Okay, good afternoon class. So this will be our last class before the break. We have a three -week break coming up. I hope that during these three weeks you have a chance to reflect on what we've learned because when we come back we'll continue to build on the ideas that we've learned so far. And so today I want to talk about the meritocracy. The meritocracy means that people should succeed based on their talent, their ability, and their hard work. And in theory this sounds like a good idea. And in fact the school system is built around the idea of a meritocracy. The good students go to the best universities and then after they graduate they will get the very best jobs. That's the idea. But what I will show you today is that there are actually lots of problems with the meritocracy. And one of the problems I want to show you is that this area is actually destroying American society.
Secret History #7: Death by Meritocracy
Source-synced transcript for the compressed reading. Spans keep the original chronology, timestamps, and audit trail behind the public interpretation.
So the first thing I'm going to do is I'm going to explain to you why America has the world's most complicated admissions system. So in China, when you apply to university, you take the gaokao, you take an examination, and then based on your test score, you get into the university. and this is a system that most countries use only in America it's a system that's complicated your transcript matters but so does your standardized test scores the SAT the TOEFL so does your extracurriculars so does teacher recommendation letters and so does essays in which you have to say to America I'm a really good person why does it matter if you're a good person okay so it's it's the world's most complicated admissions system so what I'll do first is explain to you why we have this system okay so we start off in England in the 1600s and at
this time in history in England there's a major conflict between religious belief and the king okay the king is head of the Anglican Church which the official Church of England and there's no difference between the Anglican Church and the Catholic Church the only difference is a Catholic Church the head is the Pope in the Anglican Church the head is the king of England that's the only difference in terms of rituals in terms of belief it's the same now there are people called Protestants who believe there should be no Pope there should be no King you should as an individual be able to access God directly and you do that by reading the Bible so at this time in history there's a major conflict between the Protestants the Puritans or the dissenters and the king and it leads to wars basically and so the solution is the king says to the dissenters hey there's this new
place called America it's far away go away there guys and leave me alone okay so the dissenters go as pilgrims to America to build their own theocracy what they believe to be the New Jerusalem or paradise on earth heaven on earth now one core belief of the Protestants is you must read the Bible in order to understand the mind of God therefore education literacy learning it is the divine imperative and that's why they established Harvard okay Harvard was a school designed to train people into the religion called ministers in order to study the Bible in order to spread the truth of the Bible now Harvard then would encourage the development of other universities Yale Princeton okay and collectively they would be known as the Independence Society of the United States. the Ivy League so this is how the Ivy League started because America was founded as a religious colony and everyone needed to read the
Bible so they needed places to study the Bible and so they founded Harvard and then Yale and then Princeton but over time as America became more wealthy it became also less religious and so the Ivy League became social clubs and what I mean by that is these were just places where the rich of America went to become friends okay it was to build cohesion right and remember we discussed the idea of cohesion where you if you commit transgression you become more cohesive so these guys did not study they drank they dress up like girls they had wild parties they play football they took risks okay and they became uneducated and they became uneducated and they became uneducated and they became good friends and they they went on to become the leaders of America as America became much more diverse much bigger and much more wealthy it recognized that it need to educate its population and
so it started state schools okay state schools what we call A &M okay you may have heard the term Texas A &M okay it means Texas agricultural these schools were built to train farmers engineers and soldiers okay trades people in order to help grow the American economy now and these the system was extremely successful America was able to industrialize really really quickly and most people went to these schools only the rich would go to the Ivy League because they were country clubs or social clubs over time America as we came to as began to industrialize more and more it recognized that it needed science and technology so it basically copied the best universities in Germany and Germany was at this at this time the main center of science and technology in the world and so they built them called research universities okay and a couple of the first research universities were to call the University
the University of Chicago and John Hopkins okay so in the about nineteen hundred you have this system okay of State schools where most people went you're a poor person you go to learn a trade and then you go and get and get a good job and make good money if you were you want to be a professor or scientist you went to these research universities if you're a rich you went to these social clubs called the Ivy League and quite honestly it was a really good system and America should have stayed with this system but what happened was who's unhappy now about the system these guys right harvard young princeton because if you think about it over time they become less and less relevant because just because you're rich doesn't mean you're smart all the smart people are going to to chicago and john hopkins and so over time we can expect to call john
hopkins to overtake the ivy league okay and that's why harvard decided to in to institute scholarship programs so he wanted more smart people into its i want to welcome more smart people into its campus okay and this creates something called the sat okay this is the origin of the sat the std was founded as a scholarship program to identify the best and brightest students from all over america so that they can come to harvard and help harvard be the best university in the world okay but now who's angry about the system harvard's not happy that the best best students are going to chicago and john hopkins so they so they quit the sat and now the best students are coming to harvard now who's unhappy the rich kids right okay the alumni the legacies because before their kids just just their kids could just go to harvard and have a great time now it's hard
for them to get in they have to take a test and also they're in class with smart people people okay so now harvard has a problem on one hand it wants the best students in america but on the other hand it still wants to maintain good relations with its alumni so that's why it created a new system okay in this new system grades are not the only factor test scores are not the only factor now it's focused on holistic holistic okay the new one is holistic specifically character just being smart is not good enough you have to be a good person you have to be a strong and brave and a virtuous person okay so they have a new concept called character but this word was created to basically keep jews out okay because jews are really smart but jews like to read books so they're not good at sports and so like that's not
good we need people who are manly who are strong who are brave we need white people okay so they develop this holistic system and that's why we have the system that we have today where it's not just test scores it's essays it's transcript it's teacher recommendations because they want to identify the jews and keep them out okay today we have the system to identify both the jews and the asians to keep them out yes they would even identify for your household like they will ask for your profile exactly exactly so all the information that they're looking at today is ethnicity your um They want to keep, they basically want to keep Asians out of Harvard, okay? It's that simple, all right? But I'll explain more as we go along, okay? All right? So the purpose of all these changes is to ensure that Harvard remains the institution of power in America. It doesn't make sense.
