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Creativity: As American as apple pie!

My friend Tom emailed me today to ask if I saw "West Wing" last night.

I hadn't. Don't have a TV, you see. And I'm not one of these "Kill your TV" people, either. I just don't have one. The cheap ones are as convenient to move as anvils, and the expensive ones are, well, expensive. As such, I am a man without the power of cable culture.

However, Tom gave me a very good summary of the show. It sounded to me like the scriptwriter had gone along, collected a few reports on offshoring, taken a couple sides of the debate, and wrapped it up with a cute little bow for prime time tubing.

The message, of course, as we all know now, was clear: The jobs we currently have will disappear, but they will be replaced by better, stronger, newer, more interesting, cuter, hotter, sexier jobs.

Well, all I can say is HOT DAMN!

I'm actually so excited that I've already put my current job in a box, taken it to the post office, and shipped it to Southeast Asia myself! Good riddance, stupid high-paying tech job!

Man. When I'm head of NASA, life sure is going to be different. I'll be making all sorts of big decisions about this/that. Don't worry - I'll keep blogging, of course, but from the position of someone with power to wield. I'll write about life in a mahogany office with trim carved of the rarest Amazonian rainforest wood. The martini lunches, evenings at the club, and the drive home in my S series Benz. Not that it will be all that interesting. You'll all probably be doing similar things by then, so the grandeur should be par for the course (and much golfing there will be!).

When that gets old, maybe I'll switch to something else. I've never put my skills to use designing pharmaceuticals. Maybe that's my calling. I figure it's only about eight years of retraining. I'll have plenty of time to do that while living off of all the major cash I've pocketed as an overpaid coder and underappreciated exec.

Yeah. That's it. Spend a couple good years heading NASA just to make some connections, and then move on to something more "hands-on," like the good old days. Like when I used to code. I could design the next Viagra, or whatever. Certain to be a cash cow, of course, since so many of my fellow former-coders will have been transitioned into new even higher paid positions with more power and responsibilities, which means they'll all be working too much, drinking too many martinis, spending too much time planning their big yachting parties, and such. Everyone knows what this kind of stress does to the male body, and I can't wait to benefit from the impotence that will surely run rampant through the executive boardrooms of America (where I expect to find most of you within the next ten years (except for the foreigners - sorry, but no, no, no! creativity belongs to us)).

Ah, yes. The French Riviera in summer, Tahiti in the spring, and a few trips back to the office year-round in the Learjet to make sure everything's running smoothly. I figure that this will be possible with the infrastructure we're building for offshoring. We'll have high quality videoconferencing, high speed data transfer from anywhere on the globe, and collaboration software as yet undreamt. It will be a utopia, and we will push all the buttons and make all the decisions. After all, those silly foreigners don't have any creativity, do they? Of course not! Creativity is an American product, and we don't export it. It's not like pale, watery beer that we can bottle and ship. As long as we hang on to that, there won't be any problems.

That's the truth, too. People in other parts of the world are so very different from us that there's no way they could do our "high end" jobs. I figure that we share 99.6% of our active genomes with chimpanzees, and probably only a little more than that with people who don't have American birth certificates. I'm sure the genetic switch for creativity is in there somewhere. I don't know where, yet, but with my new job in the biotech industry (which I'll have in addition to all the other new, high-paying jobs), I'll probably be able to isolate it, patent it, and then, if I'm feeling nice, sell it to other countries so that they, too, can enjoy the singularly American experience of being able to use the brain to create rather than just manufacture from American design.

Actually, on second thought, forget everybody else on the planet. I'll own the key to creativity, and just share it with a few close friends (about 300,000,000 of them, to be exact). Always important, I suppose, to maintain dominance in the market.

<sigh>Life in the offshored world will be grand. Sort of like a cross between Nazi Germany and a junkyard in Tijuana. There will be those of us who are superior and rule by birthright, and those who will live in shanty towns to crank out the paperwork to support our blazingly rich and creative notions.

Put on your sunglasses and tanning lotion, people. The future is looking especially bright. I'd recommend something with a reasonably high SPF so that we don't all come down with skin cancer and get eaten alive by our own prosperity.

P.S.

Apples, which we Americans use in apple pie, something that some of us use as a symbol of this great country, are currently theorized to have originated in Southern Asia.

Published Thursday, April 22, 2004 3:40 PM by Rory

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Comments

 

TomB said:

'My friend Tom ...'

Gee...thanks.

Nicely ranted.
April 22, 2004 4:01 PM
 

Sven Groot said:

Importing your national pride is always nice. Let us not forget that the bona fide 100% American creativity (which I, as a Dutchman, have no notion of) rests on the shoulders of the Latin alphabet, Arabic numerals, Greek mathematics and so forth.

Luckily I don't live in the US. I live in the Netherlands, which is primarily known for windmills (imported from the middle-east), wooden-shoes (imported from France), and several types of softdrugs I'm pretty sure didn't originate here either...

