Moses moved to Oxford University in England for his post-graduate work. This was to give him a clear, definable sense of public purpose and the duties and rights of those born to privilege (noblesse oblige). Moses swapped the pseudo-democracy of Yale for the elitism of Oxford, which he preferred and became the first American President of the Oxford Union debating society.
Moses continued his foreign travels around the colonial British Empire between terms. He enjoyed the bohemian atmosphere of post war Oxford, affecting a haphazard style of dress and carelessness with money. He told his parents that he would be devoting himself to public service, but this devotion was also accompanied by an increasing arrogance and Anglophilia. He developed a contempt for the working classes and especially for the colonised populations of the British Empire, saying “the subject peoples of the British Empire were not ready for self-government.”
Moses’s prose style hardened and improved at Oxford. His cast of mind had also hardened into support for noblesse oblige, encapsulated in the British Civil Service, a perfect instrument for civil reform but one disfigured by patronage. However, his notion of meritocracy applied only to the members of the educated upper class. A system that for him elevated the most intelligent young men into powerful and influential positions. He advocated suppression of socialist tendencies and working-class activism that challenged these beliefs. He urged the American Government to follow the British model and supported the election of Woodrow Wilson as President.
Moses graduated from Oxford with honours in 1911. He then carried on his studies in London and Berlin. Moving back to his old rooms in New York in 1912. He enrolled at Columbia University for his PhD, completing his thesis in 1913. While he was completing his thesis, he entered the training school for the Bureau for Municipal Research. His education was over and he now entered the world of public service.
Analysis & Key Takeaways: Chapter 3
Having contempt for the working class is obnoxious; like having contempt for something you do not appreciate, understand or are exposed to. We can only interpret reality from the information we are exposed to in publications, in anecdotes and in relationships. If we believe the patterns [we are exposed to] are objective reality then we are doomed. Doomed to jump to conclusions for quicker decision-making (finding short-hands from the gut) that are possibly very wrong.
Robert Moses went to Oxford which has a reputation for telling its students that they are special, smarter and better then non-Oxford students or people generally. This brand management has a re-enforcing nature to it. In Moses’ case, it may have contributed to his contempt for the poor (financial and possibly spiritual, attitudinal poverty). Poverty and races were strongly correlated in New York in the 20th century and still is due to variables such as: a), b), c)….and z) the time value of money which compounds for those who have it, but subtracts for those who do not understand compounding interest and/or do not have sufficient cashflow. For Oxford graduates, “anything is possible, so they are told, so why are these poor non-Oxford folks so down? Well, then we the elite shall marshal them….” Meanwhile, there are likely Oxford students who aren’t condescending, I am just as guilty as others of extrapolating from patterns that or only partially representative of objective reality.
A recurring theme in this book is that the municipal government is where things done rather then where deadlocks form, municipal is where anyone serious about getting public policy should start. Why are there layers of government controlled by individuals anyway? Technology isn’t in place yet.
PhDs should be completed quickly if you can. It’s intellectually self-pleasuring in the best case scenario. Don’t think you’re smart because of a PhD or other advanced degree. But go out and test your hypothesis in the wild, post-doctoral, test and refine.
Considered a “Jew” by his classmates at Yale. Known internally as “a democracy of talent”, the structure of Yale was in fact a social pyramid based on family background and closed to Jews. Moses roomed alone, seen as “diffident, quiet and shy” by his classmates but as exceptional by his few friends with a great love of learning. Joined editorial board of the Yale Daily News and joined the swimming team. Moses broadened his acquaintances through these two groups. He travelled Europe extensively, enthusiastically visiting the great museums and galleries and developed a great enthusiasm for Samuel Johnson.
Back at Yale, Moses attempted to democratize the structure and to improve the status of sports such as swimming, using the Yale Daily News to promote his views. He persuaded the minor sports to combine into a formal association for funding. On June 11, 1908, Moses announced the formation of the Minor Sports Association.
Moses resigned from the swimming team when he couldn’t get his way on funding. He became more active in literary circles. His academic work continued to be outstanding. In his last two years he had roommates, members of literary groups KitKat and The Current. He became liked by his circle of friends.
Moses’s idealism strengthened through the years. He was known as intense in argument but honest, speaking from the heart. Moses did not achieve a membership of any of the important Yale societies, but his achievement was impressive for a Jew achieving a certain amount of power and influence. He had managed to build a coterie of followers within the structure with himself at the head. This was to influence his progress in the wider world thereafter.
Analysis & Key Takeaways: Chapter 2 of Power Broker
Anyone who has been in student politics will recognize the low stakes, high pettiness of student politics. Robert Moses organized student minor sports leagues for fundraising purposes. He wants to bring all the clubs together as a kind of unionized entity in order to gain funding leverage. He also wanted to fudge the finances to advance his singular sport of choice: swimming. Of course, distributing the funds would be how he could funnel more to his sport then the more popular sports. When his ideas were rejected, he cut out friends that opposed him. He figured out early that money is power.