Harvard's not interested in academics, it's interested in power. Therefore, it must ensure that the people who come to Harvard are the ones who are most likely to succeed. And that's why it doesn't want all Asians. It wants a mix of students, okay? But I'll explain this later on. Okay, now in this new system, there are two key concepts. The first key concept is the idea of secrecy, okay? Secrecy just means like, I'll never tell you why I let you in or why I didn't let you in. I don't have to, okay? The other is the idea of discretion. Discretion means that I can, I can choose to let in for no reason, okay? So in China, if you get a really high score on the Gaokao, Beidai or Qinghua has to let you in. Not in America. You can be the best student in the world, they don't care. If they don't like you, they'll just say, we don't want you, okay?
They have their own institutional reasons to let you in and they'll never tell you, all right? And the system was created to ensure that Harvard is able to recruit the best students in the world. But what's important for us to remember is, from Harvard's perspective, best just means the most likely to succeed, not necessarily the best academically orientated student, not the smartest student, okay? So let's run a thought experiment, okay? Let's just say that you are a Harvard admissions officer and you're presented with four students, okay? You're Harvard, the best university in the world, okay? And I give you four students. And you can only let in one student, okay? You tell me who you let in, and I'll tell you if you're a good admissions officer or not, okay? The first is the best math genius from China, okay? Everyone's like, nah. Second is the best basketball player in the world, okay?
Basketball player in America, okay? Okay. The third is the best student. And the fourth is the best math genius in the world. And the fourth is three generations of Harvard, okay? So your father, your grandfather, your great -grandfather went to Harvard. Who do you let in? You guys know the system. Exactly, okay? You don't even think about it. Like, I let in number four, okay? Because you know that in the world, he is the most likely to succeed. You're not interested in educating smart people, all you want to do is, graduate rich people, okay? So let's just say this guy doesn't exist. Then who do you let in? Exactly, yep, this guy, okay? Definitely not this guy, okay? Definitely not the math genius from China, because you know that he's probably going to end up as a math teacher, right? Math professor, we don't want that, okay?
We don't want professors, we don't want lawyers, we don't want doctors. We want people who will be head of a company. We want people who will become a famous rock star, okay? One people who will become president of the United States. That's what we want, okay? And, yeah, so either one of these two is fine. No, no, okay? We want these guys to apply because that helps us look better, right? We want people to apply so we can reject them so that our metrics look better, okay? Does that make sense? Okay, that's how the system works. All right. So, let me explain this. Let me explain why they do this, okay? Why is the system set like this? The best analogy for Harvard, Yale, and, sorry, go ahead.
Like, does all the admission officers in American college doing this intentionally?
Okay, that's a really good question, okay? So, if you're the Ivy League, you do this, because everyone wants to go to the Ivy League. But if you're an average school, you're actually just trying to recruit students, okay? So, this is like the school, this is the mentality of admissions officers for elite schools. But most schools are just like, they want you to come in and pay the tuition, okay?
So, why did Yale pick you?
Yeah, I'll explain later on, okay? All right. So, Harvard is, first and foremost, a venture capital firm, okay? Your investment firm. So, let's pretend you're a venture capitalist, and I'll give you two options, okay? And you tell me which option you pick. Option one is, I want to open a restaurant, and I need a million dollars from you, okay? But guess what, guys? My uncle works for the government. So, I can guarantee that he and his friends will come to my restaurant every single day. And so, there's no risk. There's absolutely no risk involved. I guarantee we'll make at least $500,000 a year. No risk. Easy money, okay? Number two is, I want to start a website that's AI and Bitcoin and all of this, okay? Problem is, I don't even know how to write code. I have no experience writing, doing a website. And my idea isn't really fleshed out. But if it works, we can make $1 billion, guys, okay?
So, option one is, low risk, really good plan, solid returns, $500,000 a year, okay? Option two is, concept, vague idea, I have absolutely no experience doing any of this, but we could possibly make $1 billion, okay? Which option do you take? You always take this, guys, okay? Right? Because, like, you don't need $500,000. That's boring. You want $1 billion. And that's the mentality of Harvard, you understand? They want to take a risk on you. They don't want students who are solid and who become a professor. That's boring, okay? They want crazy people who will change the world because that makes Harvard look good. Okay, another way of saying this is, they rather, so, they rather have a class where 10 people succeed and 99 fail rather than 1,000 people succeed slightly. Does that make sense? Okay? Why? Because we only remember the 10 people who succeed.
