Low-paid, liberal, nonprofit yuppies unite: you have nothing to lose but your chains.[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The Trap: Selling Out to Stay Afloat in Winner-Take-All America by Daniel Brook Times Brooks, 274 pp. When Daniel Brook and I first spoke about his book, the conversation morphed quickly into what I imagine a therapy session to be. He even compared me to my parents. We were sitting in a bar in Philadelphia, and Brook was delivering what by then must have been a very practiced spiel spiel Informal n. A lengthy or extravagant speech or argument usually intended to persuade. intr. & tr.v. spieled, spiel·ing, spiels To talk or say (something) at length or extravagantly. . His book, he said, was about young, educated people who want to go into either public service, advocacy, or creative work, but increasingly find that they can't stay in those fields and maintain a basic, middle-class lifestyle. It just so happened that I had asked to see Brook, and bought him a beer, precisely because I was a young, educated person beginning to find that I couldn't stay in my field and maintain a basic, middle-class lifestyle. Brook used to write for the same alt-weekly paper I write for now, and though our tenures didn't overlap and I hardly knew him, I knew he was making a go of it as a journalist in Philadelphia, without selling stories on, say, perfect abs to Cosmo. This was no small accomplishment, and I'd been hoping to learn his secret. Instead, I began talking about myself. "That sounds like me," I said. Brook nodded knowingly, and asked about my background. I told him that my parents both work for the government--my father's an attorney for the City of New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , my mother's a public school teacher. They raised me in Queens Village, Queens Queens Village is a middle-income neighborhood in the New York City borough of Queens, covering the zip codes 11427, 11428, and 11429. The neighborhood is part of Queens Community Board 13. . "And could you buy their house from them?" he asked. Of course, he already knew the answer. He was asking to make a point: I had been looking at things through the narrow lens of my ambition. Brook has been trying to get people like me to see a bigger picture. If talking to Noun 1. talking to - a lengthy rebuke; "a good lecture was my father's idea of discipline"; "the teacher gave him a talking to" lecture, speech rebuke, reprehension, reprimand, reproof, reproval - an act or expression of criticism and censure; "he had to Brook was like visiting a therapist, reading his book was like finding an entry in the DSM 1. DSM - Data Structure Manager. An object-oriented language by J.E. Rumbaugh and M.E. Loomis of GE, similar to C++. It is used in implementation of CAD/CAE software. DSM is written in DSM and C and produces C as output. that sounds suspiciously familiar. The Trap: Selling Out to Stay Afloat in Winner-Take-All America opens with two case studies. One is the irony-soaked story of Pam Perd, a member of the tongue-in-cheek protest group Billionaires for Bush Billionaires for Bush is a culture jamming political street theater organization that satirically purports to support George W. Bush for those activities which are perceived to benefit corporations and the super-wealthy. . "Pam" puts in long, unpaid hours coordinating public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most for her organization; to support the work, she holds a job handling PR for Fortune 500 companies--as Brook puts it, "mere millionaires for Bush." She'd prefer to work for a nonprofit, of course. But that kind of gig wouldn't pay for her current, relatively modest lifestyle of a fifth-floor walkup walk·up also walk-up n. 1. An apartment house or office building with no elevator. 2. An apartment or office in a building with no elevator. in the East Village and the hope of someday raising a family. The other case is a twenty-seven-year-old activist named Claire, a former Fulbright scholar who makes $35,000 a year for her work at a nonprofit combating the global traffic of sex workers. Technically, this is a middleclass salary, but in New York (where Claire needs to be in order to lobby the United Nations), it's hardly enough. Factor in school debt, and Claire has to wait tables on weekends just to afford a shared apartment in Queens. Should she wish to have a family, the math would no longer work. Pam and Claire may seem like people on widely divergent paths, but Brook sees them as two victims of the same pernicious pernicious /per·ni·cious/ (per-nish´us) tending toward a fatal issue. per·ni·cious adj. Tending to cause death or serious injury; deadly. circumstance. In today's hyper-capitalist America, he argues, the basic touchstones Touchstones is an art gallery, museum, local studies centre and café in Rochdale, Greater Manchester, England. of a middle-class