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Who believes in the power of hard work?
http://anepigone.blogspot.com/2011/08/who-believes-in-power-of-hard-work.html | 08/20/2011 | Audacious Epigone

Posted on 08/23/2011 12:07:46 AM PDT by JerseyHighlander

Who believes in the power of hard work?

Advances in gene sequencing and brain scanning technologies are continually threatening the human notion of free will, and the smart money appears to be on us coming to the uncomfortable realization that we have a lot less control over our actions, behaviors, and abilities than we think we do, sooner rather than later.

That said, it's encouraging to find that over two-thirds of Americans, when questioned on what it takes to get ahead, assert that hard work is more important than are lucky circumstances or getting help from others. At the individual level, the belief in the efficacy of personal effort is a benefit, a beneficent lie to the extent that it is overemphasized. What good does it do for someone of limited ability and prospects to languish in self-pity or resentment, resigning himself to a dismal, effortless existence because he knows the game is fixed, and so what's the point in trying?

There are inherent dangers in believing effort is everything, especially for those who have won life's lottery. If someone of nearly limitless potential decides to coast on his early accomplishments, having attained a bachelor's degree from State U and currently making $80,000 a year in a comfortable job, reasoning that "Hey, I'm doing better than most people, and that's pretty good, right?", the world is the poorer for it. More pithily, if accomplishments are exclusively the products of personal effort, the venerable words from Luke--that "from everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked"--lose much of their meaning.



There is also the problem of people having unrealistic expectations about success, the idea that any child is capable of becoming an astronaut or the future president of the US, as NCLB illustrates. But a more pressing concern to me seems to be the sense of entitlement that has infected Western civilization, the sense that everyone deserves a prestigious, fun existence and lots of material accouterments to accompany it without having to do much of anything to earn them.

The declaration that two-in-three Americans believe hard work is paramount in getting ahead in life comes from a GSS question that reads "Some people say that people get ahead by their own hard work; others say that lucky breaks of help from other people are more important. Which do you think is most important?" The three possible answers are "hard work", "both equally", and "luck or help". It's a question that is posed to a huge swath of participants, so sample sizes are large across the board. The following table shows a self-determination index (SDI) score, computed by taking the percentage of respondents who say hard work is more important and subtracting from it the percentage of respondents who say "luck or help" is more important. For contemporary relevance, all responses are from 2000 onward:

Group
SDI
Race

Whites
58.4
Blacks
47.7
Native Americans


61.6
Asians
51.9
Hispanics
62.2
IQ

Really smarts
54.1
Pretty smarts
54.8
Normals
62.3
Pretty Dumbs
56.4
Real Dumbs


59.4
Age

18-29
60.0
30-44
57.8
45-64
55.5
65+
53.0
Political orientation

Liberal
49.7
Moderate


56.1
Conservative
64.3
Partisan affiliation

Democrat
54.6
Independent
54.5
Republican
62.9
Sex

Male
54.0


Female
59.2
Birthplace

US native
56.8
Foreign-born
56.0
Theism

Atheist
45.5
Agnostic
42.4
Uncertain believer


52.0
Firm believer
60.9
Educational attainment

Less than high school
59.9
High school grad
58.0
Some college
55.8
Bachelor's degree
55.2
Post-secondary work
52.5


The largest differences are racial, political, and theological. Intelligence, educational attainment (though the academic world's emphasis on the powerlessness of the individual and the heavy influence of societal forces beyond the individual's control shouldn't be discounted in the observation that those with less education put more emphasis on the value of hard work than those with more education do), sex, age, and whether or not you were born in the country do not factor in much.

I'm not surprised to find that blacks, many of whom are enmeshed in the idea that white society is forever holding them down, and Asians, who despite doing well, seem strangely fascinated by luck or the lack thereof, take a more cynical view of the value of hard work than whites do. That Hispanics and Native Americans actually believe in the importance of effort a little more than whites do is more unexpected. To offer an explanation after the fact, Amerindians have lower levels of self-esteem and are less braggadocios than blacks and whites are, so perhaps they're more willing to accept the fact that while hard work is helpful, they don't always possess the will to work very hard themselves.