We forget everyone else. Okay? That's the Harvard mentality. And that's why they're the most famous university in the world, because they're looking to create as much brand name recognition for themselves as possible. Okay? All right. Does that make sense? All right. Now, how do we know if they succeed or not if you're Harvard? Well, remember the class that we learned last class, which is dissociative personality disorder. And what we discussed last class is, in a game, people who are most likely to succeed have this characteristic. Okay? And so, I'll explain why using myself as an example, because I got into Yale. Okay? So, what we're going to do is this. We're going to examine my application to Yale. And then we're going to look at how the admissions officers would perceive my application. And how they would judge my potential. Okay? So, three things. The first is what my application actually says. Second is they will examine my background.
And the third is they will then judge my potential.
Okay?
All right. So, my application. All right. So, I went to a public high school. It was good, but it's not a private high school. You get a better education at a private high school. Plus, it's in Canada. Okay? Which is like, everyone's kind of stupid in Canada. Okay? So, and I was like top 10 of 200 kids. So, it's good, but it's not number one. It's not number two. It's just top 10. Okay? I was number 10. My SAT was 1400 out of 1600. And it's like decent. But, you know, people in China get 1550, 1500 easily. Okay? So, not that great. I was on a soccer team. I was not athletic. The soccer team just needed players. So, I signed up. Okay? I was also editor of the school newspaper. Okay? And I was captain of a quiz team called Reach for the Top. Okay? So, that's a Canadian thing. But I was captain of it.
I organized it. Okay? So, these three activities, they're fine, but it doesn't really demonstrate leadership potential. Right? You're not like head of student government or you're not head of model United Nations. All right? On my essay, I wrote about Richard Feynman, who is a physicist. It was a really boring essay. It was, I mean, like anyone could have written it. I mean, like ChatGPT could have written it. Okay? It was just a bad essay. My teachers, I mean, they liked me, but they really didn't like me because I seemed aggressive to them. You know? I wanted grades too much. So, the word they use is ambitious. They thought I was ambitious. Ambitious. Ambitious is a dirty word in Canada. It means you don't play by the rules. It means you're too aggressive. It means you're too pushy. Okay? All right? So, this is my application to Yale. As you can see, it is a decent, but not a stellar application.
So how did I get in? Well, because there was some information that they could also derive from application that made them interested in me. The first is that I was poor, so I couldn't even afford the application fee. I had to apply for a waiver for my application, okay? So I was poor because I was an immigrant. So I was born in China in 1976, and my family went over in 1983 when I was like six. Okay? So I was a poor immigrant in Canada. I transferred high school. So I was in a poor high school, then I went to a rich high school. Okay? So basically I switched neighborhoods. My family lived in a poor neighborhood, and then I applied to go to a rich high school in a different neighborhood. So I had to take the subway there every day, and I spent like half an hour on the subway.
And guess what, guys? Canadians don't like that. Okay? Canadians want you to stay where you are, and that's it. So when I told my high school principal that I was going to transfer high school, she got very upset, and he said that, I'm going to write a discipline letter, okay, a discipline letter, and it's a very serious thing, and I'm going to put it in your folder so that when you apply to university, they will know that you were suspended from the school. And that's basically like a really bad thing, okay? So I got a discipline letter, and when I went to the rich high school, I had no friends. Why? Because they didn't like me, because they don't like it when someone new comes in. Okay? I didn't know their culture, I'm sort of like ambitious, and I was grade -grubbing, but the thing is, I was desperate because my family was very poor, and I wanted a better life, okay?
Okay? So again, they know all this, okay? They know I'm an average student, and they know that I'm pushy and ambitious. Okay? And that's why Yale let me in, because it's clear from this information that I had dissociative personality disorder, okay? What does that mean? It means, first of all, I'm desperate, okay? Desperate means like, if I don't get into Yale, I'll probably kill myself. I mean, if I didn't get into Yale, I would drown. I couldn't breathe. It was a life or death issue for me. They can see the desperation. They want that, okay? Second thing is, I was insecure, okay? If you're an insecure person, it means you're not happy with who you are. It means there's a void in your heart, and therefore, the way to fill the insecurity is through achievement, okay? So if I made $1 million, I wouldn't be happy.
I would need to go make $2 million. If I made $10 million, I would see people around me who had $100 million. I wouldn't be happy. And I would be like, I need to go make $1 billion, okay? So an insecure person sees the world as a competition, and you're always achieving and achieving, okay? And that's how you succeed, okay? And the third thing is, I was not a moral person, okay? I was ready to break the rules in order to succeed, transgressive, okay? So I was not supposed to leave my poor high school and go to the rich high school. That's breaking the rules in Canada. It's not illegal, but you're not supposed to do that, and I didn't care. The principal said I couldn't do that. I said to him, screw off, I'm still going to do it. I went to the rich high school, everyone said to me, you're not welcome.
