I envy Jane Galt

It’s true, I have committed one of the seven deadly sins in thinking about Ms. Megan McArdle — and it’s not even one of the interesting sins. No, I am envious of her because she wrote this post, which contains this paragraph: I’ve had a taste of both academia and investment banking. The dominance hierarchy ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

It's true, I have committed one of the seven deadly sins in thinking about Ms. Megan McArdle -- and it's not even one of the interesting sins. No, I am envious of her because she wrote this post, which contains this paragraph: I've had a taste of both academia and investment banking. The dominance hierarchy of banking is so strong that if you could get the bankers out of their pinstripes for an hour, you could have filmed your average pitch meeting for the Discovery Channel. Yet when it comes to hyper-obsession with invisibly fine status distinctions, no banker could hold a candle to the average academic--or journalist, for that matter. Read the whole thing.

It’s true, I have committed one of the seven deadly sins in thinking about Ms. Megan McArdle — and it’s not even one of the interesting sins. No, I am envious of her because she wrote this post, which contains this paragraph:

I’ve had a taste of both academia and investment banking. The dominance hierarchy of banking is so strong that if you could get the bankers out of their pinstripes for an hour, you could have filmed your average pitch meeting for the Discovery Channel. Yet when it comes to hyper-obsession with invisibly fine status distinctions, no banker could hold a candle to the average academic–or journalist, for that matter.

Read the whole thing.

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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