Networks matter and so do cultural groups. Religion (cultural group marker) is a foot in the door in some cases and a means of exclusion in others. The fact that shared experiences create alliances is not going to disappear anytime soon because the human brain is wired to prefer things that are similar: example Movie Sequels….it’s not that we have to like the human brain, to acknowledge these patterns;
Is Robert Caro building up Robert Moses in this chapter? Do people have an honest recollection of a person after that person becomes influential in wider society? Or do recollections warp, inserting false memories? Moses sounds like a superstar or at least an overachiever, CV stuffer;
Resign if you can’t get your way. This mantra is something Moses threatens to do a lot throughout his career, figure out where you stand and then threaten to resign as a bargaining chip, but only if you are confident that ‘they’ need you.
Robert A. Caro’s The Power Broker is a Pulitzer Prize winning epic that was widely read by the politicians and civil servants in the US and abroad;
The keypoints are my interpretation of the events in the corresponding chapter; take with a grain of salt;
My opinions are subject to change at any future date as an intellectually free person; so if new information shows Moses to be even more “impure” I am free to change my opinion without judgement, thanks!;
Writing about Moses does not equal endorsing Moses obviously;
This article is my attempt to provide a chapter-ized summary so that you don’t have to read this 1255 pager. The physical book weighs a lot, too, as is Robert Caro’s way. Enjoy;
Hero, Villain or Mixture of the Two? Probably a Mixture. He is both repugnant and visionary. Hate-able and laudable for “getting things done.” Moses famously responded to this Caro book by saying a) he wasn’t responsible for public transport (read: probably not of interest fee-wise), b) he wasn’t that powerful, c) Moses never addresses the racism he is accused of peddling…can we separate the progress from the possibly very repugnant man?
Part One – The Idealist
Chapter 1 – Line of succession
Robert Moses was born on December 18th, 1888. His mother Bella was the strong willed, daughter of Bernard and Rosalie Cohen. Bernard was among many German Jews who longed to escape repression and emigrate to the USA. Eventually he settled with his brother in New York and marrying his cousin, Rosalie Silverman. Bernard became interested in civic affairs. And became known as a decisive and visionary analyst of social problems. Rosalie Silverman bullied her husband. She was intellectual rather than maternal and as Granny Cohen was imperious, treating other people as underlings.
Bernard died in 1897 of pneumonia. Rosalie carried on energetically, marching around New York and dismissive of the soft life. In 1919 she calmly finished her crossword puzzle, got out of bed and rang the bell to summon her maid before calmly announcing “Martha, summon Doctor –, I’m dying”.
Bella, quiet and unassuming but thoughtful, spoke French and German fluently and retained the sharpness of her mother. In 1886 she married Emanuel Moses, a Jew from Cologne. Although he built a successful business, Bella was thought to have “married beneath her.” They settled in Dwight Street, New Haven, Connecticut, an elm lined street with substantial houses.
Bella disliked the lack of cultural activity in New Haven so eventually they moved to New York in 1897.
By 1907, 1 million Jews had fled to the USA to escape persecution. By 1917 this was 1.5 million. In the Lower East Side, settlement houses sprang up to cope with the influx, and Bella became involved. There was a certain snobbery exercised by the settled Jewish community towards new Jewish immigrants, many from Russia. They called them “Kikes” because of the endings of many Russian surnames. German Jews had a patronising attitude to the new influx of Jews from Eastern Europe. Bella’s attitude towards those under her wing were thought to be “You’re my children, I know best.”
Bella however, was more interested in urban planning than integration. Her proposals were well mannered but steely. She was known for getting her way. Once she became involved in a project, she became obsessed with the detail. Bella could always count on Emmanuel’s support, at work and in the home, an obvious parallel with her own parents. Bella was not religious, and although Emanuel was attached to the synagogue, her views prevailed.
In New York the family lived just off 5th Avenue; a large oak panelled brownstone at the centre of a rich Jewish sector. With assets of $1.2M and walls covered with Rembrandt and Durer prints, they were among the elite.
Bella was strict with children, organising their lives in minute detail. She was particularly interested in their education. All the children were sent to expensive schools, Robert eventually ending up at Yale.
Bella’s sons, Paul and Robert, were often mistaken as twins. Both were considered “stunningly” handsome but haughty, even arrogant. They were popular with both girls and boys. Although both were considered athletes, Robert was more of a loner, attracted to sports, but not team sports.
Both brothers were dismissive of their father but Robert and his mother formed an inner circle. Bella catered to Robert’s every whim, “doting” on him. Robert flattered his mother by praising her work in the community and mimicking her movements and deportment. The line of personality was clear: from Robert’s grandmother, to his mother, to him.
Analysis & Key Takeaways:
Robert Moses’ personality was shaped by the powerful women in his early life, women who had steely determination past down generation to generation;
Forming alliances can start at the Family level between siblings. Healthy competition is important, parents are people too and so they can and sometimes outwardly express their preferred child;
The instinct to know better than others is not without merit. However, it is difficult to evaluate the merit of ones ideas in isolation especially if the idea is based on a track-record, pattern recognition etc. Ironically, we are the worst evaluators of our own instincts (Dunning Kruger effect) which creates arrogance in some cases and brilliance in others. A way to check your instincts is to evaluate your predictions against the reality, however prediction is very luck based;
Loners seem to operate and run things; it’s lonely at the top therefore loners are predisposed to move to the top;
Everyone has a personal religious perspective, sometimes religion defines ones identity, other times it’s a footnote and other times a hindrance.
