Keen On America

An Anticapitalist Mutiny: Noam Scheiber on the Rise and Revolt of the College-Educated Working Class

Apr 7, 2026
Noam Scheiber, New York Times writer and author of Mutiny, argues that good white‑collar jobs have quietly disappeared, turning many college grads into a working‑class force. He explores rising distrust of managers, universities as extractive institutions, new forms of tech organizing, and the political consequences when educated radicals align with traditional labor.
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INSIGHT

Diplomas No Longer Guarantee Management Careers

  • College degrees no longer guarantee management-track white-collar jobs; those roles have quietly declined over the last 15–20 years.
  • Noam Scheiber traces downward mobility since the Great Recession and rising radicalization as grads lose access to high-status careers.
INSIGHT

Rising Left Lean Among Younger College Grads

  • College-educated voters skew strongly toward progressive candidates on economics and socialism: sympathy for socialism among grads doubled from ~20% to ~40% (2010–2020).
  • Scheiber notes 85% of college grads under 30 voted for Zoran Mamdani in NYC as an example.
ANECDOTE

The Video Game Design Degree Story

  • Universities aggressively marketed video game design degrees to high schoolers, promising career outcomes few students achieve.
  • Tens of thousands enroll annually but only a tiny fraction make a living designing games, creating deep student resentment.
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