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2008 - The Year of the Outsider
“I come from down in the valley, where mister when you’re young, they
bring you up to do, what your daddy done”
-Bruce Springsteen
Just like 1932, 2008 is a year when we will realign “Insiders”
and “Outsiders.”
Insiders tend to be white, well-educated males from high
income backgrounds. Religion, personality and regionalism narrow Insider ranks even
further.
2008 will change things. We will either have an African-American President
or a female Vice President. Being a
Wall Street hotshot doesn’t carry the weight that it did a few months ago. Lobbyists are losing their clout with
politicians who can raise money on the Internet.
Outsiders who eventually become Insiders learned to play the
game of Life by different rules. They
buck conventional wisdom and knock down the doors that are closed to them.
Obama is a good example. He was encouraged to stay in Congress and wait
his turn. Instead, he took the risk of
running for President after only three years in the Senate.
It was a risk that paid off.
One of the fascinations of Obama’s campaign is that he got
the nomination without a lot of Insiders involved.
Win or lose, his campaign changed how modern campaigns are
run.
One of the fascinations of Obama’s campaign is that he got
the nomination without a lot of Insiders involved.
Win or lose, his campaign changed how modern campaigns are
run.
It reminds me of William Jennings Bryan’s presidential campaign
in 1896. Bryan ran a campaign that
was different from any presidential candidate before him. But every candidate after him copied his
style.
Under the new system, there will be a lot of political
bosses looking for someone to boss. Candidates
can ignore them and still win.
Some people spend their lives trying to be Insiders. They suck up, toe the line and hope that Insiders
will tap them to join the ranks.
It’s uncommon for that ‘tap’ to happen. Once earned, power and privilege are rarely
given away. Insider status is often handed
down from generation to generation.
Unless you want to stay in the same career that your daddy
did, you are going to have to buck the system.
Many of my friends are trial lawyers, journalists, and
entrepreneurs. Those are natural professions for people who
want to change the status quo.
Almost all great musicians are Outsiders. Rock and roll, country and rap have their
roots in rebellion.
Outsiders are the driving forces in almost every profession. It took an Outsider like Bill Gates to go
against the establishment at IBM. Then Google came after Gates when Microsoft
became the Insider.
There is one group that I have never understood -- people
who are Outsiders but think they are Insiders.
I know a young, disabled couple who identify deeply with the
establishment. The couple has no money
and no hope of getting any. They get
every kind of government benefit available.
One of their hobbies is to call into talk radio programs. They rail for lower taxes, despite the fact
that they don’t pay any. They get incited
about estate taxes, although no one in their family has a taxable estate. They vote for political candidates who want
to take away their benefits and their right to the jury system.
There are thousands like them, but I suspect that number is
diminishing.
Most people do not like to rock the boat. It is easier to act the same way as everyone
around you. It takes a crisis to get
people to switch.
1932 was our last great economic crisis. It also broke some
long standing political habits.
Up until 1932, African-Americans overwhelming supported the
Republican Party. The Republican Party
has always been seen as the party closer to Big Money, but that really was the
case in the 1920’s.
Although few African-Americans in 1932 had wealth, the
Republicans were the party of Lincoln. It took the Great Depression to put a dent in
that voting pattern.
Bringing in Outsiders does not always make things better. Insiders have experience and knowledge that is
difficult to replace. There is also the
chance, like in George Orwell’s Animal
Farm, that the Outsiders take on so many of the Insiders’ characteristics
that it is impossible to tell them apart.
We will soon learn how it plays out.
Don McNay
is the Chairman of the Board for McNay Settlement Group and the author of Son of a Son of a Gambler. Winners, Losers and What to Do When You Win
the Lottery. You can write to him
at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or read other things
he has written at www.donmcnay.com
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