I said, I don't care. I'm going to get my good grades, and I'm going to get into the Ivy League. I don't need you guys, okay? So they saw the desperation, they saw the insecurity, they saw the hunger and the immorality, and this is part... Okay? This is all part of dissociative personality disorder, and that's why they let me in, because it's possible I go crazy, okay? It's possible I become depressed, but it's also possible I change the world, okay? Does that make sense? That's how they think, because they're a venture capital firm. They're looking for the riskiest investment with the best possible return. Looking for people who can become president of the United States, who can change the world, who can make a name for themselves, because if they do that, that makes Yale look good. So you remember the name, okay? It's all about brand name recognition, okay? Does that make sense?
All right. Okay. So you're like, okay, well, this is fine, but... And what's wrong with the system, okay? Why would this be a bad thing? It works. Why would this be a bad thing? Well, the problem with this is... Because Yale, Harvard, and Princeton are so powerful, not only are they looking for people with trauma, okay? I was traumatized as a child, but they're also traumatizing the world, okay? If that makes sense, all right? So the meritocracy exists to find people with trauma, and because it exists, it's traumatizing the world, okay? So let me explain how and why. All right. Any questions so far? Is this all clear? Yeah?
So let's say if Harvard and Princeton are these college students, then why they're still so famous, because the system is just unreasonable and unequal for the students who have good grades.
Okay. All right. That's a really good question, okay? So why are Harvard students, Yale students, Princeton students so famous? Okay. The reason why is when you do investment, you don't do all risky investments, okay? You always have diversity in your portfolio. So the majority of students are still students who will be successful no matter what. Why? Because their families are rich, okay? So if you go back to the example, right, those four, you let in the child who comes from three generations of Harvard graduates, okay, and that's the majority of people who get into Harvard, and then you let in the athlete, okay? So the athlete, the legacy, these are the people who are the majority. Those are the safe investments. And then you have like 1 % of positions for people like me, who you don't really know, but there's potential there, so let's take a risk, okay? And quite honestly, it's a crapshoot,
because it's all very discretionary, so basically, it's all intuition, okay, they don't have a formula for this, they just think, this guy is interesting, let's just let him in, okay? And it's possible, on an essay, you just wrote something really interesting, and they laugh, and it's like, okay, let's take a chance on this guy. They have that 1 % of positions available for risk, okay? Does that make sense? Okay, so I'm not the average Yale student, I'm a marginalized Yale student, okay? So this system, the meritocracy, the way it's set up, it creates trauma, okay? So let me explain why. So let's look at university, Yale, then we'll look at high school, okay, then we'll look at parenting, okay? So you think, oh, you get into Yale, you can just coast, you're happy, life is simple, okay? The fact of the matter is that, when you get into Yale, Yale is actually the Hunger Games.
Have you read the book, The Hunger Games? It is a relentless competition. Because once you're in Yale, you're still competing. Okay? But now you're competing against the most competitive people in the world, okay? So maybe at this school, you can be the best student. Your parents love you, you have lots of good friends, you're head of student government, you feel really good about yourself. You go to Yale, and then you recognize that you're a nobody. Your parents are far away. And you're now in competition with the best students from all around the world, who all want to kill you, because it's a zero -sum game, okay? Own it, strong or survive. And so everywhere you go, it's a competition. In the classroom. It's a seminar style. So you're with 20 other students, and the professor's asking you questions, and you're all competing to impress the professor. Okay? Outside the classroom, you're competing to get into clubs, and something called secret societies.
Okay? But you're also competing for graduate school, for law school, for medical school, for scholarships like the Rhodes Scholarship, okay? So Yale, it sounds nice, but once you get in there, from the first day, it's an endless pursuit of achievement. It's just competition after competition after competition. Wherever you go, you're being judged by someone, okay? You're being judged by the professor, or your classmates, and everyone's looking to basically kill each other, because it's a winner -take -all system, okay? So this is very traumatic, and it makes you so insecure that you go through life thinking like, life is just like that. Everyone's an enemy. I have to achieve and achieve in order to feel good about myself. I cannot stop working hard, otherwise I will be killed by other people, okay? So people, guys, from Yale have a deep sense of insecurity, even those who come from the wealthiest families.
Okay? They're always looking to achieve. And that's what Yale wants. That's what Harvard wants, because these are the people who will be most successful in life, okay? They're not happy with $1 million. They want $1 billion. Once they have the billion dollars, they want $10 billion, okay? It never stops. Okay? So to get into Yale, you have to go for high school. And high school has to train you for Yale. So it's also a competition, also a Hunger Games, okay? To train for high school, your parents have to have a different parenting system, okay? So I'll give you two examples of parenting, okay? The first system, which is the healthy system, you say to your child, I love you unconditionally. No matter what you do, I will support you. I will always be here for you. And if you say that to your child every day, your child will be happy, fulfilled, and secure in life.
But the person will probably end up as a teacher, okay? Now you can also say to your child, I don't have time for you, but if you win the swimming competition, or you place first on your math test, or if the teacher say nice things about you, then I'll take you for ice cream. Okay? And so it's a system that neglects the child, while at the same time, demands the child, okay? And this is trauma. And again, most kids will be traumatized by the system, but there are some kids who will thrive in the system, and the trauma will encourage them or drive them to achieve and achieve and achieve, so that they get into Yale, so they can compete in the Hunger Games, so they can go on in life. And... Compete some more, okay? And that's how the system is set up. And this is what we call the meritocracy. And as I'll explain to you later on, it is destroying America and the world, all right?