The following is a synopsis of Factfulness by Hans Rosling. It’s a great read on the Ten Reasons We are Wrong About Everything and Why Things are Not as Bad as We Think
Introduction: Why I Love the Circus
Hans Rosling was a physician, academic and
public speaker. Together with his son, Ola Rosling and his daughter in law Anna
Rosling Ronnlund, he founded the Gap Minder Foundation in 2005 to fight
ignorance and encourage what he calls a more factful approach to life. Although
this book, like his TED Talks, was written in his voice it is a collaboration
between the three of them.
Although he pursued a career in medicine
and became a leading academic, Rosling’s true passion as a child was the
circus. He loved everything about it and was convinced he would one day live
his dream and run off to become a performer. His parents had other ideas; they
wanted him to enjoy the first-rate education they didn’t have and so he studied
medicine instead.
Hans Rosling actually swalllowing a sword
When studying medicine, he discovered he
could stick his hands down his throat further than anyone else. For a short time,
he dreamed once again of joining the circus as a sword swallower. Because
swords were in short supply, he decided to start with a fishing rod, but found
it impossible. It was only later, when treating an actual sword swallower, that
he learned the reason why he had failed.
The throat, he was told, is flat and can
only take flat objects. To his delight he discovered he could actually do it
and, later in life when he began giving talks, he often used it as a finale to
his act.
He talks about sword swallowing for a
reason. It’s one of those ideas which inspire people to think differently, to
question perceptions and, as such, to accomplish the seemingly impossible. This
is a key feature of the book.
Another is the continual need to test
yourself and question your assumptions. To illustrate he lists 13 questions:
How many girls finish primary
school in low income countries around the world?
Where does the majority of the
world’s population live: low income, middle income or high-income countries?
In the last 20 years, the number
of people living in extreme poverty has increased or halved?
What is the life expectancy of
the world today?
There are 2bn children aged 0
to 15 years old. How many will there be in the year 2100 according to the UN?
The UN predicts that, by 2100,
the world’s population will have increased by 2bn. Why is this: more younger
people or more older people?
How has the number of deaths
from natural disasters changed over the last 100 years?
There are 7bn people in the
world. Where do they live: mostly in Europe, Africa, Asia or America?
How many of the world’s
one-year old children today have been vaccinated?
30-year-old men have spent ten
years in school on average. How many years have women of the same age spent?
In the 1990s tigers, giant
pandas and black rhinos were all listed as endangered. How many are listed as
more critically endangered than they were then?
How many people in the world
have access to some electricity?
Over the next 100 years will
the average temperature get warmer, stay the same or get colder?
He sets these tests to people around the
world and the majority get them wrong. Our perception of the world is far
removed from the reality. His aim in the book is to give people the tools to
think in a factful manner, to challenge perceptions and understand the world
more completely.
Chapter 1: The Gap Instinct
Our world view is often distorted thanks to
the tendency to divide everything into two extremes with a space or a gap in
between. For example, we often view the world through the perspectives of
distinct groups such as ‘rich versus poor’, ‘us versus them’ or ‘developed and
developing countries’.
This is simple and makes it easy to develop
a view of the world, but he believes it’s wrong.
To demonstrate his point, he looks at our
tendency to divide the global population into developing and developed countries.
Those in developed worlds have better access to healthcare, live longer lives
and have better access to electricity, while those in the developing world do
not. However, the data shows that most people have access to all these things.
In reality, most countries fall into a gap
between the perceived developed and developing worlds, with many moving towards
the group of developed countries. As such, this divisive world view makes no
sense.
Instead, he introduces four categories
which can provide us with a better view of the world. These are:
Level 1: Earning less than $2 per day.
Level 2: Earning between $2 and $8 per day.
Level 3: Living off$8 to $32 per day.
Level 4: Bringing in more than $32 each day.
It doesn’t matter where you live in the
world; people in each group tend to have a similar quality of life. Those in
Level 1 suffer from poor nutrition, live hand to mouth and rely on walking to
get where they need to go. In Level 2 people are better off; they can feed
themselves have better access to electricity and education but they are not
secure. At any time, an emergency could see them slip back to Level 1. At the
top is Level 4 in which people can afford a car and an annual holiday.
This produces a more accurate view of the
world, one which divides people by quality of life rather than simply where
they are living. Even so, the traditional gap-based view of the world prevails.
To combat this, he cites a number of
warning signs which can encourage us to slip into the gap-based world view.
Comparing averages between
two situations. We forget about the overlap which
creates the illusion of a gap.
Comparing extremes: For example, thinking of the poorest versus the richest is wrong
because most people are in neither extreme.
View from above: People in higher income levels look down on lower levels without any
idea of the conditions in those levels. If you’re in Level 4, you might think
of people in levels 2 and 3 as being poor when in fact they have a much better
quality of life than you might think.