life--health insurance, a quality education for one's children, and home ownership, particularly within reasonable commuting distance of a metropolitan center--have become exorbitantly expensive. At the same time, the compensation gap between people dedicating their lives to the public good and those dedicating their lives to corporate enrichment has grown immensely. And so a generation of young, educated people who want to do good in the world is forced to choose between material sacrifice (Claire) and spiritual sacrifice, or "selling out" (Pam). [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] That people generally considered to be fortunate are actually screwed is an ambitious thesis, and a tempting one: Do I really get to blame my financial anxieties on socioeconomic trends, rather than life choices? To establish his premise, Brook corrals a herd of anecdotes about young people making unsavory decisions. There's the teacher who lives in a "low-income" housing development outside San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden . The D.C. couple that, because of the cost of living, is gradually transforming from two public service professionals into a 1950s-style household, he taking a corporate gig and she staying home to care for the children (Brook dubs this the "mutual martyrdom Martyrdom See also Sacrifice. Agatha, St. tortured for resisting advances of Quintianus. [Christian Hagiog.: Daniel, 21] Alban, St. traditionally, first British martyr. [Christian Hagiog: NCE, 49] Andrew, St. marriage"). The tech entrepreneur with a potentially fatal cardiac condition, and no health insurance. The terrifying--terrifying--world of law school graduates, where we meet a young prosecutor in his last day on a job he loves before defecting to a private law firm in order to pay off loans and raise a family. His advice for current law students: "Have no debt: marry money or be independently wealthy." In perhaps my favorite My Favorite is an independent synthpop band from Long Island, New York. They released two CDs: Love at Absolute Zero and Happiest Days of Our Lives. My Favorite broke up on September 14, 2005, when singer Andrea Vaughn left the band. section, "At the Wake," we watch as a gathering of graduate students at Yale (Brook's alma mater ma·ter n. Chiefly British Mother. [Latin m ter; see m )
sits through a recruiting session for McKinsey & Company. McKinsey
is the management-consulting firm that advised Wal-Mart to cut health
care costs by requiring all cashiers to gather shopping carts as part of
their job (thus discouraging unhealthy people from applying). The
students are finishing degrees in science or literature, and seem like a
bad match for such an outfit. But it turns out that the McKinsey
recruiters have academic credentials much like the students'. They
just found, when they got out of school, that corporate America was
their most financially tenable ten·a·ble adj. 1. Capable of being maintained in argument; rationally defensible: a tenable theory. 2. option. Michael Yoo, an MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology PhD, tells the Yalies that McKinsey's hours don't bother him, because he used to work long days in the lab. "That a graduate school project was something a person purposefully selected to devote a number of years to while McKinsey assignments were dictated by the random needs of the market was never addressed," Brook notes. Interspersed with these stories is, naturally, a bevy bevy a flock of birds. of statistics. Most of these are meant to illustrate the financial squeeze Brook's subjects are feeling: for example, that 90 percent of the homes in Boston are too expensive for a teacher-headed household; or that the starting salary of a Chicago teacher is just slightly higher than a single year of tuition at the University of Chicago; or that half of all American bankruptcies are the product of health care bills; or that the gap between a starting salary at a public interest law firm and a top corporate firm is currently as much as $100,000 (Brook calls the disparity "hazard pay hazard pay n (US) → prime f de risque hazard pay hazard (US) n → Gefahrenzulage f hazard pay n (US for the soul"). Fewer of the stats actually substantiate the claim that educated young people are being driven into private sector careers (perhaps because, and this a complicating factor Brook doesn't deal with, people don't necessarily spend whole careers in a single industry anymore). But after the first couple of chapters, I no longer thought it a coincidence that when Class Notes come, updating me on the career progress of my fellow alumni, the recent grads seem to be teachers and organizers, while the folks a few years out are in corporate jobs. Then again, the people in my Class Notes live in the most desirable, expensive cities in the country. And indeed, Brook's anecdotage an·ec·dot·age n. Anecdotes considered as a group. anecdotage old age, when a person may be prone to regale others with anecdotes about his past. [A humorous blend of anecdote and dotage. is centered primarily in just three places: New York, Washington, and San Francisco. Couldn't Pam move to Cleveland? Brook is fairly up front about the fact that the phenomenon he's bemoaning is a metropolitan one, and offers up some good defenses for why it still matters: for one thing, major cities are industry centers, and afford people an opportunity to make an impact that other places don't--Claire can't move to Cleveland because she needs to be in New York to lobby the UN. For another, if only lobbyists can afford to live in D.C.