
College of St. Joseph the Worker's Jacob Imam talks with Gomer
Catching Foxes
Introduction
A discussion about the podcast's elaborate setup, including a workshop and a floating room. They also joke about using cheap labor for remodeling and discuss the legal requirement of paying for skilled trades training.
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Speaker 1
What
Speaker 2
I ended up finding, it was very hard because when I was in college, I used to just arrive to Newsweek, you know, but they don't really, they don't exist really in that form anymore. So I finally found one called The Week. And it does just what you're saying. For each story, it actually had quotes from all sides of the political spectrum. And I found it really quite illuminating and lovely. I want to ask you about for people who work in the tech industry, I'm sure some of them will be listening to this. People who work in the tech industry as designers, developers, leaders have a lot of leverage at Instagram, Google, Facebook, Netflix, OpenAI now. And for any of them listening, how could they steer technology toward interacting in healthy ways with their customers? Is it even possible with this top line of profit?
Speaker 1
Yeah. So I don't have the answer to this question. I wish I did. I think it's something we need to be working on. But there's a couple of lenses. One I shared earlier about the collaboration between tech companies and regulators and scientists and individuals to gradually lead to culture change. And you can look at things like drunk driving and cigarettes as some historical examples of these type of collaboration, which I think is essential. But for the average technologist who's working at one of these companies, the reality is, as you probably already know, you're in a system with incentives, and it doesn't really feel like there's any way to escape those incentives. So depending on where you are in the hierarchy, you might be simply mandated to follow those incentives as they are, or you might be someone who actually has a say in setting the incentives. So let's start with the latter group. If you actually have a say in setting those incentives, let's be realistic. You do need to make a profit. You do need to make technology that drives business, but that doesn't have to be the only incentive. And as we've talked about it in personal life, that awareness drives change. Simply measuring something else can have a dramatic impact. So what is a small amount of resource you can set to measure something? And the way that I tend to package this for large companies is if you go to the mission and vision of these companies, you tend to find the answer to the question of what to measure in a way that is palatable to the leadership and the board. Because the reality is Facebook wants to connect the world, Airbnb wants people to belong anywhere, et cetera, et cetera. So why aren't we measuring belonging? Why aren't we measuring a sense of personal deep connection? I don't know what changes that lead to, and maybe I'm being a bit idealist, but I think if your dashboard has, yes, adoption, retention, activation, but also has some measure that's connected to your highest vision and values, it can be a way to start the conversation of systemic change. And I also want to address the individual who doesn't have a say in the incentives. And what I have for that person is that, you know, fundamentally, I believe change comes from within and you have a long career ahead of you. Educating yourself about these approaches, working on your own personal relationship with technology, seeing through the conceptual illusions in your own life, seeing how you can bring that to your design practice to, yes, you do have to shoot that three-pointer through those incentives, but is there a way you can do that in a compassionate way and trying to find those opportunities and stay true to that deeper mission? Your goal, if that's you, is to not let the incentive structure turn you into an incentive driving robot, but to retain your humanity while you do what you need to do to succeed and to climb the ladder and eventually, hopefully, find yourself in a position where you can shape those incentives. One
Speaker 2
of the favorite things I learned at work is what gets measured gets done. So in Buddhist centers, we do something that sounds a little cheesy, which is that before we start a meeting, we say, may our work benefit others.
Speaker 1
And
Speaker 2
I think a little bit about that when I think back to working at Facebook if we had just said that at the beginning of every meeting boy I think we would have made more beneficial products
Speaker 1
yeah and we do have to learn from our mistakes like you were in-house at Facebook and you know some incredible work was done at Facebook and it's still happening but there's some some mistakes were made and I think we do need to accept that. And we need to learn from it. And I think when you go back in time, that's one example. And I think measuring elements around what was actually happening in the user experience for individuals would have been a huge boon to help steer the ship early when it wasn't too late to actually think about the effects of some of these elements like newsfeed and others. So
Speaker 2
you've, you already led us through one nice exercise and you agreed to lead a meditation that will air separately. Most of our interviews, our guests lead a meditation and we're going to air that in the next episode, but could you tell us a little bit about the meditation you're going to lead?
Speaker 1
Yeah, we're going to go through something that may seem a little bit scary to people is we are going to get into a mindful state. And then we are going to engage with our phone in that meditation. And what we're going to do is, if you've ever done like a mindful eating exercise, there's a lot of inspiration there where you inspect the raisin and sniff it and eat it and think about, you know, where it comes from. So we're going to deeply and mindfully investigate our foam with clarity, including activating it. And then at the end, we are going to look a little bit into false urgency in particular, and notice the tug of false urgency on our attention in the moment.
I was lucky to interview Jacob Imam about the merger between higher education and Catholic social justice principles, especially on the dignity of non-exploitative work and of the trades. Jacob lives in Steubenville, Ohio with his wife and kids and works at New Polity. He and Michael Sullivan launched the now approved College of St. Joseph the Worker.
Links:
- College of St. Joseph the Worker
- Announcing The College of St. Joseph the Worker | Starting Fall 2024 - YouTube — Mike Sullivan and Jacob Imam are excited to announce that the College of St. Joseph is now state-approved and accepting students for Fall 2024. The College's mission is to teach students a trade, provide a liberal arts education, and graduate them without crippling debt.
- New Polity — Steubenville, OH 43952 The 4th annual New Polity conference, "Should We, Therefore, Destroy the Servers," is a three-day opportunity to consider, discuss, and debate technology as to its nature, its status as a totalizing form of life, its effects on politics, and the possibilities and limits of doing something about it. Featuring a keynote from Michael Crawford, a Gala dinner on Saturday night, and the opportunity to present your own ideas on Thursday night, we continue to try to one-up ourselves. Looking forward to seeing you there. Like actually seeing you!
- Should We, Therefore, Destroy the Servers? | 2024 Event — NEWPOLITY — Featuring a keynote from Matthew Crawford, a Gala dinner on Saturday night, and the opportunity to present your own ideas on Thursday night, we continue to try to one-up ourselves.