So that's how the system is set up. And guess what, guys? Is it different in China? Not really, okay? All right? So the concept of meritocracy has conquered the world. It started in America. It actually started at Harvard, but now it's conquered the entire world. And that's why the world is so messed up.
So as you say, Yale gives you so many negative emotions, so will you still go there if you got a second chance?
Okay. So that's a really good question. Would I go there if I had a second chance? And the answer is probably, okay? And the reason why is the system is set up that you don't really have a choice, right? If you want to move ahead in the world, and you're poor, what are your options, right? So before, in America, there were opportunities for poor people to succeed. So for example, George Washington, the first president of the United States, he never went to college. Abraham Lincoln didn't go to the Ivy League, and these are considered the two greatest presidents in American history. Unfortunately, today, if you look at the presidents, if you look at the top people, they all went to the elite schools, okay? So the system is set up so that if you want to succeed, you have to go through the Ivy League. Okay? But I do not plan to send my kids to the Ivy League.
Okay? The last thing I would do is have them in such a competitive, traumatic environment as the Ivy League. Okay? Does that make sense? All right. All right. Any more questions? So thank you for your question. Any more questions before I move on? Okay. So let's do a PPT, and I'll explain to you how America is destroying the world. Okay. Sorry about this. Okay. So I actually need to go back to the beginning. Okay. Death by meritocracy. All right. So let's go. Okay. So from this graph, what you can see is this. In the year 1875, the best universities in the world were actually not in America. They were in Germany. Germany was producing the most Nobel Prize winners. Second was France, followed by the UK. Okay? And America was non -existent. But because of its investments in research universities, it started to move up and up. And then it won World War II.
So now it can import all these German scientists. And that's why it dominates today. So the best universities in the world are now America, or in America, Harvard, Yale, and Princeton. Okay? Now, as universities get better and better, they're lending more students. Okay? And as you can see, more and more American students are now going to college. Before in 1940, it was only about 5 % of all males who went to university. Today it's almost, it's 35 % basically. Okay? Because that's a huge step. And you would think that with the increase in college graduates, America would become a much more equal society. Right? Well, the opposite has happened. Okay? America has become a much more unequal society. There's something called the Gini coefficient, which measures inequality. And as you can see, these past 20 years, it's gone way up. It's among the highest in the world. I mean, America right now
is one of the most unequal societies in the world, even though over a third of its young people go and graduate from college. Okay? This is a graph of social mobility. Okay? So the graph, the top, this number shows you if the number of people who are doing better than their parents. As you can see, in the year 1940, most people are doing better than their parents. But over time, it's no one's doing better than their parents. Okay? So your generation, you will not do better than your parents, most of you. Okay? Income inequality has gone way up in the United States. The top 1 % control most of the wealth in the United States, as you can see from this map. Okay? So even though America has become wealthier, it's actually going to just the 1%. At the same time, universities are becoming much more expensive. Okay? So this is leading to student debt.
Okay? And you can see how student debt, student loans, has gone way up. So in America, student loans, student debt, is the only type of debt that you can never, ever get rid of. You can't declare bankruptcy. This debt cannot be gotten rid of. Okay? When you die, it passes on to your children. Okay? So this is a terrible situation for young people in America. This is actually a more stark graph. Where tuition has gone way up, but wages have stayed pretty stagnant. Okay? And it's leading to depression among teenagers. Okay? And also, the thing about this graph is the middle class and wealthy students are much more likely to be depressed and identify as depressed than poor students. All right? So this is leading to a crisis in America. So what has happened? Well, you have two individuals who create the meritocracy. The first is named James B. Conant. And he was president of Harvard for a couple of decades.
And he was the person who brought in the SAT in order to identify scholarship students. And he made Harvard into the best research university in America. Okay? And he was determined to make Harvard into the best university in the world, as well as an institution of power in America. Meaning that it would now decide who wins and who loses in America. The man who would help him is named Harry Chauncey. He was dean of Harvard, who was in charge of the scholarship program. Then, he got a new job at a new organization called ETS. You know ETS because it's Education Testing Services. They're the ones responsible for the SAT, the TOEFL, the AP, the GRE. Okay? So, these two together create the modern meritocracy. And as you can imagine, because they're both from Harvard, the entire system is set up to benefit Harvard. Okay? And guess what, guys? It worked.
Okay? So, in the year 1940, 90 % of applicants to Harvard got accepted. Now, it's gone way down to 5%. Okay? Stanford is even lower. Okay? So, now it's so hard to get into Harvard. At the same time, look at the cash of Harvard. Okay? This is called the endowment. The amount of money they have at Harvard is just ridiculous. They have more money than most countries in the world. Right now, their endowment is about $40 billion. Okay? And it's just the past 30, 40 years. The success of the Harvard alumni is just incredible. The most billionaires in America, Harvard graduates more billionaires than any other place. Okay? 127 billionaires in 2024. Second is Stanford. All right? No one else comes close. But not only that, but it's also anyone with over $100 million. Most of them graduate from Harvard. 7 % of all, sorry, 7 % of all people in America who have over $100 million net worth graduate from Harvard.
