Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How America’s ‘creative class’ learned to love conformity
How America’s ‘creative class’ learned to love conformity
Feb 27, 2026 9:36 PM

Rather than using their power and privilege to preserve freedom and diversity, America’s educated upper class has coalesced around all-or-nothing advocacy, hoping the state does the heavy lifting of social harmonization.

Read More…

In 2000, columnist David Brooks wrote Bobos in Paradise, hailing the dawn of a new phase in America’s longstanding story of meritocracy. The “bobos” were a peculiar breed — part bohemian, part bourgeoisie — blurring class divides in a way that would introduce a new form of enlightened, activist citizenship in a country with an otherwise ambivalent middle class.

“The bobos didn’t e from money, and they were proud of that; they’d secured their places in selective universities and in the job market through drive and intelligence exhibited from an early age,” writes Brooks in a retrospective essay at The Atlantic. “… X types defined themselves as rebels against the staid elite. They were – as the classic mercial had it – ‘the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers.’”

It’s the same group that researcher Richard Florida famously called the “the creative class” – educated upstarts who could spin magic and mystery from their ideas and initiatives, transforming enterprises and institutions across whatever cities and streets they touched.

Back then, Brooks was optimistic, believing the bobos offered the promise of a more diverse, dynamic, and class-agnostic society. “The educated class is in no danger of ing a self-contained caste,” he wrote at the time. “Anybody with the right degree, job, and petencies can join.” Now, over 20 later, Brooksbelieves he was wrong, calling that earlier prediction “naive.”

Alas, rather than promoting a deeper, wider diversity through decentralized institutions, the creative class continues to push the needle toward greater consolidation and conformity, from land-use regulations to the educational bureaucracy and beyond. To no surprise, it’s a trend that’s been matched by outright resistance among the working class and their counterparts – those who feel alienated from opportunity and increasingly cynical about the supposed “openness” of American society.

“The bobos – or X people, or the creative class, or whatever you want to call them – have coalesced into an insular, intermarrying Brahmin elite that dominates culture, media, education, and tech,” writes Brooks. “Worse, those of us in this class have had a hard time admitting our power, much less using it responsibly.”

Echoing many of the same themes of his 2012 book, The Social Animal, Brooks highlights three specific areas where power concentration and cultural consolidation have e most pronounced.

Education

First, [the bobos e to hoard spots in petitive meritocracy that produced us. As Elizabeth Currid-Halkett reported in her 2017 book,“The Sum of SmallThings,” affluent parents have increased their share of educational spending by nearly 300 percent since 1996. Partly as a result, the test-score gap between high- and e students has grown by 40 to 50 percent. The children of well-off, well-educated meritocrats are thus perfectly situated to predominate at the elite colleges that produced their parents’ social standing in the first place. Roughly 72 percent of students at these e from the richest quarter of families, whereas only 3 e from the poorest quarter. A2017 studyfound that 38 schools—including Princeton, Yale, Penn, Dartmouth, Colgate, and Middlebury – drawmore students from the top 1 percent than from the bottom 60 percent.

Geography

Second, we’ve migrated to just a few great wealth-generating metropolises. A few superstar cities have economically blossomed while everywhere else has languished. The 50 largest metro areas around the world house 7 percent of the world’s population but generate 40 percent of global wealth. Just six metro areas – the San Francisco Bay Area; New York; Boston; Washington, D.C.; San Diego; and London – attract nearly half of the high-tech venture capitalin the world.

This has also created gaping inequalities within cities, as high housing prices push middle- and lower-class people out. “Over the past decade and a half,” Florida wrote, “nine in ten U.S. metropolitan areas have seen their middle classes shrink. As the middle has been hollowed out, neighborhoods across America are dividing into large areas of concentrated disadvantage and much smaller areas of concentrated affluence.” The large American metro areas most segregated by occupation, he found, are San Jose, San Francisco, Washington, Austin, L.A., and New York.

Politics

Third, e to dominate left-wing parties around the world that were formerly vehicles for the working class. We’ve pulled these parties further left on cultural issues (prizing cosmopolitanism and questions of identity) while watering down or reversing traditional Democratic positions on trade and unions …

… These partisan differences overlay economic differences. In 2020, Joe Biden won just 500 or so counties—but together they account for 71 percent of American economic activity,according to the Brookings Institution. Donald Trump won more than 2,500 counties that together generate only 29 percent of that activity.An analysis by Brookings andThe Wall Street Journalfound that just 13 years ago, Democratic and Republican areas were at near parity on prosperity and e measures. Now they are divergent and getting more so. If Republicans and Democrats talk as though they are living in different realities, it’s because they are.

Such trends have been pointed out before, and with great care and nuance, whether one looks to Charles Murray’s “Coming Apart” or Yuval Levin’s “The Fractured Republic.”

Among the bobos-dominated media, however, the divide tends to be characterized through a series of overly simplistic narratives – enlightened elites vs. working-class passionate globalists vs. blood-and-soil nationalists, open-society liberals vs. closed-society scaredy-cats, diversity-lovers vs. diversity-haters.

When es to the populist piece of the equation, such narratives contain plenty of truth. But what about the bobos side of the blame?

To what extent have “diversity” and “openness” e mere buzzwords, backed by mitment or consequence, and serving instead as fancy fronts for precisely the opposite? Likewise, to what extent does such entrenchment exacerbate the worst elements of the very counterculture it claims to oppose and despise?

“For all its talk of openness, the creative class is remarkably insular,” Brooks writes. “In‘Social Class in the 21st Century,’ the sociologist Mike Savage found that the educated elite tended to be the most socially parochial group, as measured by contact with people in occupational clusters different from their own. In a study forThe Atlantic, Amanda Ripleyfoundthat the most politically intolerant Americans ‘tend to be whiter, more highly educated, older, more urban, and more partisan themselves.’”

Rather than using their power and privilege to preserve freedom and diversity, the creative class has largely coalesced around all-or-nothing advocacy, from the culture-warring of woke capitalism to the cookie-cutter conformity of higher education to the fatal conceits of central-planning elites. Rather than freeing civil society to do what it does best, our elites have largely deflected such responsibilities to the state, hoping that top-down control will do the heavy lifting of social harmonization.

“I didn’t anticipate how aggressively we would move to assert our cultural dominance, the way we would seek to impose elite values through speech and thought codes,” Brooks explains. “I underestimated the way the creative class would successfully raise barriers around itself to protect its economic privilege – not just throughschooling, but throughzoning regulationsthat keep home values high,professional-certification structuresthat keep doctors’ and lawyers’ es high while petition from nurses and paralegals, and more. And I underestimated our intolerance of ideological diversity.”

When es to using policy to correct perceived social inequalities, Brooks points to the right low-hanging fruit: education, zoning, and licensing. I would add price freedom, as well.

But at a cultural level, the real source change remains at the lower levels of society, including among the bobos themselves. While the prospects of social and economic mobility may be dimmer than they ought to be, and despite the constant entry of new obstacles and challenges, freedom and opportunity are still widely available across American life.

Indeed, outside the realm of policy, we have plenty of work to do. Problems of plenty continue to trickle down from cultural elites into all else, distorting and discoloring our notions about work and vocation, trade and exchange, marriage and family, or wisdom and education. At the level of our cultural imaginations, there’s a tug-of-war over the basic meaning of the good society, one that posits the preservation of freedom against the exultation of conformity.

In such an environment, we ought to be careful that our resistance doesn’t mirror the reactive approach of prevailing elites, promoting our own notions of top-down conformity and methods of “conservative-friendly” coercion. Instead, we can promote a freedom that flows higher than the narrow dualisms of our age – individualism vs. collectivism, localism vs. globalism, and so on. It is up to each of us to be the moral witnesses of such freedom, in our families, churches, schools, businesses, munities.

In an age where social conformity continues to gain cultural esteem, whether promoted by large, private enterprises or through the collectivized power of the state, a revival of the “middle layers” or “mediating institutions” of society is sorely needed. As we continue to preserve the liberties that makes a varied witness possible, we can continue building and rebuilding society right where we are.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
A ‘moral imperative’ or just another exercize in green politicking?
This past Friday, I blogged about the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s recent decision to allow a vaguely worded proxy resolution proceed to a vote. The resolution was submitted by, among others, members of the religious shareholder activist group the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility. The ICCR resolution calls upon ExxonMobil Corporation to take action intended to mitigate climate change. ExxonMobil requested the SEC deny the ICCR resolution on the grounds it was based mainly on nonspecific greenhouse-gas reduction targets...
SEC Allows Activist Nuns’ Climate-Change Resolution
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission determined March 22 that ExxonMobil Corporation must for the first time ever allow a vote to proceed on a proxy shareholder resolution submitted by members of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility. ExxonMobil had attempted to block the resolution with the SEC on the grounds it was vaguely written, pany’s current business practices already aligned with the ICCR resolution and current U.S. regulations. Because any plans for climate-change mitigation in the near future inherently...
Why Edmund Burke Supported Free Trade
The Republican Party is fracturing on the topic of trade. Alas, in the same corners where free and open exchange was once embraced as a propeller for economic growth and dynamism, protectionism is starting to stick. In response, free traders are pushing the typical arguments about growth, innovation, and prosperity. Others, such as myself, are noting that the trend has less to do with economic illiteracy than it does with a protectionism of the heart — a self-seeking ethos that...
Video: Samuel Gregg on Pope Francis, Poverty, and the Economy
No one questions the sincerity of Pope Francis when es to his demonstrated concern for the poor and downtrodden of the world. Many, however, have questioned whether the solutions that he has suggested will actually alleviate the poverty that afflicts too many around the world, or whether those solutions will actually exacerbate the problems of the poor. Samuel Gregg, Acton’s Director of Research, addressed this topic in his March 30th Acton Lecture Series address in which he lays out some...
The Disabled Deserve the Dignity of Work
Last week, Hillary Clinton became the first major presidential candidate to ever mend paying all disabled workers the minimum wage. While its seems like a reasonable proposal, I explained why the effect would be to put workers with severe disabilities, such as those with Down syndrome, out of work. Clinton isn’t the only one pushing such measures, though. As Anne Schieber of the Mackinac Center notes, government regulators at the Department of Labor are also considering mandating “integrated work settings,”...
Losing faith in reason
A lack of reason may lead to violence and an inability to respond to crises, but that didn’t stop the West from abandoning it. In a new article for the Catholic World Report, Acton’s Samuel Gregg reflects on Pope Benedict XVI and his 2006 address near Regensburg, Germany. “Ten years later,” Gregg laments, the West is “still in denial.” On September 12, 2006 Benedict made global news with his lecture–his words enraged, gained support, and were analyzed countless times. The...
Samuel Gregg: Catholicism and the Enlightenment
Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg reviews a new book at the Library of Law and Liberty that demolishes the canard that religious figure were “somehow opposed holus bolus to Enlightenment ideas is one that has been steadily discredited over the last 50 years.” In his review of The Catholic Enlightenment: The Forgotten History of a Global Movement by by Ulrich L. Lehner, Gregg points out that the new book shows how “the Enlightenment argument for freedom was embraced by many...
Payday lending is a debt trap. But regulatory ‘solutions’ may be even worse.
What’s the biggest problem with payday loans? The obvious answer would seem to be “high interest rates.” But interest rates are often tied to credit risk, and so charging high interest rates is not always wrong. Another answer may be that the loans appear to be targeted toward minorities. But research shows that the industry appeals to those with financial problems regardless of race or ethnicity. No, the problem with payday loans —what makes them a debt trap — is...
Explainer: What You Should Know About the Panama Papers Scandal
What are the Panama Papers? The Panama Papers refers to the 11 million leaked files from the Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonsecathat shows how some of the richest, most powerful people on the globe use tax havens to hide their wealth. According to the BBC, this is the biggest document leak in history — dwarfing the size of those released by the Wikileaks organization —and includes details on 214,000 entities, panies, trusts and foundations. The documents covered day-to-day business at...
Love, Community, and The Walking Dead
The sixth season finale ofThe Walking Dead aired last night and sets up an anxious off-season of waiting and deliberation about what will happen next. I may have some more to say about the larger dynamics of the show as the survivors in this most recent season have really transitioned from concerns about mere survival to actually munity with longer-term plans. But for now I want to focus briefly on the path Carol has walked over the last few episodes...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved