids in school) diverged with those of the teachers and administrators. As (Kevin) Roberts, the Heritage Foundation president, put it to me, parents who were in many cases apolitical “became concerned about these overwrought lockdowns, and then when they asked question after question, there was no transparency about them, which led them to pay more attention when their kids were on Zoom. They overheard things being taught. They asked questions about curricula. They were just stonewalled every step of the way.” The battles regarding the covid lockdowns, Roberts told me, opened the way for everything that came after. “This is the key thing,” he said. “It started with questions about masking and other aspects of the lockdowns.”

Both parties right now are trying to answer the question of how fundamentally covid has changed politics. “From 2008 to 2020, elections were decided on the question of fairness—Obama ’08, Obama ’12, and Trump ’16 were all premised on the idea that someone else was getting too much, and you were getting too little, and it was unfair,” Danny Franklin, a partner at the Democratic strategy firm Bully Pulpit Interactive and a pollster for both Obama campaigns, told me. But the pandemic and the crises that followed (war, inflation, energy pressures) were not really about fairness but an amorphous sense of chaos. “People are looking for some control over their lives—in focus groups, in polls, once you start looking for that you see it everywhere,” Franklin said.

Both parties had shifted, in his view. Biden had sought to reassure Americans that the government, guided by experts, could reassert its control over events, from the pandemic to the crisis in energy supply. Republicans, meanwhile, had focussed on assuring voters that they would deliver control over a personal sphere of influence: schools that would teach what you wanted them to teach, a government that would make it easier, not harder, to get your hands on a gun. A moral panic about gender identity might seem anachronistic, but it served a very current political need. Franklin said, “It’s a way for Republicans to tell people that they can have back control of their lives.”

Berenson comments:

The profound failure of lockdowns and now vaccines have woken many average folks to the dangers of bureaucratic overreach, expert overconfidence, and authoritarianism in the name of safety. 

They took our rights. The media and public health authorities would like you to forget the closed playgrounds and shuttered malls and mask mandates of 2020. And the vaccine mandates of last fall. They want you to forget that for a while, the federal government tried to take the right to work from tens of millions of unvaccinated people. State and local governments went even further; and countries like Canada and Australia further still. UNTIL 10 DAYS AGO, CANADA DID NOT ALLOW UNVACCINATED PEOPLE ON PLANES – effectively curtailing their right to travel in a country that stretches more than 4,000 miles from British Columbia to Newfoundland. 

And they took our rights FOR NOTHING.

That’s it. People not only want control back over their lives. They also demand control over their government, the control promised to us hundreds of years ago when modern political systems were forged with the primacy of freedom as a first principle. This is something we can believe in. 

Whatever it is that the World Economic Forum is promising does not look especially impressive by comparison to the normal freedoms we took for granted. Indeed, we let the experts have a go at it and they created a monstrous experience for billions of people the world over. This will not be soon forgotten. 

The younger generation was especially touched. They were locked out of dorms. They couldn’t go bowling. They couldn’t get a haircut. They couldn’t go to the movies. They saw family businesses wrecked, siblings and parents demoralized, and even churches shuttered. When they finally were allowed to move about again, it was only by covering their faces. Then the shot mandates came, which turned out to introduce more risk than reward. When people finally started traveling again, prices had nearly doubled. It is increasingly obvious that locking down for a virus was really about pillaging the public on behalf of a powerful elite. 

It’s an outrage. The experience has shaped an entire generation, having taken place at the time when such experiences form an outlook that lasts a lifetime. The impact extends across all class, gender, language, and ethnic lines. 

Notice too that things are not going in the direction that the credentialled lockdowners had hoped. Their censorship is not working, nor their media control, nor their intimidation tactics. They have been discredited. 

We are looking for new ways to believe in something. Let’s just call it freedom. It’s not nearly as risky as putting our fate in the hands of the same gang that betrayed the multitudes in this last go around.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government
KEYWORDS: bloggers
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-26 next last

1 posted on 07/07/2022 12:25:56 PM PDT by Heartlander
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Heartlander
Bush and Kerry both got the credential of a Yale degree, but both were mediocre students.

And we have suffered under their incompetent leadership.

2 posted on 07/07/2022 12:36:19 PM PDT by who_would_fardels_bear (This is not a tagline.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

Some credentials count. However, credentials coming from anyone incompetent enough to work for the gubmit are worth as much as that $1.00 bill in your Monopoly game.

If it’s a gubmit lawyer, divide the above by 10 million.

Eff them, the turd wagon they rode in on, and all their previous and future families. May they catch Monkey Pox of the tongue and die a death of 1,000 years.


3 posted on 07/07/2022 12:38:52 PM PDT by Da Coyote
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

I worked Avionics as a EE for 30 years. In my experience the PhD’s generally wrote more unnecessarily complex programs than less credentialed engineers. And frankly some of the technicians without 4 year degrees were some of the best. Fancy credentials are worth spit to me. Show me what you can do. I don’t give a crap about your diploma.


4 posted on 07/07/2022 12:41:18 PM PDT by Seruzawa ("The Political left is the Garden of Eden of incompetence" - Marx the Smarter (Groucho))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

Back in the 80s an issue of Omni (still got it around here somewhere) included a report about a Russian inventor who was claiming that wearing tampons up your nose could prevent the cold.

Thankfully none of these mask mandating power hungry freaks remembered that issue of Omni…


5 posted on 07/07/2022 12:42:44 PM PDT by Rurudyne (Standup Philosopher)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

Spot on.


6 posted on 07/07/2022 12:42:59 PM PDT by Mama Shawna
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

The Kissinger piece in the WSJ....linked to in that article...is dated April, 2020. Is that true?!