--well, that's a problem. But as Brook goes along, he sometimes seems to slip into treating "the Trap" as a nationwide phenomenon, and America as a place where no one can afford to be a teacher and the middle class doesn't exist. This just doesn't reflect the reality of American life, and it doesn't help the left's cause to pretend it does. Still, Brook's central insight is a good one, and he lays it out in savvy fashion. None of the book's subjects comes in for a close-up, or even returns much after his initial appearance; Brook doesn't watch people agonize over their decisions, or analyze the effect on their psyches. He's interested in a simple calculation: Pam or Claire? A bit of narrative drive may be lost here, but the benefit is that, in the reader's mind, the array of snapshots begins to look less like a handful of individuals not hacking it, and more like a large crowd, unified by its collective screwed-ness. This is important, because it shows people like me that, yes; our circumstances are subject to more than our own ambitions. We've been raised on meritocracy mer·i·toc·ra·cy n. pl. mer·i·toc·ra·cies 1. A system in which advancement is based on individual ability or achievement. 2. a. , we young, educated types, and it's tempting to think that the right mix of career and compensation is out there if we just keep at it. Brook is telling us that this isn't so. There are big, socioeconomic factors at play here. We need to look at those. What Brook was getting at when he asked whether I could buy my parents' house was that things haven't always been this way. There was a time when an American could hold a public-sector job, afford a home in a major city, and stay more or less in the middle class. In fact, he says, during the 1960s "any white man willing to work forty hours a week for forty years could raise a family in a home he owned, in a safe neighborhood with good schools, and receive a lifetime of health care and retirement benefits." That ability was beginning to be extended to women and minorities. I think Brook probably overstates the extent to which the dilemma he writes about is new, charming us with nostalgic tales like that of the writer who in the '60s "could support herself in the East Village for months on the fee from one mainstream magazine feature." People in my parents' generation also had to weigh career against finance, and vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. : I can't afford my parents' house, but they couldn't have gotten a place on Park Avenue--in fact, when they bought, their neighborhood was considered quite a hike from Manhattan. Comparisons to previous decades are also complicated by the fact that the number of Americans employed by nonprofits doubled between 1977 and 2001, a much faster growth rate than both the government and for-profit sectors, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the research group Independent Sector. Some of these do-gooder jobs can't pay less than they used to, because they didn't use to exist--a fact that Brook doesn't note. But Brook is right that the compromises people are making for fulfilling careers are starker, especially in metro areas This article is about the music production team. For the article about population centers, see metropolitan area. Metro Area are a Brooklyn-based dance music production team composed of Morgan Geist and Darshan Jesrani. . There are things middle-class people once took for granted on the bargaining table. What changed? Brook blames linguistics. Well, not exactly, but he spruces up his inevitable recounting of the rise of the conservative movement, from Buckley to Goldwater to Reagan to George W. Bush, by focusing on the right's appropriation of the word "freedom." Through rote rote 1 n. 1. A memorizing process using routine or repetition, often without full attention or comprehension: learn by rote. 2. Mechanical routine. repetition, Brook says, conservatives redefined freedom as the absence of government interventions such as progressive taxation and business regulation. This enabled the right, under Reagan, to slash top tax rates from 70 percent down to 28 percent, and unleash Brook's real bogeyman: inequality. Too often, Brook