Okay? And you have MIT, Stanford, Pennsylvania, Columbia, Yale, Cornell, Princeton. Guess what, guys? Ivy League plus MIT. Okay? Okay. $30 million. Still, Harvard is number one. Okay? All right? So their graduates are the most successful in America. Okay? But it's not just rich people. It's everyone in the American elite. Okay? Most of them are graduates of the elite universities. Okay? So this is an article in Nature. And they looked at all the elite in America. And what they discovered is they all, most of them went to certain schools, the elite universities. Um. And this is what's causing a lot of global conflict in America today. All right? So let's just look at what they found. The red is Harvard graduates. Okay? The green are Harvard plus Ivy League. And as you can see, Harvard is everywhere. Even among generals, admirals, there's Harvard people. Okay?
They dominate in terms of philosophers and professors. But they're everywhere. Even Pulitzer Prize winners, billionaires, New York Times bestselling authors, Fortune 500 CEOs, federal judges, senators. Okay? They're everywhere. And that's the power of Harvard. This is a, this is a portion of, of Harvard graduates compared with the general population. This is the portion of Harvard graduates compared with the elite. Okay? You see, you see the contrast. So Harvard and Ivy League dominate America today. Okay? Now what's amazing is Harvard people don't know if they dominate Harvard. They don't know they're elite. So they did a survey. And so they asked people in these elite organizations, how many people do you think in this organization went to Harvard and other elite universities? So the red is the actual number. The blue is the estimate. So Harvard and Ivy League don't even know they dominate America. Okay? And you ask them like, no, it's conspiracy theory. No, you're spreading conspiracy theories.
We're just average people. There's no way Harvard controls America. All right? Now, as I mentioned at Harvard, just going to Harvard is not enough. You have to join the elite social clubs, the social secret societies. So Harvard is a place like the, at Harvard everyone wants to join the porcelain club. Okay? At Princeton is the Ivy Club. These are secret societies. Oh, they're not really secret, but they're senior, they're senior societies. Okay? The clubs that everyone wants to join. At Yale, it's Skull and Bones. Okay? Skull and Bones is the most famous college secret society. They're not that secret because they like to brag that they're Skull and Bones. They're so powerful that they produce a lot of presidents, a lot of rich people. Okay? 2004, okay? George W. Bush versus John Kerry. Guess what, guys? John Kerry is the Democratic nominee. George Bush is the Republican nominee, right? They're both Skull and Bones.
They're both Yale Skull and Bones. Okay? So it's a rigged game. Barack Obama, okay? Barack Obama, Columbia, went to Harvard Law School, but he promised hope and change. He told people in 2008 that the game is rigged against them, that he will be their champion, that he would make a difference. That he would make America more fair. Okay? And he won. Why? Because... So this is his book, Dreams of My Father. It was a New York Times bestseller. It basically launched his political career. He won because in 2008, the U.S. economy collapsed. Why? Because the U.S. banks, the U.S. political system was controlled by Ivy League graduates, by just people who are friends with each other. And so they cheated. They became corrupt. Okay? They basically destroyed the American economy. And people protested against all this. And Barack Obama promised that he would come in and do something about it. Okay?
Well, he did do something about it. All right? So his economic team, he appointed quite a few individuals. These are the two most famous. Larry Summers, who was a Harvard graduate as well as a president of Harvard. And he was treasury secretary under Bill Clinton. And he was the guy who created the mess in the first place. And then Tim Geithner, who was a Dartmouth graduate. And he was a treasury secretary. Okay? So these are friends of Wall Street who came in to save Wall Street. So a lot of critics say, you know, it's Wall Street who created this mess, who destroyed the American economy. They should be punished. Or at least they should feel some pain. If you just let them go and help them out and save them, then you create a problem called moral hazard. The idea of moral hazard is if you don't have any consequences for your mistake, you will do it again.
Okay? And then Larry Summers said, no, no, you guys are seeing it incorrectly. We have to save the American economy. The goal is not to save the banks and my friend. The goal is to save the American people and the American economy. And that's why we're bailing out the banks by giving them free money. Okay? And then the critics were like, well, how about all these American friends? Homeowners who've lost their homes. Shouldn't we help them as well? And do you know what Larry Summers said? Moral hazard, guys. Do you understand? Moral hazard? If we help out these ordinary Americans, they won't learn anything. Okay? So as you can see, people were angry. The banks got saved. The people got screwed over. And guess what, guys? Because of this, who did we get? This guy. Okay? This is why he won. There were millions of Americans who voted for Barack Obama because he promised hope and change.
And then they voted for Donald Trump because he promised to destroy the system. Okay? That's why we have Donald Trump. Now, funny story about Donald Trump and Barack Obama. So Barack Obama and Donald Trump were always adversaries. In fact, Donald Trump led a movement which accused Barack Obama of not being born in America. He's born in America, but Donald Trump was saying, no, he was actually born in Nigeria. His father is from Nigeria. So Barack Obama made fun of Donald Trump. 2011, there's a big dinner, the White House Correspondents' Dinner, where Barack Obama gets on stage and he makes fun of Donald Trump. Okay? He says, hey, if Donald Trump ever became president, this is what the White House would look like. It'd be a casino. Okay? And this is funny, right? Donald Trump was in the audience that day. No. And everyone was laughing at him. And that's what motivated Donald Trump to become president of the United States.