The political shake out is predictable. Liberals and Democrats are more inclined towards the idea that people are a product of societal forces beyond their control and consequently there is a need for a powerful central government to right societal wrongs and redistribute wealth in an equitable manner. Conservatives and Republicans are closer to the Ron Paul message of individual liberty and personal responsibility, viewing government as a nefarious force that punishes the innocent and rewards the guilty.

Somewhat ironically, those who believe in God are more likely to feel that it's up to oneself to make it in the world, even as they pray for blessings and assistance from above, while atheists and agnostics feel that a person has relatively little control over his circumstances in life.

Parenthetically, the slight increase in the belief in hard work among the young tracks with the gentle trend over the four decades that the GSS has asked the question for people to increasingly respond that hard work more than luck is more important in determining whether or not a person gets ahead in life.

GSS variables used: GETAHEAD(1-3), YEAR(2000-2010), SEX, RACECEN1(1)(2)(3)(4-10)(15-16), GOD(1)(2)(3-5)(6), POLVIEWS(1-2)(3-5)(6-7), PARTYID(0-1)(2-4)(5-6), BORN, WORDSUM(see *), EDUC(0-11)(12)(13-15)(16-17)(18-20)

* Respondents are broken up into five categories; Really Smarts (wordsum score of 9-10, comprising 13% of the population), Pretty Smarts (7-8, 26%), Normals (6, 22%), Pretty Dumbs (4-5, 27%), and Real Dumbs (0-3, 12%)



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: bloggersandpersonal; missinglink; sourcetitlenoturl
Not sure what to add though I'm sure it'll interest some Freepers,

I follow this blog regularly, the author cuts apart census and demographic survey data in interesting ways. http://anepigone.blogspot.com

1 posted on 08/23/2011 12:07:51 AM PDT by JerseyHighlander
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To: JerseyHighlander

I will submit, without argument, that genes and hormones and other biological processes can affect our abilities to form habits.

Having said that, we are still in possession of free will and can overcome our inherent tendencies.


2 posted on 08/23/2011 12:19:05 AM PDT by Jonty30
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To: JerseyHighlander

Hard work works.


3 posted on 08/23/2011 12:29:16 AM PDT by allmost
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To: Jonty30
There is an interesting book called 'Outliers: The Story of Success' by Malcolm Gladwell that is quite interesting. In it he tackles a number of interesting (and maybe contrarian) facets, such as why hockey players who make it to the NHL tend to be born in certain months, and why Bill Gates made his money. Personally, I am a firm believer in hard work. It makes a huge difference.

At the same time, however, I am cognizant of the effect (and preponderance) of other factors that can have just as great (at times even greater) influence than simply working hard. In my occupation (Private Equity) and my background (born in Kenya, studied in some of the best private schools in Kenya run by scots, then did my tertiary education in the US), I have managed to see a LOT of people who work very hard yet live on less than 2 bucks a day (simply because they were born in a certain area ...I can recall a picture of a very sweet looking little girl playing in a trash heap totally oblivious to her conditions), and others who were born right next to that slum and have a trust fund (like a kid I personally know in Nairobi who is 11 years old and has a $3 million bank account courtesy of his grandfather). Using those two examples, the outcome of the little girl and the little boy are bound to be extremely different regardless of how hard they work or do not. Even if the girl was to work super hard, and the boy slacks, it will not matter much (if at all in the first place) as to what happens.

On the other hand, looking at another example - say two middle class families. In the first family the parents take a lot of attention to their child. Education is made key, extracurricular activities transcend beyond the mundane (e.g. basketball) to activities that foster higher intellectual acuity. The parents even augment the education the child gets in school with some home schooling or extra tuition. To top it up, the logic and sense of hard work and a good work ethic is instilled from childhood.

On the other hand you have a second family, also middle class. However, in this family education belongs only in school. Any grade is ok as long as the child 'did his best.' All extra curricular activity is play oriented (and at that gross level play such as basketball or hockey). A strong work ethic is not necessarily instilled.

Now, look at those two kids 15 years later. There will be profound differences. The first kid will (all things being equal) be a harder worker, but more importantly be a better worker (and maybe not just a worker but an employer even). The other kid may be a hard worker, but it will really not matter whether they are working hard or not.