argues, inequality is understood as a question of moral fairness, with no practical implications. He quotes writer Mickey Kaus Mickey Kaus (born 1951) is an American journalist, author and blower of goats (citation needed) best known for writing Kausfiles, a "mostly political" blog featured on Slate.com. , whom he calls inequality's "apologist-in-chief": "a fat man eating quails while children are begging for bread is a disgusting sight," Kaus says, but "a fat man eating quails while children are eating Bob's Big Boy hamburgers" is less of a problem. "What Kaus fails to see," Brook writes, "is how a rise in the concentration of wealth reshapes markets, inflating the prices of goods whose supply is fixed, like homes within a reasonable commuting distance of a major city or degrees from top colleges." As for health care, Brook contends that a high concentration of wealth has led to a high concentration of power, which, in turn, has enabled corporate donors to block the adoption of a universal health plan--exactly the sort of policy that would allow young people to strike out on their own in, say, freelance photography, without worrying about acquiring a budget-busting emergency room bill. I called a few economists and other experts to see if Brook was on solid ground with these assertions. Most said he was right on the basics; urban expert Joel Kotkin offered the important caveat that cities are becoming less tenable living places because of inequality, yes, but also because there are more people and not enough new cities to put them in. The sharpest disagreement I heard was from Jason Furman of the Brookings Institution Brookings Institution, at Washington, D.C.; chartered 1927 as a consolidation of the Institute for Government Research (est. 1916), the Institute of Economics (est. 1922), and the Robert S. Brookings Graduate School of Economics and Government (est. 1924). , who argued that, while the cost of certain important goods (heath care, housing, education) has indeed gone up over the last thirty years, the Years, The the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109] See : Time cost of other necessities (food, clothing) has dropped, resulting in a near wash for the middle class. I'm not sure, however, that if Brook's argument is taken at its most specific (and in Furman's defense, he hadn't read the book), those facts rebut To defeat, dispute, or remove the effect of the other side's facts or arguments in a particular case or controversy. When a defendant in a lawsuit proves that the plaintiff's allegations are not true, the defendant has thereby rebutted them. TO REBUT. it. Furman is arguing against the idea of an overall middle-class squeeze; Brook is saying that, in certain important places, the cost of a few basic goods has become prohibitively expensive, eliminating an entire segment of middle-class America. In the 1980s, hordes Hordes may refer to:
Mental conflict that occurs when beliefs or assumptions are contradicted by new information. The concept was introduced by the psychologist Leon Festinger (1919–89) in the late 1950s. , because it's the only sector of the economy that can afford to pay enough for what was formerly considered a middle-class life. "[Y]oung Americans want more money because they need more money," Brook writes. "Even if they don't covet cov·et v. cov·et·ed, cov·et·ing, cov·ets v.tr. 1. To feel blameworthy desire for (that which is another's). See Synonyms at envy. 2. To wish for longingly. See Synonyms at desire. mansions and luxury cars, they need big bucks for housing, health care, and education. In the 1980s, young people sold out to enjoy a life of luxury; now they sell out to stay afloat." You probably already know Brook's proposed solution to this problem. He wants America to move in the general direction of a social democracy, with a publicly funded health care system, more money for public schools, and heavily subsidized sub·si·dize tr.v. sub·si·dized, sub·si·diz·ing, sub·si·diz·es 1. To assist or support with a subsidy. 2. To secure the assistance of by granting a subsidy. higher education higher education Study beyond the level of secondary education. Institutions of higher education include not only colleges and universities but also professional schools in such fields as law, theology, medicine, business, music, and art. , all of it paid for by progressive taxation (this would have the added benefit of holding the top tax brackets Tax Bracket The rate at which an individual is taxed due to a particular income level. Notes: Each income class is taxed at a different level. Generally, the more you make the more you are taxed. down and flattening