Okay? So thank Obama for Donald Trump. Without Obama, there would be no Donald Trump. Okay. So it's not just Barack Obama. It's a lot of people in the American political class. They're just soulless robots. Okay? This man is JD Vance. He's the vice president for Donald Trump. Like Barack Obama, he wrote a book, a bestseller called Hillbilly Elegy. And it's possible he becomes president of the United States as well. Now, you may not know this, but when he first came to prominence, he opposed Donald Trump. He thought that Donald Trump would be a fascist and be a dictator and all that. And then suddenly he changes his opinion and says Donald Trump is the greatest guy in the world. Okay? So these guys, like JD Vance and Barack Obama, they have no ideas of their own. They're just puppets. They just tell people what they want to hear.
All they know is a chief. Okay? So another example of this, this man's name is Johnny Kim. Okay? And he'll probably run for president of the United States one day or at least be a U.S. Senator. Why do I mention him? Guess what, guys? He was a Navy SEAL, which is the top position you can ever achieve in the military. He was a secret soldier. Okay? He went to Harvard Medical School and became a doctor. Then he joined NASA and became an astronaut. This is like the ideal Ivy League graduate. Okay? This is what Harvard wants. Now, why is he able to do all this? Well, because this is his Wikipedia entry. Okay? In 2002, the police went into his house and killed his father. He was there and he saw the police killed his father. He was traumatized for life. His father was a domestic abuser. The father was violent, crazy, hit him all the time.
Okay? So he has dissociative personality disorder. And, in fact, if you look at most of these really successful people, they do have dissociative personality disorder. And that's why he was able to do all this, because he turned the trauma into an energy to drive him to greater and greater achievement. The problem, though, is he has no ideas of his own. He's just a puppet, guys. Okay? So let's conclude and summarize why the meritocracy is so great. It creates this extreme inequality in America. Okay? So it destroyed the school system, because all people care about are their grades now. Right? People don't even care about learning anymore. All they want are the grades. In fact, if you get a bad grade, you'll probably complain to the teacher, in which case the teacher is now afraid to teach you. Because if the teacher tries to challenge you, make you a better student, you'll just complain.
Okay? And if you don't succeed, your parents will come and complain. Okay? Traumatized children. Okay? Okay? If you look at the rate of mental illness in China, in America, it's just insane. Death of American dream and social mobility. You're not going to be richer than your parents. You're just not. Constitution of wealth, power, and status in the 1%. The rich just got richer. The political divide between left and right. Okay? So you have all these political divisions right now in America. Corruption. So Wall Street just steals and steals and steals, and no one can do anything about it. Destruction of American identity, globalization, immigration, woke ideology. Okay? Incompetent mismanagement. You look at COVID. You look at the fact that America now has $37 trillion in debt. An elite that is soulless, mediocre, and unimaginative. Okay? Barack Obama. Judy Vance. This guy, Johnny Kim. Okay? They're just robots. Oh, and Donald Trump. Okay?
So thank you, American meritocracy, for destroying the world.
Okay?
All right. Questions, guys. I know this was a lot to take in, but do you have any questions? You're all depressed and sad and shocked. Yep. We have a question. Thank you.
Is there a way to get rid of all those bad things? All the bad impacts of this? I mean, is there some suggestions for us to help us better develop ourselves, not just using this system?
Okay. Great question. Okay? So the real solution is to destroy the Ivy League. Okay? And there are different ways you can destroy the Ivy League. The best way is to make them public, for the government to come in and control them. Because a lot of the issues stems from the fact that these are institutions that only care about their own power. Okay? So the government were in charge, they won't be so powerful and secretive. Okay? So that's the best solution. It's not going to happen. Because Harvard, as you can see, it's too powerful, as well as Yale. So as an individual, your best option is to recognize how evil the system is and choose to learn for yourself. Okay? Because when you go to Yale or Harvard or Princeton, you think you're learning, but you're not. You're being indoctrinated and being brainwashed and being traumatized to be turned into basically a robot that's only focused on success.
So you need to recognize this, be truthful to yourself and focus on real learning. Okay? So what do I mean by that? Okay. So let me, sorry, let me explain. Okay. So success. Okay. So what is success? What is real success? Well, before the meritocracy, you didn't have to go to college, but you need to have certain values and attitude. Okay? So the first was to be open -minded. And so recognize that you have a lot to learn and ask questions, learn from other people. Okay? And what people recognized was failure is the best teacher. Why? Because failure forces reflection. Right? And resilience, which leads to learning. Okay? And this is a model that most people understood before the meritocracy. Keep in mind, make mistakes because if you make mistakes, you will learn from them naturally. And then you can reflect and then you can become resilient, and then you will grow and grow, and then you will achieve your true potential.