The reality of life is that there is no
gap. Most people exist in the middle where the gap is supposed to be. Thinking
about people in two groups distorts our view of the world. To form a fact-based
world view, we have to recognise that many of our perceptions are filtered
through mass media which loves to focus on examples which are extraordinary or
extreme.
“There is no gap between the West and the rest, between
developed and developing, between rich and poor,” Rosling writes. “And we
should all stop using the simple pairs of categories that suggest there is.”
Chapter 2: The Negativity Instinct
“The world is getting worse”. It’s a view
that we hear often and which, according to polls, most people share. However,
it is also wrong. In truth, the world is getting better. We simply don’t notice
when it does.
Most humans pay attention to the bad rather
than good. As such, they believe the world is only getting worse.
There is some truth in this. The
environment is deteriorating and terrorism is higher than it was 30 years ago.
Even so, the state of the world is generally improving. However, according to
Rosling, these improvements go unnoticed because they aren’t reported and we
look back at the past through rose tinted spectacles.
Instead, minor setbacks receive greater
coverage. If you look at the news, you’ll be forgiven for assuming that the
world is set on a downward trend. However, the facts tell another story.
In the 1800s most people in the world were
at income Level One. Extreme poverty was the norm for most people in the world.
Today, only 9% of the world is still at level one. Life expectancy has improved
from 31 years in the 1800s to over 70 years today. Slavery has been abolished,
child mortality is down; plane crashes, hunger and deaths in battles have
decreased. Access to electricity, water and health have improved.
Even so, the negative world view persists.
This view is caused by three things: mis
remembering the past, selective reporting and the feeling that it would be insensitive
to say things are getting better when they are still bad for many people.
When people start living better lives, they
can forget how bad things were. They romanticise their youth.
Most reporting is negative. Good news is
not news and neither are gradual improvements. A successful flight receives no
coverage, but a crash will be splashed across all media outlets.
Rosling suggests three ways to control this
negativity instinct.
Remember that ‘bad’ and ‘better’
are not mutually exclusive. Things can be bad but
they can also be better than they were before. Saying things are better should not
be confused with believing everything is fine.
Expect bad news. If we recognise that news is likely to disproportionately highlight
negatives, we can be better prepared for it. Factfulness is remembering that
most of the news which reaches us is bad news and there are plenty of positive
developments in the world which do not make headlines. More news does not
necessarily mean things are getting worse. It could equally mean that we are
getting better at monitoring this suffering, which in turn will make it easier
to alleviate it.
Avoid romanticising the
past. Life was not as good as we think it was, if
we present history as it was, we can realise that life, in general, is getting
better.
Chapter 3: The Straight-Line Theory
Life does not always work in a straight
line, but our thinking does. In this chapter Rosling examines our tendency to
assume a certain trend will continue along a straight line in perpetuity.
Reality is very different but our straight-line instinct stops us seeing life
as it truly is.
He talks about an Ebola outbreak in
Liberia. Like most people, he assumed the number of cases would continue in a
straight line with each person infecting, on average, another person. As such
it would be relatively easy to predict and control as most other outbreaks of
disease are. However, he came across a WHO report which said the number of
infections was doubling with each case. Every person infected two more people
on average before dying.
This spurred him into action. He discusses
an old Indian legend. Krishna is challenged by the King to a game of Chess and
asked to name his prize if he wins. Krishna asks for one grain of rice to be
placed on the first square with the number doubling with each square.
The King agrees assuming it will increase
in a straight line. However, it takes him a little while to realise that, by
the time it gets to the 60th square, he would have to find more rice
than the entire country could produce.
Many people assume the world’s population
is increasing. If nothing is done it will reach unsustainable levels meaning
something drastic must happen to stop this tend getting any worse. However, UN
data shows the rate of population increase is slowing. As living conditions
improve, the number of children per family is falling. Instead, growth can be
controlled by combatting extreme poverty.
Rosling uses the example of a child. In their
first few years, babies and toddlers grow rapidly. If you were to extrapolate
that growth for the future, ten-year olds would be much taller than they are.
Of course, we know that doesn’t happen because we are all familiar with how the
rate of growth slows over time.
When faced with unfamiliar situations, we
assume a pattern will continue in a straight line. Instead, he suggests we
should remember that graphs move in many strange shapes, but straight lines are
rare. For example, the relationship between primary education and vaccination
is an S curve; between income levels in a country and traffic deaths is a hump
and the relation between income levels and number of babies per women is a
slide.
We can only understand the progression of a
phenomenon by understanding the shape of its curve. Assuming we know what will
happen leads to erroneous assumptions and false conclusions which will in turn
lead to ineffective solutions.
To control the straight-line instinct, we
must remember that curves come in many forms and we will only be able to
predict it when we understand the shape of its curve.
Chapter 4: The Fear Instinct
“Critical thinking is always difficult,” writes Rosling, “but
it’s almost impossible when we are scared. There’s no room for facts when our
minds are occupied by fear.”
This is why the ‘fear instinct’ can be so destructive. When
people are afraid, their ability to tell fact from fiction falls off
dramatically. Factfulness demands that we control our fear.
Never before has the image of a dangerous world been
broadcast more widely and more effectively than it is today. We are frightened
of almost everything, but the truth of the matter is that the world has never
been safer or less violent.