The flattening, ellipticity, or oblateness of an oblate spheroid is the "squashing" of the spheroid's pole, down towards its equator. income distribution). You know this, and Brook knows you know it. Thus, his chapter on "Releasing the Trap" is basically a throw-in. The section on fixing the public schools is literally three paragraphs long. This is fine. Brook isn't providing a blueprint for social reconstruction here; he's diagnosing an emergent condition in American life. And, anyway, the most interesting questions raised by his findings aren't about how to cure the disorder. They're about whether the problem he's focusing on is big enough to warrant drastic intervention, and whether even the people caught in the Trap will see fit to try to release it. Brook steers clear of slapping any definitive labels on the demographic he's discussing, and thus far I have, too, but look: we're talking for the most part about young liberals from middle-class backgrounds, people who have graduated from fancy schools. I have a bachelor's in sociology from Wesleyan University--basically a four-year degree in "Hey, I've had it pretty good." And I have! If I really wanted a pricier place to live, I could probably land a corporate PR job. Is my situation so untenable? Brook concedes in his introduction that there are plenty of Americans who are worse off than the subjects of his book. But he argues--convincingly, I think--that the situation is more serious than just "the whining of a pampered pam·per tr.v. pam·pered, pam·per·ing, pam·pers 1. To treat with excessive indulgence: pampered their child. 2. generation." For one thing, he says, it's bad for society for creative and public service work to be relegated to a cadre (company) CADRE - The US software engineering vendor which merged with Bachman Information Systems to form Cayenne Software in July 1996. of "moral giants, mental midgets, and trust fund babies." If capable accountants are lured away from government jobs into the private sector, there will be no one to catch the Enrons. If no competent lawyer can afford to work as an assistant district attorney, there will be no one to prosecute murders. More broadly, Brook says, it's not enough that young, educated people have a choice. No healthy society should make people choose between a career in advocacy and quality health care (indeed, America is the only developed country that does). In fact, he writes in the book's angriest moments, what is really being compromised when we make these choices is the very freedom conservatives claimed when they cast "freedom" and "equality" as competing values--the freedom to choose a fulfilling career. Will all this be enough to rally young liberals in their own defense? Remember that young liberals, like old liberals, have liberal guilt. By this I don't mean that the subjects of Brook's book are so selfless self·less adj. Having, exhibiting, or motivated by no concern for oneself; unselfish: "Volunteers need both selfish and selfless motives to sustain their interest" Natalie de Combray. as to be incapable of acting on their own behalf--you should have seen the protests at my school when they banned "chalking" on the sidewalks. I just mean we're not accustomed to the idea that large economic forces are working against us. It's not part of our conditioned understanding of the world. In this sense, Brook's greatest contribution is not his argument about Big Ideas like freedom and promise, but his simple, central observation: that young, educated people are adversely affected by the new inequality. I know I've been thinking about politics differently since reading The Trap--the issues are more personal to me now. And you know what's great? The things I want from my government for myself turn out to be the same things middle- and working-class people all over America yearn for: quality health care and quality education. Maybe the interests of the "liberal elite" aren't so different from those of the average American after all. Is this convergence of interests an opportunity for change? Brook is optimistic op·ti·mist n. 1. One who usually expects a favorable outcome. 2. A believer in philosophical optimism. op that American freedom can be revived--that the right can't assault the middle class and get away with it. That's what he says in the book, anyway. In person, I have to tell you, he seems less hopeful. As I was nearing the end of The Trap, I ran into the author on the street. He asked me how things were going. "Bad," I told him. My car and my computer had both broken down, and I couldn't afford to fix them. "Well, the first thing you should do is not have a car," he said. "As for the computer, I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. what to tell you." He paused. "Have you considered selling out?" Doron Taussig is senior writer for the Philadelphia City Paper Philadelphia City Paper, a free alternative news weekly in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was established in November 1981 as a spin-off of the now defunct WXPN Express newsletter. New issues are released every Thursday. . |
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