Take the time to educate yourself before forming an opinion

Student loan debt is at an all-time high at a little over 1 trillion dollars, a figure that now, for the first time ever, exceeds our nation’s credit card debt. Higher education has never cost more, the rate of rise of college tuition having exceeded in recent years the rate of rise of many other services. Perhaps as a result of this, as well as of the difficulty in obtaining a job after college in today’s market, more people are questioning the value of a college education than ever before.

Not that anyone is questioning the value of an education itself (at least, not more than they ever did). The value of education is so firmly established that I won’t bother debating it here. But we do seem to be in the midst of an education crisis, and not just because higher education has become so expensive.  Wikipedia lists the rate of functional illiteracy in the U.S. (as measured between 1994-2003), for example, at 20 percent.

There are a number of reasons this statistic fills me with dread, but I’ll mention only the one I find most troubling. The solutions our political leaders seek for our most pressing problems are largely determined by which are most popular. And which are most popular is largely determined by our population’s ability to understand the problems for which the solutions are being proposed. Which, as far as I can tell, is dismal. Which means the most popular solutions are also the solutions most likely to be wrong. Which means our population’s lack of education is compromising our political leaders’ ability to solve problems. (If enough constituents understood, for example, the true causes of our current economic crisis and demanded real fixes instead of the appearance of real fixes, politicians might actually feel able to implement them without committing political suicide.)

What else might explain the popular notion that we don’t want a President who’s “too intellectual” other than a poorly educated populace that finds itself unable to identify with such a characteristic? Certainly, intellectualism could be considered antagonistic to decisiveness, but what’s been implied here is that we aren’t best served by having the smartest, most educated person in the office.

We all seem too quickly satisfied with the easy answers our politicians spoon feed us. Perhaps it’s because we’re all too busy to thoroughly investigate the causes of our country’s problems ourselves. Perhaps it’s because we feel powerless to do anything about them. But if we don’t educate ourselves, if we allow our politicians and pundits to do our thinking for us, we won’t be able to demand of our leaders effective solutions for our problems.

For the real solutions to our problems aren’t easy to understand. How do you fix healthcare? First by understanding what’s wrong with it. But how many of us really understand that? We know how its flaws affect us:  long waits to see doctors, high insurance premiums, and the risk being bankrupted by a serious illness. But we don’t understand the root causes of those effects. So we can’t really understand what fixes will work. The health care law is over 1,500 pages long. How can anyone know if they don’t like it if they don’t know what it says? The media has held up certain parts of it for public inspection, but without first understanding the root causes of the problems it’s trying to solve, how can anyone possibly judge the quality of its solutions?

I’m not arguing for or against the health care law here. I’m arguing for taking the time to educate ourselves thoroughly before forming an opinion—for the general population to elevate its level of education in general (note I’m not addressing how: that’s an entirely separate topic). Because our collective opinion has power. If our political leaders seem to be pushing our country toward a cliff, it’s only because we the people are pushing them to do it.

Alex Lickerman is an internal medicine physician at the University of Chicago who blogs at Happiness in this World.  He is the author of The Undefeated Mind: On the Science of Constructing an Indestructible Self.

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  • Jamesfreemarket

    Doctor Lickerman has a good point: seek to understand and then to be understood. I feel that he has not appreciated what I consider to be the real issue. The public appreciates the fundamental problem is we can’t afford government control. They understand that the law is a utopian contrivance invented by congressional bureaucrates at the order of powerful political alliances.
    The public is coming to understand that deep system reform is necessary. It isn’t about understanding the law. Government control of healthcare doesn’t work. The system that does work is the free market. A willing buyer and a willing seller, freely agree on a price and execute an exchange of service or product. This system guarantees lower price, stimulates invention and kills monopoly though competition. The polity is understanding that best intentions of goverment does just the opposite i.e. raises prices, retards invention and builds monopoly that strangle the efficiency and effectiveness of the system.
    The University of Chicago is supported by Capitalism. The really “uninformed” are those who have no experience in Capitalism. Capitalism cannot exist without government. However government must be reformed in to a supporter not a controller of the market. The intellectual who is supported by free market economics needs to give some credit to the public. It isn’t a matter to understanding the law it is a matter of reforming the law by reestablishing free market patient choice. It works because no government has the wisdom to control the supply of 300 million life demands.

    • http://profiles.google.com/andeevb Andee Bateman

      oh, of course. That’s why every other industrialized nation has a capitalistic health care policy that profitizes care….no, wait a second. We’re the only ones that have that and its an epic fail. When Taiwan set up their program, the first thing they did was look at the USA as an example of what NOT to do. Hey, Taiwan has healthcare, and we have policy makers who think its a a good (popular) idea to push 30million back on to the private market that they couldn’t enter anyway. So much for freely agreeing on a price that is out of reach for all but the upber wealthy. ACA is a solution to the problem EMTALA created, because our national concience cannot abide the idea that we would let our fellow citizens die in the gutter for the inability to pay. Its not Medicare for all, but it shoulda been. Change 2 words in the Medicare law, ‘over 65′ and get everyone in the game of private provider, single payer with results based reimbursement. Welcome to the first world.

  • DMPull

    I am far from being “poorly educated.” I find that the popular notion, if it is indeed popular, that the President is “too intellectual” stems from his lack of practical experience and willingness to consider others’ ideas, that could help balance the “Ivory Tower” quality he brings to his pronouncements. He is what some would call a “knee-jerk” politiican, defaulting to the left of everyone. There are far too many of his brethren on either side of the political spectrum. Too busy politicking to bring his much-vaunted intellect to bear on the Nation’s problems, even those of us who did not go to Harvard can tell he is not suited for the office he occupies.

    • http://profiles.google.com/andeevb Andee Bateman

      yet he used the Heritage Foundation idea of ACA, the rights ‘knee jerk’ alternative to HillaryCare, that was road tested by Romney in MA and herded everyone into a regulated marketplace, with the Roberts court seal of approval. Not the best idea, to be sure, but hardly left of anything. Centerist much?

      • DMPull

        I was refering more to his rhetoric; they all say what they think their “side” wants to hear. Today he is supporting the extension of the Bush tax cuts. Will that make Republicans happy? Probably not. And I appreciate the irony of Romney having to run against his own idea when he excoriates the ACA. I will be voting in November, but for whom? Perhaps someone worthy of a write-in; that would at least correlate to “None of the Above.”

  • StephenModesto

    …well thought, well composed, well written.

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