Rosling starts the chapter by looking back
to an old story from his days as a junior doctor. It was 1975 and news came in
of a plane crash. The survivors were being rushed to his hospital; senior staff
were at lunch which would leave just him and a nurse to handle the situation.
It would be his first emergency and, in his
panic, he confused one of the survivors for a Russian pilot and became
convinced Russia was attacking Sweden. He mistook a colour cartridge for blood
and was narrowly stopped from shredding through a G suit worth thousands of
dollars.
Fear stopped him from seeing the situation
for what it was. Our minds have an attention filter which decides what reaches
it. This is the useful. The word contains vast amounts of information and we
have to filter it to avoid overload. However, what gets through tends to be the
unusual or scary.
This is why newspapers are full of events
which are frightening. However, the more of the unusual we see, the more we
become convinced the unusual is actually the norm. Our fear instinct has been
baked into our minds by millennia of evolution. Fear kept our ancestors alive,
but even though many of these dangers have gone, the perception remains.
The dangers are more real for people in
Level 1 and 2 income categories because they are more likely to suffer threats.
For example, they might be more likely to be bitten by a snake which might make
them jump if they see a funny shaped stick. However, for people in higher
income levels, being bitten by a snake is much less likely. Even if they were
to be bitten, they have access to good healthcare.
For them, the fear of the snake does more
harm than good. Newspapers know these fears are hardwired into our brains so
they use it to grab our attention. The same fears which kept our ancestors
alive are keeping journalists employed today.
This GOES East satellite image taken Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2018, at 10:30 a.m. EDT, and provided by NOAA shows Hurricane Florence in the Atlantic Ocean as it threatens the U.S. East Coast, including Florida, Georgia, South and North Carolina. Millions of Americans are preparing for what could be one of the most catastrophic hurricanes to hit the Eastern Seaboard in decades. Mandatory evacuations begin at noon Tuesday, for parts of the Carolinas and Virginia (NOAA via AP)
The number of deaths from natural disasters
has fallen as countries develop better healthcare and infrastructure. Organisations,
such as the WHO and UN, help victims in these situations but people in Level 4
aren’t aware of their success because the media reports it as the most serious
disaster in history.
It is important to look at things with a fact-based
approach to make better use of resources. For example, the 2015 earthquake in
Nepal which killed 9,000 people attracted global attention, but diarrhoea from
contaminated water kills 9,000 children each year but receives very little
attention in comparison.
2015 was the safest year in aviation
history but this fact was not reported. The number of deaths from battle has
fallen and so has the threat of nuclear war. All these good pieces of news slip
under the radar.
Following the Tsunami in 2011, 1,600 people
died escaping Fukushima while nobody died from what they were running away
from. Fear of chemicals such as DDT leads to deaths which could have been
treated by DDT. The fear of an invisible substance leads to more harm than the
substances itself.
Terrorism causes fewer deaths than alcohol
but receives far more publicity.
Fear is a terrible guide for understanding
the world. We pay attention to things we are afraid of but ignore things which
can do us harm. Factfulness is knowing how to tell the difference between
actual risks and perceived risks.
Chapter 5: The Size Instinct
From immigration to the number of deaths in
hospitals, we consistently overestimate size. In this chapter, Rosling shows
how this leads to a distorted view of reality and warps decision making.
He starts by going back to his time as a
young doctor in Mozambique in the 80s when it was the world’s poorest country.
One in 20 children died. He argued with a friend about the standard of
treatment at the hospital. He felt they needed to provide better care outside
of the hospital, but his friend believed he should concentrate on improving
care within the hospital.
He decided to look at the number of
children who died in the hospital compared to those who died outside. To his
surprise he found that, while deaths were comparatively low inside the
hospital, over 3,900 people died in the community. He therefore decided to go out
into the community to provide better care to people who couldn’t get to the
hospital.
When looking at a single number in isolation,
it is easy to give it too much importance. For example, when he saw he was
saving 95% of the children who came to the hospital it was easy to assume he
was doing a great job. However, when he compared it to those who were outside
the hospital, he realised he had to do more.
Journalists always give us numbers and
exaggerate their importance. It leads to solutions which do not help. At the
hospital, people would have assumed increasing the number of beds would reduce
deaths but, with more information at their disposal, they realised the best
path was to improve the levels of care and education within the community.
To avoid the trap of the size instinct, he
recommends using the tools of comparison and division.
For example, two million children died
before the age of one in 2016. This seems high until you compare it with 1950s
number when 14.4 million children died before their first birthday. Infant
deaths are falling, but you wouldn’t know this if you only looked at the first
figure.
A Swedish hunter killed by a bear received
more coverage than a woman killed by her husband. The first incident was a
freak event; but it received far more coverage than the second which is a far
more common and serious risk. Rather than being concerned by domestic violence,
the media became obsessed with an event which is unlikely to happen again for many
years.
Another example comes from the Swine flu
epidemic which killed 31 people in 2 weeks. However, 63,000 people died from TB
in the same period, but it received no coverage.