Okay? The meritocracy has destroyed this system. Why? because now we just want you to focus on grades, okay? And to get good grades, you cannot fail, you understand? Failure now is a problem. If you fail a class, you may learn a lot from your failure, but it won't look good on your GPA, right? It will destroy your GPA, and you won't get into Harvard, okay? You don't have failure, you cannot have reflection, you cannot have resilience. Also, before, you had time for yourself. Nowadays, every minute is organized for you, right? You come to school, the school day is very long, then you have lots of homework, and then you have activities, then you have to have dinner, then all that. You don't even have time to just think for yourself, to just chill and do what you want to do, okay? It's intentional, okay? So it's destroying reflection, you don't have any resilience, and so you can't learn anything.
So it's a really bad system, because if you're like me, okay, you're just a normal person, your family's not rich or powerful, and you go to Yale and Harvard, it actually makes you fail in life, okay? Let me explain why. Okay, the first is, it makes you arrogant. It makes you think, I went to Yale, therefore I know more than anyone else, so I don't have to ask questions, I don't have to learn anymore, okay? Second, is that you're not going to be able to do anything. Third, is that it makes you utilitarian. You only care about things that help you succeed. You're not actually interested in real learning anymore. Okay? And the third thing is, all you care about is success, so you're narrow -minded. You don't want to explore, okay? You're not so creative anymore, okay?
So it's a great system if you come from a rich family, because this system trains you to go into power. But if you're just like me, and you need to work hard and be talented, and be committed to your passion in order to succeed, this actually destroys all that. And that's why probably the most traumatized people in America are those who came from poor families, who had a dream of going to the Ivy League, who got in the Ivy League, and then they just failed in life, because they don't have the, you know, life skills, right? They don't have the ability to succeed. They don't have the reflective ability. They don't have the resilience. They're not open -minded. They don't accept failure. They're not committed to learning. They're only committed to success, okay? So if you're rich, go to Harvard and Yale and Princeton, because you'll become more rich. But if you're a poor person, going to these schools may be a mistake, okay?
Certainly for me, it was a mistake, because after I graduated, I stumbled through life. For me, it was just failure after failure after failure, because I wanted to succeed right away, okay? I refused to put the time and effort to learning a real skill and learning a real passion. And so in my 30s, late 20s, early 30s, I became really depressed. And honestly, I thought about killing myself, and I was playing video games every single day. I just hid in my parents' basement. And so I was traumatized by Yale. It took me a long time to get over the trauma and recognize this is a false system, okay? Yale traumatized me, and I need to relearn to be open -minded, to embrace failure, to be resilient, to embrace learning, okay? And that's why I'm a teacher today, to teach you guys that to be successful in life, this is the formula, okay?
You don't need Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, all right? All right, any more questions, guys? Yep?
Well, can we do both, like open -minded and get the grades and being rich? Okay. Is it a possible thing?
Yeah, that's a great question. Thank you, okay? All right, okay. So I'm gonna have to go into some psychology here, okay? But psychologists have discovered that we have two modes of being, okay? There's the altruistic mode. There's the altruistic mode. And there's the utilitarian mode, okay? Okay, so utilitarian is what we call fight or flight, okay? Altruistic is just family and connections. So imagine we're back in the village, okay? And most of the time, we are, yeah?
But you said that all the psychology is just rain -washing.
Okay. Yes, psychology is not all brain -washing. There's some validity to it, okay? And so I'm not saying this is something like fact. I'm just saying this is a good way to understand how things work, okay? All right? All right, so in the village, we spend most of the time being close to other people, right? We wanna be friends with other people, so we help each other out. But sometimes we have to be very utilitarian. So for example, if there's not enough food, okay? Or we're being attacked, guess what? Run, man, okay? So there are these two mindsets. And what psychologists have discovered is they are mutually exclusive. It's either one or the other. The other thing that they discovered is the altruistic mindset is what leads to creativity, okay? Creativity and passion and love, okay? And the utilitarian mindset is one that's focused on rewards, okay, like grades. So it is impossible to both want to have really good grades as well as help the world.
But what's interesting is Harvard wants that, okay? So in your application, you have to say to Harvard, I have a passion. I will die for my passion. But at the same time, I wanna be a billionaire. And I will die trying to be a billionaire. At the same time, I know it's important, okay? I know it's important to be loyal to Harvard. So I will die being loyal to Harvard, okay? And the only people who can do this are people who have the soul -stiff personality disorder. Okay? And they can test for that in your application. They're so experienced that they know exactly how you think, okay? They all, like, come on, guys. You will not apply to Harvard if you're not utilitarian, okay? Right? But you have to pretend you're not. And that's what makes people crazy, okay?
Because you're basically an actor. Because you're basically an actor. Harvard wants the best actors in the world. They want people to go for, like, pretending that's something they're not, okay? They want Barack Obama. The problem with Barack Obama is he's soulless. He stands for nothing, okay? In 2008, he promised people hope and change. The moment he gets in office, he's like, sorry, man, I was just joking. Why did you believe me? Okay? Then in 2012, when it was time for reelection, he said, oh, you know what? I what? I'm hoping change, okay? In 2016, he's like, you know what? Screw that. I'm going to go water skiing now, okay? So the man is actually soulless, stands for nothing, all right? Any more questions, guys? Okay, great. So thanks for today, and I'll see you guys after the break, okay? So we'll continue this after the break.