Same thing with IQ. I remember reading a book on the bell curve/IQ that I found quite humorous. Why? Well, apparently I am supposed to be at the 'other' end of that graph because I am black, but I guess someone forgot to send me that memo. When I was discussing that years back (maybe 10) someone said that it is because I am an 'exception,' and like any statistical graphing there will always be exceptions. Well, it was interesting to note to him that the highest GPA average in campus as a group belonged to Africans (mostly Kenyans and Nigerians), and thus I guess we must all be 'exceptions.' When it seemed that my 'pal' wanted to make the conversation more serious, I simply took him to the library (that overlooked a public sand-volleyball pitch. In the library were a lot of immigrants (mostly African and Asian) ...outside playing a game were some African Americans and some goth types. I then asked how he expected any of those outside to even have the slightest chance of beating any of us ...even if we slept for week straight? By the way, this was the same 'pal' that I had managed to convince that I acquired my grasp of English on my flight (or maybe I said boat) over to the US when he inquired how I got to know the English language (even though I probably learned it before he did).

Anyways, hard work is EXTREMELY important. But nurture is by far more important, because it is where certain skill sets (and the ability to use them to great efficacy) are formed, and without those skill sets it really doesn't matter if one works hard or not. A person can work extremely hard at Pizza Hut, while another can be lazy and Goldman. It is a wider set of skill sets, and reading articles like the one written by some Chinese 'Tiger Mom' shows how early that training can start. I remember when I went to the US in 1999 I got a list of ten things I should do/not do, ranging from what area I should stay, car to drive ....people to associate with (that one was quite ...erm ...'interesting'). It was not much of a surprise when my internships were better than most jobs, while many other people were working at Papa Johns or the local Deli. Planning. Focus. Sacrifice. Stratagems and efficient application. Patience. Logic. Dedication. Then hard work.

4 posted on 08/23/2011 1:04:51 AM PDT by spetznaz (Nuclear-tipped Ballistic Missiles: The Ultimate Phallic Symbol)
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To: spetznaz

Born with it is a joke.


5 posted on 08/23/2011 1:16:43 AM PDT by allmost
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To: allmost

You know it.


6 posted on 08/23/2011 1:18:02 AM PDT by allmost
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To: spetznaz

If you’re black and born in Kenya, you too can run for president. :)

It is true that somebody who is born in favourable conditions won’t have to put in the same effort to live a nice life than somebody less fortunate.

But the really nice thing about hard work is that its effects accumulate. The girl you mentioned might have to slave day in and day out to scratch out a life for herself, but if her children learn the lessons of hard work and follow through, they will have a nicer life than their mother and if their children also learn that lesson, their lives will be even better yet.


7 posted on 08/23/2011 1:24:11 AM PDT by Jonty30
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To: Jonty30

That is true. There are tremendous cumulative effects that stem from consistent hardwork, and just like the effect of compounding interest on an investment, those effects can reach a level whereby the resultant propagation is simply astounding. I agree 100% with that. All I am saying is that with that hard work there needs to be strategy. A farmer who tills from morn to dusk, and puts it great amounts of sweat equity, will have greater harvests if he uses some strategy in ensuring he puts some fertilizer, maybe digs a furrow from the river through the land for more water, maybe he sells one of his goats for better seed and money to rent a tractor for planting day ....than a farmer who works twice as long and thrice as hard, but is doing so with a simple sharpened stick. I remember a sermon where the pastor said that it doesn’t matter how fast you go if you are going in the wrong direction. Hard work is extremely important, but hard work with strategy is magic.


8 posted on 08/23/2011 1:38:53 AM PDT by spetznaz (Nuclear-tipped Ballistic Missiles: The Ultimate Phallic Symbol)
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To: spetznaz

For sure.


9 posted on 08/23/2011 1:40:11 AM PDT by Jonty30
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To: spetznaz
Hard work allows one to make the best of ones own abilities and talents no matter how endowed or limited one might be. Perhaps one's talents are such that one will never rise above manual labor but if he gives up because he feels he will never have that 4 bedroom house with the three car garage then he will not attain the level that is possible for him. If Society/government tells him he can't make it without being given his livelihood then he may not use the talents he has and society is the worse for it. Ultimately there will be less out of which the government can give the welfare because it stifles the efforts and real contributions of those it deems poor or insufficiently able.
10 posted on 08/23/2011 2:00:00 AM PDT by arthurus (Read Hazlitt's "Economics In One Lesson.")
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To: JerseyHighlander

I subscribe to Ronald Reagan’s philosophy: “They say hard work never killed anybody, but I say, why take chances?”


11 posted on 08/23/2011 2:00:56 AM PDT by Arthur McGowan (In Edward Kennedy's America, federal funding of brothels is a right, not a privilege.)
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To: JerseyHighlander
"I've laid down the law, though, to everyone from now on about anything that happens: No matter what time it is, wake me, even if it's in the middle of a Cabinet meeting." ■ Ronald Reagan
12 posted on 08/23/2011 2:19:26 AM PDT by Arthur McGowan (In Edward Kennedy's America, federal funding of brothels is a right, not a privilege.)
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To: spetznaz
Well, it was interesting to note to him that the highest GPA average in campus as a group belonged to Africans (mostly Kenyans and Nigerians), and thus I guess we must all be 'exceptions.' When it seemed that my 'pal' wanted to make the conversation more serious, I simply took him to the library (that overlooked a public sand-volleyball pitch. In the library were a lot of immigrants (mostly African and Asian) ...outside playing a game were some African Americans and some goth types. I then asked how he expected any of those outside to even have the slightest chance of beating any of us ...even if we slept for week straight?

Excellent.

13 posted on 08/23/2011 2:44:15 AM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Dick Obama is more inexperienced now than he was before he was elected.)
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To: allmost

...”Hard work works”...

Yes..It keeps people out of trouble..”Idleness is the devil’s workshop,” so I have heard.


14 posted on 08/23/2011 3:16:13 AM PDT by jazzlite (esat)
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To: JerseyHighlander

The harder you work, the luckier you get.


15 posted on 08/23/2011 3:18:17 AM PDT by Frankss
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To: Jonty30

...”But the really nice thing about hard work is that its effects accumulate. The girl you mentioned might have to slave day in and day out to scratch out a life for herself, but if her children learn the lessons of hard work and follow through, they will have a nicer life than their mother and if their children also learn that lesson, their lives will be even better yet”...

True..Provided the girl lives in a nation which will not steal from her efforts in order to redistribute to the lazy girl next door.


16 posted on 08/23/2011 3:19:20 AM PDT by jazzlite (esat)
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To: JerseyHighlander

So will the stupid and lazy outbreed the industrious? The image of the Costco greeter from Idiocracy just popped into my head. “Welcome to Costco; I love you.”


17 posted on 08/23/2011 4:11:11 AM PDT by Opinionated Blowhard ("When the people find they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.")
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To: JerseyHighlander

Good place to post a comment I read on a local board about a shoplifter killed by a car while running away from the security guard at K-mart:

“It’s time white peeple were stopped from being so judgemintal! Who are we as a culture to say larseny is wrong? Poor people need things too, and they have every bit as much right to have those things as do those peple who are lucky to have actuall jobs. Just because you’ve been forchanet enough to have won life’s lottary and been granted a job doesn’t mean your better than other peopel. Housing is a civil right! And its time the gratest country on earth took care of all her cittisens.”


18 posted on 08/23/2011 4:15:31 AM PDT by Rebelbase (Disgusted with the establishment GOP and their enablers.)
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To: JerseyHighlander

You can see how much hard work is valued on any given Friday at the local state lottery ticket counter.


19 posted on 08/23/2011 4:25:07 AM PDT by wayoverontheright
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To: JerseyHighlander

The statistics are interesting here, because they show that almost every group has a high proportion who believe in hard work. Great! I also believe strongly in loosing weight and in exercise. Believing is not exactly the same as doing!

The biggest piece of luck is one’s genetic heritage — but the paradox is, that one never knows what one can do, until one has really worked hard and consistently. Many very successful people don ‘t even rank at the top of their college class. How do they succeed? I suspect that by work, by focus, and by some measure of daring — and by not believing in limitations to their possible accomplishments.

I suspect that if all the lazy, time-wasters in the country would really get to work, it would be amazing.

As for the quotation from the Bible, it is a parable (a sort of analogy), not intended as advice on work and success. It is good to read the Bible, but don’t think that you understand it unless you really know how to READ. I run into many Christians who think that they are solid, Biblical folk, and yet when they quote, it is apparent that they don’t really understand the words that they are repeating. But that is a separate discussion!


20 posted on 08/23/2011 4:55:06 AM PDT by docbnj
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