And people say globalisation is something new.
April 22, 2004 4:03 PM
 

Larry O'Brien said:

Oh, don't worry about the creativity gene: American creativity is rooted in our unparalleled educational system, our societal values of hard work and fair play, and our unbounded optimism in the future. So long as we have those things, we will remain the most admired country in the world.
April 22, 2004 4:40 PM
 

Anon said:

Larry, you really need an emoticon of some sort to let everyone know you're being sarcastic. Without an all-out Roryrant, it's hard for us to tell.
April 22, 2004 4:44 PM
 

Joe Duffy said:

Creativity, respect, <fill in the blank> are all attributes tagged to the U.S. workforce in an almost blind faith fashion. Who's doing the tagging, however? Yup, that's right -- us (well, them -- us as in other Americans).

The rest of the world is already leapfrogging the U.S. in terms of technology. Just look at Japan, where people live, eat, and breath SMS as a communications medium; we stick to our tele-o-phones. In Japan, even restaurants are so high tech they surpass most technology companies in the U.S. We don't want any part of it. GSM/other digital networks in Europe and Asia make the U.S. digital network support look like a failed experiment. There seems to be a certain technology threshold which Americans are ultra-sensitive to, and which they refuse to cross. Especially when it comes to digital infrastructure.

Sadly, I doubt we will realize it's too late to regain our technological advantage until... well... it's too late. I'm convinced our only hope is Microsoft. ;)

My crystal ball's broken today, so take what I say with a shaker full of salt.
April 22, 2004 5:28 PM
 

Sam said:

Well its a rant, but I'm not sure what the point is...?
April 22, 2004 7:33 PM
 

Jason Bunting said:

It is funny, eh? The pride (founded in ignorance) so many Americans have is almost comical in its tragedy. I mean, there literally *are* people out there that _buy_ that line of crap about our having a corner on the creativity market. What a sad commentary on the state of the human race. We have come so far in so many ways, yet intelligence seems to be on the decline . . .
April 22, 2004 9:01 PM
 

Steve V. said:

It's so amazing the amount of apathy in this country. We are, collectively, being sold down the river. I don't support nationalism, but at the sametime, this wholesale exportation of our complete infrastructure has got to end. Anyone want to take a stab at how much is still "made in the USA"?...and why China has the fastest growing economy?
April 22, 2004 10:17 PM
 

Rory said:

Sam -

"Well its a rant, but I'm not sure what the point is...?"

I *guess* it's a rant. It's interesting to me that so many people are calling it a rant.

To me, it was just a post that was fun to write.

As for the point: The point is that I don't think creativity is a uniquely American thing like many people seem to believe at the moment.

I realize that I didn't just come out and say it, but that's part of the fun.
April 22, 2004 11:12 PM
 

Rory said:

Steve V. -

"It's so amazing the amount of apathy in this country. We are, collectively, being sold down the river."

You might like "Coding Slave." It's anything but apathetic.

Thought provoking, interesting, and entertaining, yes. Apathetic, *no*.

You might not agree with Bob's conclusions, but I don't think people *usually* agree on pre v1.0 ideas anyway. It can take years to iron things out.

But, you need a place to start, and "Coding Slave" gives us that place. It gives us a context for the rest of the discussion.

http://www.codingslave.com
April 22, 2004 11:15 PM
 

Joe Grenier said:

Rory -

"The point is that I don't think creativity is a uniquely American thing like many people seem to believe at the moment."

What they say is really true; a joke loses it's "funny" when you explain it to someone. Hey, I saw that episode of The West Wing last night and all I can say is, man is that C.J. Craig a hottie (rrrrrrrroooowwww!!!). Was there something about jobs in it? Oh well. Guess I should pay closer attention.
April 23, 2004 2:47 AM
 

Jason Bunting said:

Joe, are you serious?! Alison Janney?! Eeewwww . . .

:P

April 23, 2004 4:09 AM
 

Jason, said:

April 23, 2004 11:57 AM
 

Joe Grenier said:

Crap, I can't even type right.

Jason, that was actually supposed to be a joke. I was going to use Martin Sheen, but I didn't want to start a whole gay rights thread ;)

Damn, I wish I was funny like Rory.
April 23, 2004 12:02 PM
 

Peter Stathakos said:

Just when I've finished thoroughly cleansing my nostrils, monitor and keyboard with tea from reading Rory's post, Larry gets me again with this...

"Oh, don't worry about the creativity gene: American creativity is rooted in our unparalleled educational system, our societal values of hard work and fair play,"

Yup, as long as we have that North American (9-5, gotta have my two coffee breaks and 5 smoke breaks, you don't pay me enough so I'll surf the web and talk on the phone all day long) work ethic and "the man" only looks at the bottom line and their fancy lifestyle, we'll keep loosing jobs. Note, I say North American because it's just as bad here in Canada and YES, I know Mexico is in North America as well.

Somehow I think they'll always be jobs for the creative ones though. We just have to start getting the slackers back to flipping burgers somehow.
April 23, 2004 2:53 PM
 

Jeff Atwood said:

August 11, 2004 4:17 AM
 

TrackBack said:

Offshoring and Lessons Learned
April 23, 2004 5:48 PM
 

TrackBack said:

Offshoring and Lessons Learned
April 23, 2004 6:33 PM
 

TrackBack said:

Rory on Outsourcing
April 23, 2004 8:50 PM
 

TrackBack said:

Cost vs. quality in offshoring
April 24, 2004 1:37 AM
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About Rory

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