The Competence Mirage — How Artificial Intelligence Has Made It Easier Than Ever to Appear Competent — and Harder Than Ever to Actually Be It

For fifty years, organizations measured competence by measuring production. That system worked — until artificial intelligence made it possible to produce sophisticated, high-quality work without the underlying skills to evaluate a single word of it. In The Competence Mirage, we examine what AI has actually done to the workforce: not replaced professionals, but created a generation whose apparent competence now outpaces their actual competence by a margin no one is measuring. The Eight Critical Skills haven’t changed. What’s changed is the cost of not having them.

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Competence vs. Incompetence — The Divide That Defines Every Career

Most organizations have a problem they refuse to name. It lives inside their performance reviews, their promotion decisions, and their tolerance for mediocrity dressed up as seniority. In Competence vs. Incompetence: The Divide That Defines Every Career, we draw on research spanning more than 900 completed executive searches to expose the structural gap running through every workplace in America — and name exactly what is on each side of it. Grounded in the Dunning-Kruger Effect, the Four Stages of Competence, and the Eight Critical Skills framework, this is not another leadership think-piece. It is a precise, unflinching examination of why incompetence survives, how organizations protect it, and what genuinely competent professionals do differently — and why it is always worth building the real thing.

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The Continuous Education Skill – The Mismatch Is the Gift: Why the Career You Planned May Not Be the One You’re Built For

Most people think continuous education means taking courses and earning certifications. That version is real — but it is the least interesting part. The more important version asks a harder question: not what new skills do I need, but who am I, and have I been telling myself the truth about that? In this article, I map the full architecture of lifelong learning across three distinct layers — the root system built in K–12, the structural trunk of college and early career, and the ever-changing canopy of professional reinvention. Drawing on my own Naval Academy reckoning, his wife’s transformation from art historian to robotic surgeon, and the final correspondence of Jefferson and Adams, I try to make the case that reinvention is not a crisis — it is a discipline.

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The Exchange Rate – – What Military Hardware Costs in Schools and Hospitals

One Tomahawk cruise missile costs roughly the same as running a 300-student middle school for five months. One F-16 fighter jet equals a decade of keeping an elementary school open. One submarine equals 136 years of a rural hospital — the kind that has been quietly disappearing from American communities at a rate of more than one per month for over a decade. In “The Exchange Rate,” there are no opinions, no partisan arguments, and no policy prescriptions. There is only arithmetic: the cost of military hardware translated into the schools and hospitals that communities actually live and die by. The numbers are the argument. You supply the conclusion.

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We Fired the Teachers to Buy the Tomahawks

The administration spent a year cutting school lunch programs, firing IRS agents, and gutting foreign aid to save $20 billion. Then it launched a military campaign against Iran estimated to cost three to ten times that amount—in a matter of weeks. The math doesn’t reconcile. Every Tomahawk missile that detonates is $1.3 million that didn’t build a school, train a teacher, or treat a veteran. This article lays two ledgers side by side: what we chose to cut and what we chose to spend. The contradiction isn’t subtle. It’s arithmetic.

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