So Kissinger called it a month in? And said that when this thing (which had just began) is over, many people would fundamentally question their governments and their societies?

That’s actually remarkable. Prescient. And spot on.

I only quibble with the notion in the article when it seems like the author thinks that “most” people question the pandemic response.

I’m not sure that 51% of Americans question lockdowns, masking and vaccines.

I think the number is big....maybe 38%...mabye 40%. But I think the majority still trust, ahem, the experts.

But I suppose I don’t know. Would be eager to hear data which supports the notion of “most”.


7 posted on 07/07/2022 12:47:26 PM PDT by ConservativeDude
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

I like to think the demolition of the Georgia Guidestones is an expression of the FU zeitgeist of the citizenry. A finger to the WEF and DC.


8 posted on 07/07/2022 12:48:10 PM PDT by DesertRhino (Dogs are called man's best friend. Moslems hate dogs. Add it up..)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

“Neanderthal Thinking”. Never forget mandates and lockdowns when you vote.


9 posted on 07/07/2022 12:55:52 PM PDT by TornadoAlley3 ( I'm Proud To Be An Okie From Muskogee)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

Biden has credentials. He graduated law school, even though he plagiarized. Biden worked in the private sector too. That’s perhaps the most important credential one can have. Biden single handily stood up to Corn Pop as a lifeguard. Let us not forget how Biden used to drive big rigs, although I think that was a Hess truck he received as a Christmas gift as a child.


10 posted on 07/07/2022 12:56:41 PM PDT by ConservativeInPA (Scratch a leftist and you'll find a fascist )
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

Credentials have never guaranteed competence or knowledge.


11 posted on 07/07/2022 12:57:10 PM PDT by KrisKrinkle (Blessed be those who know the depth and breadth of ignorance. Cursed be those who don't.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: KrisKrinkle

Walk into any hospital or doctor’s office these days and you’ll learn that right quick.


12 posted on 07/07/2022 1:00:51 PM PDT by mewzilla (We need to repeal RCV wherever it's in use and go back to dumb voting machines.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: TornadoAlley3

... also, encourage everyone to go grocery shopping and fill up their gas tanks before voting....


13 posted on 07/07/2022 1:01:00 PM PDT by Rurudyne (Standup Philosopher)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: Heartlander

Credentials have been shunned lately. The excuse is that a credential doesn’t win an argument but provides the person the means to make a good argument.

I think that is true; however, liberals shun credentials as an anti-authoritarian measure. It also keep people from holding them accountable. Liberals love to tout their credentials until they are held accountable for their decisions.

Someone with a credential should be held to a high standard and their credential should result in more authority, but that isn’t what liberals want. They like their participation trophy life. It is why they get nonsense college degrees and have nonsensical certifications.


14 posted on 07/07/2022 1:06:44 PM PDT by CodeToad (Arm up! They Have!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: KrisKrinkle
Credentials have never guaranteed competence or knowledge.

Nor have experience or the ability to make a good first impression. Trust, including trust in someone's competence, must be earned. It's not easy.

15 posted on 07/07/2022 1:11:30 PM PDT by NorthMountain (... the right of the peopIe to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: Seruzawa

“And frankly some of the technicians without 4 year degrees were some of the best.”

Yeah, I dropped out after 2 years of college. When other programmers hear that and look askance at me I just say “well, while you were spending your last 2 years solving fake problems to finish your degree I was out getting paid in the real world to solve real problems” and that usually shuts them up.


16 posted on 07/07/2022 1:14:02 PM PDT by Boogieman
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Boogieman

In electronics, after all that school, I basically used Ohm’s law, which you learn in your very first class. Lol. That pretty much covers everything. But I was a hands-on type working with real systems, not crunching numbers in an office.


17 posted on 07/07/2022 1:18:59 PM PDT by Seruzawa ("The Political left is the Garden of Eden of incompetence" - Marx the Smarter (Groucho))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 16 | View Replies]

To: Rurudyne

also, encourage everyone to go grocery shopping and fill up their gas tanks before voting....

Check my tagline.


18 posted on 07/07/2022 1:20:37 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Has anyone, recently, seen a Biden sticker on any vehicle and and in particular at/in a gas station!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: Seruzawa
I don’t give a crap about your diploma.

That is becoming the view of a majority of Americans. A Batchelor's degree today only means that the holder has been indoctrinated. It conveys no assurance of an education.

Consider that the galactically ignorant AOC graduated cum laude from Boston University's College of Arts and Sciences in 2011.

19 posted on 07/07/2022 2:09:18 PM PDT by T Ruth (Mohammedanism shall be destroyed.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: NorthMountain

Let us not forget that we are likely NOT lacking competence or knowledge.

I actually think many “knowledgeable” people knew precisely what they were doing.

Economists warned them. Psychologists warned them. Parents warned them. Small businesses warned them. Trump warned them.

Just like the Davos crowd do not lack in business experience; what they lack is appreciation of humans, human nature, common sense and decency.

What was happening—closing small businesses, schools, churches, community centers—while leaving open Amazon warehouses, big box retailers, etc. was not something that “followed science”.

Anyone with a Ph.D., an M.D., high school diploma, a GED or a 6th grade education realizes that all the contradictions in who could stay open and who had to close was a political, not a scientific decision.

It’s just that so many of the “credentialed” went along with evil (that’s what it is) either because they were in on it, threatened, scared or in a position where their opinion didn’t matter.


20 posted on 07/07/2022 2:19:49 PM PDT by packagingguy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-26 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson