Meritocracies...history and theory
We would do well to leave room for the Lincolns among us—especially if
they are as raw and uncredentialed as the man who would become our
sixteenth president was. Think of his great speech at the dedication of
the cemetery in Gettysburg in November 1863. As many know, there were
two notable speeches that day. The first, and the longest and most
learned and most florid, was given by the supremely well-pedigreed
Edward Everett, former president of Harvard—and the first American to
receive a German PhD. But it was the self-educated frontiersman
president who gave the speech whose accents ring down through the ages. Perhaps there is a pattern here to learn from.
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