For the most part, the last 50+ years have been the era of specialists. Whether they be doctors, lawyers, scientists, reporters, accountants, or others, we’ve seen too many graduates work in highly specialized areas of interest at the expense of liberal arts majors whose forte used to be how to think logically. But, a curious thing has happened with specialization run amuck—specialization has led to the death of common sense and great thinkers.

My touchstone has always been to question: How Will History Judge?

A relative of mine received a troubling initial medical diagnosis. His primary care physician quickly opined that he needed to see a specialist, who, surprise, surprise, definitely thought he was in the right place, except he wasn’t. Teachers and school systems employ legions of “experts” and consultants to tell them what they must do to improve this or that in Johnnie’s school experience or to support teachers better. The problem is, based on decades of records, trend analysis, and failed outcomes, kids are failing to learn!

 

The Shift in Learning:-

Before New Math, Phonics, computer-aided learning, and centralized curriculum, most students learned and retained much more than they do today. A significant number of high schoolers graduate functionally illiterate and unable to balance a checkbook or manage their household budgets, not to mention how little they understand what made America great. This is on top of an overall 5% who drop out.

Where are all our great inventors? People like Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Edison, Benjamin Franklin, Henry Ford, Linus Pauling, and many more defined American ingenuity for the entire world. We have Elon Musk but few other basic patent holders. Let me share something interesting about all of these geniuses: none of them were specialists; what they shared in common was that they saw a problem and sought solutions that cut across academic disciplines. Nikola Tesla invented alternating current electricity, the induction motor, the radio (Marconi refined it), neon lighting, and dozens of other primary and secondary inventions that changed our world.

Where did Paul Harvey, Rush Limbaugh, Walter Cronkite, Walter Winchell, or Edward R. Murrow go? All the aforementioned men held America rapt as they factually explained the news and assured us that being an American was our greatest blessing; they were also technically generalists.

 

What Makes a Generalist? Defining the Jack-of-All-Trades

A generalist can be defined as:

Someone who has a broad range of skills, knowledge, and expertise across various fields rather than specializing in just one area

Name the area of specialization, and I’ll show you how a lack of common sense has negatively impacted lives. Most miss an essential requirement to absorb multiple pieces of information, intuitively knowing what to discard, which to learn more about, and how to form conclusions that plot the best course forward. Look at some of our recent presidents and witness those who exhibited common sense vs. those who didn’t.

Presidents showing a lack of common sense:

Presidents who tended to embrace common sense:

 

Conclusion:-

Common sense is no longer common. Our greatest American presidents of modern times had an intuitive understanding of the right things to do. Washington infrequently starts with a premise founded on logic. Instead, Washington reacts to circumstances that may be either transitory or entirely misunderstood, attached to false narratives. Donald Trump may usher in the greatest common sense era of the last hundred years.

God bless America.

Allan J. Feifer—Patriot

Author, Businessman, Thinker, and Strategist. Read more about Allan, his background, and his ideas to create a better tomorrow at staging.1plus1equals2.com/

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