expressed perfectly how long it could take. It would be just a matter of seconds, if only these failures could pry open their windows and actually jump.
In real life, however, the failed are still in charge and are fighting the increasingly powerful facts that they have failed. They are not going to give up their gold-plated five irons gracefully, you can bet. They are not going to give up Hudson National or Pebble Beach or any of the perks without a concerted fight. It will be concerted and vicious because although these people are formally competitive against one another in commerce and finance, they are the same kinds of people, and they know it. The people who replace them will be of "a same kind," as well.
It should not have to be said, but I will anyway. After a generation or two of social selection to success the successful have established their sway over their politicians. In many ways they have chosen them in the same way they have chosen the up-and-coming in their own industries. Their politicians are just as much failures now as they are, and for the same reasons. And, of course, these politicians are not likely to give up their perks either. They will fight tooth and nail, tell lies like there is no tomorrow, and they will tacitly or deliberately side with the failed in industry and finance. They really have no other choice ... except to change. And, oh what a job is change, when you have to go all the way back to prep school to furl the bad habits and attitudes and begin flying different colors!
What you are seeing now is a fight for interpretation of the facts. The formerly successful are trying to hold onto power and so are their politicians. All the people a sufficient distance below the manifestly "successful" are watching quietly with bated breath. They need to know how to act, whether to defend past practices and blame it all on a few rogues, or to abandon the past and strike out on a new path ... and with what moral and intellectual skills?
There is a political stand a person could take that says: I know what went wrong, but I don't know if there are enough honest men to fix it, therefore, I am going to play this crisis incrementally. I am going to keep deliberate attention to the pressure that can be brought to bear, to the pain that the formerly successful can be required to endure, so that the greatest number of people on the assembly line for "success" see the need to change, so that the few really intelligent and really moral people at the top also change, once they see that their game is over. This stand says that the tipping point between restoration and change has not yet been reached. It will take a strong will to defend the facts against deliberate misinterpretation. It also understands that once the tipping point is reached there might be hell to pay!
JB