The lesson is that we tend to over state
the unusual and ignore issues which are far more common. It distorts our world
view and leads us to make poor decisions. Factfulness is understanding that
just because something is more widely reported, doesn’t make it more common.
Chapter 6: The Generalisation Rule
As humans, we love to categorise and
generalise everything. While this can help us to simplify our view of the world,
it can also lead to distortions. Attributing one characteristic to an entire
group based on one unusual example leads to serious misconceptions and can have
quite serious consequences.
As he writes, the generalisation instinct “can make us
mistakenly group together things, or people, or countries that are actually
very different. It can make us assume everything or everyone in one category is
similar. And, maybe most unfortunate of all, it can make us jump to conclusions
about a whole category based on a few, or even just one, unusual example.”
For example, he begins the chapter by
talking about his experiences working in the Congo when he was presented with a
less than appetising dessert made from lava. To avoid eating it, he tried to
convince them that it was against Swedish custom to eat lava.
Generalisations, he says, are mind
blockers. They create a distorted view of reality and often lead people to miss
important opportunities. For example, after polling financial experts, he says,
he found that they assumed most children in the world were not vaccinated
before the age of one. In fact, the vast majority are. For that to happen,
countries need a lot of infrastructure, which is also the same kind of
infrastructure which is required for factories and other forms of enterprise.
Statistically Valid Things
The belief persisted because these
financial experts believed the images of extreme poverty presented about some
countries in the media. As such, these experts were potentially missing out on
investment and business opportunities because they believed these countries
were more deprived than they were.
To combat the generalisation instinct, he
suggests travelling. This helps you to get out into the world and gain first-hand
experience of cultures as they actually exist, rather than the way they are
portrayed in the press.
As with other chapters, questioning is
vital. You should always question the different categories you are given. Look
for similarities across and within groups; remember to be suspicious of
generalisations and to be aware when you are generalising one particular group
from another.
Many people generalise African countries
but they are not all at the same level of development. This has enormous
consequences. The Ebola epidemic in Liberia affected tourism in Kenya even
though the two countries are thousands of miles apart.
Majority is an extremely blunt concept. It
can be anything between 51% and 99%; which does not produce a realistic picture
of any situation.
Examples give a poor picture. Many people
around the world suffer from chemophobia, the fear of chemicals, when in
reality most are beneficial.
Folders Icon with variations of colors
Assuming you are normal can lead to you
generalising others and failing to understand the reasons behind their actions.
What is normal to you is not necessarily normal to other people.
Factfulness is recognising what categories
are used and keeping in mind that these categories can be misleading. While
humans categorise and generalise everything, this can lead to stereotypes which
can lead to poor solutions. By travelling and questioning assumptions, you can
combat the problems caused by the generalisation instinct.
He also focuses on what he calls the 80/20
rule. We should always look at items which take up more than 80% of the total.
Looking at the world’s energy sources, for example, you might feel they seem
equally important, but only three generate more than 80% of the world’s energy.
Divide it by a total to get a clearer idea
of the situation. If you look at the total emissions produced by each country,
it might seem that China and India produce more Co2 emissions than Germany and
the USA, but if you divide it by the population, you’ll see that USA and
Germany produce more emissions per head than either China or India. A single
number does not provide a clear picture of any situation.
Chapter 7: The Destiny Instinct
When Rosling gave a presentation to a group
of capitalists and wealthy individuals about the opportunities of emerging
markets in Asia and Africa he was surprised by their reaction.
At the end of the talk he was approached by
what he describes as a ‘grey haired’ man who told him, in no uncertain terms,
that there was no chance that African countries would ever make it. Despite all
the positive data about economic progress he’d seen in the presentation, this
man believed there was something about African society which meant they were
destined to be poor.
This is an example of the destiny instinct
and its roots go back to the earliest history of man. As humans, we often
assume that a nation, group or culture’s destiny is determined by general
characteristic which we believe it shares. For example, white Europeans are
destined to be developed and wealthy while black Africans will always be poor.
This attitude persists even in the face of
contradictory data. Not only do people believe it to be true, but they assume
there is nothing that individuals in this culture can do to change things.
Destiny, as they say, is all.
The instinct stems from evolution when
people lived in small groups and didn’t travel very far. It was safer to assume
things would stay the same as they wouldn’t need to constantly evaluate the
surroundings. It’s also a great way to unite a group.
However, today’s societies are constantly
changing. These changes occur gradually which gives the perception that things
are staying the same. As such, gender equality is perceived to have remained unchanged
around the world, but in reality, things have largely improved.
There is also an idea that Africa is
destined to remain poor. However, most African countries have reduced their
infant mortality rates faster than Sweden did. Asian countries have moved into
the category of developed nations and many countries have escaped extreme
poverty.
It was also assumed that the number of
babies a woman has would depend on her religion. Religious women were more
likely to have babies than those with no religion. However, careful analysis of
data shows that the number of babies depends not on religion but income levels.
Other examples include the rise of support
for women’s rights and liberal ideas in Sweden. Concepts which might have been
far from the mainstream in the past are now commonly accepted.
To control the destiny instinct, you should
recognise that:
Slow change does not mean no
change at all.
Be ready to update your
knowledge. Knowledge is never constant in the social sciences.
