"America demands invention and innovation to succeed"
About this Quote
A politician’s line like “America demands invention and innovation to succeed” is less a diagnosis than a pressure tactic: it frames the country as a hard-driving employer, not a home. “Demands” turns economic change into a moral imperative. You don’t simply want new ideas; you owe them. That word choice is doing political work, because it converts policy preferences (R&D spending, education priorities, tax incentives, deregulation, immigration of skilled workers) into a story about national character and survival.
Kit Bond, a long-serving Republican senator from Missouri, spoke from the era when “innovation” became Washington’s bipartisan safe word: a shiny, forward-looking term that can sell almost any agenda without naming winners or losers. It’s aspirational and deliberately nonspecific. “Invention” nods to the mythic American garage-tinkerer; “innovation” shifts the focus to commercialization and market advantage. Together they bridge nostalgia and competitiveness, a useful combination when you’re trying to keep both Main Street and boardrooms nodding along.
The subtext is anxiety. This is the language of globalization, offshoring, and the long hangover from the Cold War tech race: if America doesn’t keep reinventing itself, someone else will take the lead. It also quietly narrows the definition of “success” to economic dominance, implying that social stability and civic cohesion are secondary outputs of growth.
The line works because it flatters and scolds at once: Americans are celebrated as builders, then warned that past greatness doesn’t count unless it keeps paying dividends.
Kit Bond, a long-serving Republican senator from Missouri, spoke from the era when “innovation” became Washington’s bipartisan safe word: a shiny, forward-looking term that can sell almost any agenda without naming winners or losers. It’s aspirational and deliberately nonspecific. “Invention” nods to the mythic American garage-tinkerer; “innovation” shifts the focus to commercialization and market advantage. Together they bridge nostalgia and competitiveness, a useful combination when you’re trying to keep both Main Street and boardrooms nodding along.
The subtext is anxiety. This is the language of globalization, offshoring, and the long hangover from the Cold War tech race: if America doesn’t keep reinventing itself, someone else will take the lead. It also quietly narrows the definition of “success” to economic dominance, implying that social stability and civic cohesion are secondary outputs of growth.
The line works because it flatters and scolds at once: Americans are celebrated as builders, then warned that past greatness doesn’t count unless it keeps paying dividends.
Quote Details
| Topic | Technology |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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