In every age, a nation reveals its true priorities not by what it proclaims, but by what it preserves. Today, as American education drifts further into abstraction—into identity, narrative, and self-construction—one domain remains stubbornly anchored to reality: the trades.
Here, in workshops and training yards, in welding bays and engine rooms, a different philosophy endures. It is older than the university, older than the credential, older even than the republic itself. It is the philosophy of making—of confronting the world not as an idea to be interpreted, but as a force to be engaged.
The modern educational system has largely abandoned this philosophy. Over the past several decades, vocational training was quietly demoted, then stigmatized, and finally displaced. The message was clear: success lay not in building, but in credentialing; not in mastering a craft, but in acquiring a degree. High school shop classes disappeared. Apprenticeships faded. The transmission of practical knowledge—once passed from hand to hand, from generation to generation—was broken.
In its place arose a new model of advancement: one centered not on competence, but on presentation. Students are now trained to curate themselves—to assemble identities, narratives, and affiliations that signal value within institutional frameworks. The question has shifted from What can you do? to How can you position yourself?
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