Collect examples of cultural
change.
Factfulness is the art of recognising that
many things appear to be static just because change is happening more
gradually. Groups are not defined by their innate characteristics and, just
because something has been true once, it doesn’t mean it is set in stone for
the future. Like many of the other attitudes discussed in this book, the
destiny instinct is hard coded into our evolution, but while it might once have
been helpful for our ancestors, it is holding us back today.
Chapter 8: The Single Perspective Instinct
We live in a world in which many people
have strong opinions. However, when these opinions are set into a single world
view, we can become blind to any information which contradicts us. This is the
problem of the single perspective instinct and it can make it very difficult to
understand reality.
“Being always in favour of or always against any particular
idea makes you blind to information that doesn’t fit your perspective,” writes
Rosling. “This is usually a bad approach if you like to understand
reality.”
The single perspective instinct can be
alluring. It is the preference for simple explanations and simple solutions to
the world’s problems, but life is somewhat more complicated. This single cause
and solution view creates a completely warped view of the world.
There are two main reasons why we do this:
professional and political bias. Professionals will always see the world from
the perspective of their own expertise. A hammer will see everything as a nail
and will probably adopt the same approach. Even experts in their field can be
wrong.
A poll of women’s rights activists found
that only 8% realised that 30-year-old women have spent only one year less in
school on average than men. They were so intent on seeing the situation as bad
that they ignored the progress their own efforts have brought about.
He warns against relying the media to form
a world view. It’s like forming an impression of a person just from his or her
feet. The foot is far from the most attractive part of the body, so it doesn’t
give you a fair representation of the rest of the person.
In the same way, the media tends to present
the worst of the world; the disasters, the catastrophes and the crime. If you
form your world view based on media reports, you’ll imagine the situation is
much worse than it actually is.
Campaigners often paint the world as
getting worse, but they are not aware that progress happening. If they ditched
the attitude that things are only getting worse, they could garner more support
for their cause.
People love the idea of being able to point
to a single cause and single solution. For example, many use numbers to
illustrate all sorts of issues, but they do not always represent the best
solution. They do not help you to understand the reality behind them.
He recalls a conversation with the Prime
Minister of Mozambique who said he believed the economy was making progress. Rosling
argued that the data did not show this, but the Prime Minister replied that he
did not solely rely on numbers to measure progress. He’d look at the shoes
people wore and construction projects taking place. If the shoes were old, it
meant that people didn’t have money to replace them. If construction projects
were overgrown with grass, it suggested there wasn’t enough money being
invested.
There is never a single explanation to any
situation. It limits your imagination. Factfulness is realising the limitations
of this perspective and finding ways to view situations from a wider range of viewpoints.
This will help people to develop a more accurate understanding of the world
they live in and to challenge their own world views.
Chapter 9: The Blame Instinct
We live in a culture which loves to
apportion blame. This instinct assigns a clear cause to an event and finds
someone who was at fault.
It’s a comforting approach. When things go
wrong it is nice to think it’s because of bad people with bad intentions, but
that seldom tells the entire story. We attach a lot of importance to individual
groups or people, but it also stops us from understanding the world.
Once we find someone to blame, we stop
looking for the actual cause of the problem and focus on punishing the person
we think is at fault. The result is that we’re unable to prevent it from
happening again.
For example, we might want to blame a plane
crash on a pilot who falls asleep, but this does not stop another pilot from
falling asleep in the future. Instead we should be looking at why the pilot
fell asleep in order to stop it from happening again.
Hand in hand with the blame instinct comes
the tendency to credit someone for an achievement even if the reality is more
complicated. Someone has to take the blame or be given the credit. We love to
point fingers if it confirms our belief
Even Rosling himself is not immune. When
UNICEF hired him to investigate a company given a contract for malaria drugs,
he became convinced that the company was acting improperly. Even before he
finished his investigation, he started pointing fingers. In reality, the
company was honest but simply had an innovative business model.
The same principle is at work when looking
at the number of immigrants killed trying to cross the sea into Europe. It is
common to blame the smugglers who traffic these people across the sea in small
craft which are routinely dangerously overloaded. In reality, though, the
problem is Europe’s immigration policies which state that an airline which
brings illegal immigrants into the country will have to pay for their
repatriation.
Airlines will not be able to tell if
someone is truly an illegal immigrant in the few minutes they have before they
board a flight, so they will ban anyone who doesn’t have a Visa. This means
that refugees who have a right to enter Europe under the Geneva Convention
cannot do so by any legitimate means. They are forced into the hands of the
smugglers thanks to official European policy.
Any boats which bring refugees by sea are
confiscated by the authorities which is why smugglers turn to cheap dinghies
because they cannot afford to lose a larger boat.
On the other hand, we can also be in a rush
to give credit to a single person or law. China’s low birth rate is accredited
to Mao’s single child policy, but rates had started to fall before the law came
into force. Instead the decline was down to institutions and technology that
were in place.
Factfulness is the ability to recognise
when someone is being scapegoated and to understand that this stops people creating
viable solutions for the future. It is easy to look for a clear solution when
something bad happens, but it stops us developing a fact-based view of the
world and coming up with a solution which actually works.
