That's not elite overproduction, elite overproduction is all the people getting college degrees thinking that entitles them to higher status.
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Replying to @CryptonMaximus
That's credential inflation not elite overproduction.
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Replying to @CovfefeAnon
Im surprised you're not familiar with the termhttps://nationalpost.com/opinion/peter-turchin-how-elite-overproduction-and-lawyer-glut-could-ruin-the-u-s …
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Replying to @CryptonMaximus
We need some clearer terms. "Elite overproduction" as I've understood the term is like in Farewell to Alms where there's downward social mobility due to excess upper class reproduction. Excess sons move downward. This use is the opposite.pic.twitter.com/qWQA8NL6bA
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Replying to @CovfefeAnon @CryptonMaximus
Opposite and not incisive I think - power *has* expanded radically to more and more stakeholders (all of whom get veto power but no one has power to say "yes" to anything). Observe the 900 person zoom call in the securing of the election. Far more than 100 Senators + 435 Reps.pic.twitter.com/pbhorPLvko
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Replying to @CovfefeAnon
The elite overproduction model is used to point out periods of instability which Turchin claims are rapidly approaching. For example look at his writing on lawyers. There are more lawyers graduating than society needs. Lawyers tend to be very political types and ambitious.
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Replying to @CryptonMaximus @CovfefeAnon
Look at journalism and how they very clearly try to stifle their competition with their latest jabs on substack. The institutional journalists want to keep clamping down on rising DIY type journalists and this is a recipe for social conflict. In an aristocracy elites are born
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Replying to @CryptonMaximus @CovfefeAnon
In a Democracy elites are both born and created through education and wealth accumulation. There's essentially more ways to become elite in Democracy, but if there's too many elites then they have to compete with each other over who has power.
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Replying to @CryptonMaximus
Nah, the problem isn't that they're competing for limited slots - his model there is just plain wrong - formal power (100 Senators) isn't the only kind and isn't even the most important kind. The problem is that more of them really are getting power and a larger elite is worse.
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Replying to @CovfefeAnon @CryptonMaximus
A larger elite doesn't coordinate as well for their own collective interest in keeping the system functional - they each expand the system to its long term detriment.
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
Maybe he makes that point though.
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