
The Visible Hand by Dale Dougherty in Welcome. The DIY mindset must again become an essential life skill – Page 13.
I wrote this piece about a month ago as the Welcome for Make: 16, which will be on the newsstand soon…
As I write this, there is panic on Wall Street despite Washingtonรขโฌโขs $700 billion rescue attempt. The crisis is not contained by U.S. borders, but extends to Europe and Asia. Like many people, Iรขโฌโขm incredulous. How could this happen?
Wall Street hired the best and the brightest, paid them handsomely, and gave them unlimited resources and technology. It turns out they were building enormously complicated castles made of sand. A great wave washed them away, astounding all the smart people who devoted their lives to speculation, not production. Their models based on historical data predicted future profits, not collapse. Few people saw this coming until it hit.
รขโฌลIt was the triumph of data over common sense,รขโฌย said reporter Adam Davidson on the excellent episode of This American Life called รขโฌลThe Giant Pool of Money.รขโฌย Economist Michael Lehmann in the San Francisco Chronicle called it รขโฌลthe triumph of ideology over common sense.รขโฌย Itรขโฌโขs obvious both common sense and the common man have taken a beating.
Itรขโฌโขs hard to stomach that our government must bail out Wall Street. It really means weรขโฌโขve bet our future on the same people who created the present situation. To paraphrase a joke Iรขโฌโขve heard: Itรขโฌโขs like going to a casino in Vegas and rooting for the house. One New York Times reader expressed the frustration that many feel: รขโฌลWhy canรขโฌโขt we take half of the $700 billion and just build something?รขโฌย
These events shake our belief that free markets work to the benefit of all. The fundamental tenet of capitalism is the รขโฌลinvisible handรขโฌย: Adam Smith wrote that รขโฌลby pursuing his own interest [each person] frequently promotes that of the society.รขโฌย This year, Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz said: รขโฌลIn this sense, the fall of Wall Street is for market fundamentalism what the fall of the Berlin Wall was for communism รขโฌโ it tells the world that this way of economic organization turns out not to be sustainable.รขโฌย
A headline in the Christian Science Monitor says: รขโฌลWith finance crisis, hands-off era over.รขโฌย Government will need to be more assertive in regulating Wall Street. But I think it goes beyond that. I wonder if we, as individuals, have been living in our own era of hands-off. Have Americans become so disengaged that weรขโฌโขve become dependent on some invisible force to provide what we need? Have we gotten used to leaving important matters to experts, until they turn out to be wrong?
Isnรขโฌโขt it time for us to become hands-on again?
We, the people, face enormous challenges. Apart from the economic mess, we know fundamental changes are coming because of global warming. Our dependence on fossil fuels is not sustainable. Change is coming, whether we want it or not.
Better we meet the challenges head-on rather than hide. New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman summed it up: รขโฌลWe need to get back to making stuff, based on real engineering not just financial engineering. We need to get back to a world where people are able to realize the American Dream รขโฌโ a house with a yard รขโฌโ because they have built something with their hands, not because they got a รขโฌหliar loan.รขโฌโข … The American Dream is an aspiration, not an entitlement.รขโฌย
We have to believe it starts with each of us รขโฌโ not some faceless government or corporate bureaucracy. Itรขโฌโขs time for us, individually and working together in business, to reconsider what it means to be productive, not just profitable. Itรขโฌโขs time for us to reengage in how our government sets priorities for education, health care, housing, and transportation.
The DIY mindset celebrated in this magazine must again become an essential life skill, rooted once again in necessity and practicality. Our future security lies in knowing what weรขโฌโขre capable of creating, and how we can adapt to change by being resourceful.
A challenge this great can bring out the best in us. We need everyone, because every person has something to contribute. We need a showing of all hands.
More:
MAKE 16 – No mission is impossible when makers put their minds to it. Make Volume 16 will help you get smart with a special section on spy tech. Learn how to build and use tiny surveillance devices, and how to know if a spy is using them on you. From tiny video cameras to sneaky recorders, this volume has enough cool stuff to make James Bond’s inventor Q envious.
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