Chapter 10: The Urgency Instinct
Rosling’s tenth and final instinct is one
which can bring all the others to the fore: the tendency to take urgent action
to solve a problem. While this might have served us well in the past, it can
cause us to make rash decisions based on incomplete information.
Doctors running for the surgery
The urgency instinct is embedded in our
evolution, and in times gone by, it has served us very well. For example, if
you think there is a lion in the grass you don’t want to spend time analysing
your options; you simply need to start running. It’s always the safest option.
It can also be useful today. If you’re
driving and someone slams on the brakes, you’ll have to take drastic action to
avoid a crash. However, in today’s modern world, it can often create problems.
While Rosling was a doctor in Mozambique, a
disease broke out that paralysed patients within minutes and sometimes caused
blindness. He wasn’t certain that it was infectious, but the Mayor didn’t wait
to find out. He ordered the military to set up roadblocks to prevent busses
reaching the city. To get around these roadblocks, women asked fishermen to
take them to the city by sea. It was a dangerous journey and many of these
boats were overloaded. They capsized and causes the deaths of women and
children.
After some research they discovered the
root cause was eating processed Cassava. So, while the Mayor believed his
prompt action was the safest approach, it actually caused a number of deaths
which should have been avoided.
Alarm clock on laptop concept for business deadline, schedule and urgency
The principal of ‘now or never’, causes
people to conjure a worst-case scenario. It kills the ability to think things
through and encourages bad decision making. This is why salespeople come up
with limited time offers. They are giving you a deadline and introducing a
sense of urgency into your decision making in the hope you’ll be rushed into
making a purchase.
To compel people to taking action, activists
will often try to trigger the urgency instinct. They will stress how urgent a problem
is and paint a worst-case scenario of what will happen if you don’t do
something now. However, Rosling believes this is counterproductive.
Fear and exaggerated data can numb people
to the risks campaigners are warning about which can lead to complacency and inaction.
For example, most countries say they are
committed to fighting a climate change but aren’t tracking their progress. It
begs the question: how can they truly fight climate change if they are not
tracking their progress?
Rosling tells us that the world faces five
serious risks: global pandemic, financial collapse, world war, climate change
and extreme poverty. The first two have happened before while the second two
are happening now.
They need to be approached with cool heads
and data analysis rather than sparking fear and urgency. It’s about crying
wolf. It can lead to these risks being ignored despite the dreadful
consequences. We must worry about the right thing.
The idea of factfulness is to remember that
things might not be as urgent as they seem. If you’re afraid and under pressure
to act quickly, you are likely to make bad decisions. We must take a breath,
take action based on data and be very wary of fortune tellers who insist they
know what’s going to happen. Although the world’s problems need to be solved it
is not always a good idea to take urgent or drastic measures.
Chapter 11: Factfulness in Practice
The final chapter brings everything
together and demonstrates how all the lessons explained so far can be put to
practical use. We see each of the ten instincts on show and how factfulness can
lead to truly positive real-world solutions.
To demonstrate, Rosling takes us to a
remote village in the DRC. He had travelled there to investigate a disease which
was caused by eating unprocessed Cassava. The villagers believed he was
collecting their blood to sell it and they were angry.
All the instincts discussed in this book
were on display. The sharp needles and blood had triggered the fear instinct. The
generalisation instinct made them categorise him as a plundering white man.
Blame instinct caused them to assume he had malicious intent and the urgency
instinct convinced them they had to act immediately, in this case by
threatening him with machetes.
Things might have worked out very badly for
both him and his translator if it hadn’t been for an old woman who successfully
calmed the crowd down and explained that he was trying to help them. Although
she was illiterate, she was bringing all the core principles of factfulness to
bear in a very dangerous situation. As such, she managed to save both their
lives.
In the same way we can bring it to our
daily lives, in business, education and journalism and communities. Children
should be taught to adopt a fact-based approach to life which will help them to
develop a better view of the world and create better solutions. Children should
be taught to be curious, to hold two different ideas at the same time. They
should be willing to alter their opinions with new facts. This will protect
them from ignorance.
Having a typo in your CV can keep you from
getting a top job. However, people who make policies are placing a billion
people in the wrong continent. Businesses have distorted world views and fail
to understand that markets are growing in Africa and Asia. Being an American company
is no longer a privilege which will automatically attract employees and
customers. If investors relinquish their preconceptions about Africa, they may
realise that it contains some of the best business opportunities in the world.
With a more factful attitude, journalists
may become aware of their dramatic world views and present something more
accurate and useful. However, it is a bit of a stretch to expect them to truly
embrace all the principles of factfulness and start reporting the mundane
alongside the unusual. The onus is on people to learn how to consume news in a
more factful manner.
If you are ignorant at the global level
there’s a good chance you’ll also be ignorant at the local level within your
own community, company or organisation. They are all using erroneous data to
manage their businesses and prepare for disasters.
Leaders in companies, cities, countries and organisations should carry out fact-based surveys to uncover ignorance within their organisations. Only by doing so can they develop a more accurate and realistic world view. Factfulness can be put into practice in all our daily lives, at home at work and in our communities.
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