We build our monuments over the wrong graves. It’s a bad habit of ours, this craving for the lone genius—the larger-than-life figure who supposedly commands the tides of progress by sheer force of will. But look beneath the surface of how things actually get built. The reality is messier. And a hell of a lot more interesting.
Take Thomas Edison. Secular saint of American ingenuity. The wizard who single-handedly lit up the dark. Except he didn’t. Edison wasn’t a solitary creator; he was a brilliant, ruthless aggregator of other people’s breakthroughs and a master of public relations. He invented the bulb, sure, but his real masterpiece was the myth of himself. In the process, he eclipsed the collective sweat of his own labs and the far more elegant alternating-current systems of his rivals. He’s our most overrated figure—not because he lacked talent, but because his shadow blinded us to how progress actually happens.
Morgan Housel nailed this structural blind spot by tracing the tangled ancestry of major turning points:
“Every current event – big or small – has parents, grandparents, great grandparents, siblings, and cousins. Ignoring that family tree can muddy your understanding of events, giving a false impression of why things happened… Viewing events in isolation, without an appreciation for their long roots, helps explain everything from why forecasting is hard to why politics is nasty.”
Look past the blinding light of the celebrity inventors and you find the long roots that actually remade our world. Take FCC Part 15. It’s an event almost no history textbook bothers to mention. In the early 1980s, a lone staff engineer named Dr. Michael Marcus looked at three chunks of the radio spectrum—stuff discarded as “garbage bands” reserved for industrial microwave ovens—and saw an opening. The entire telecom establishment thought he was chasing a recipe for chaotic interference.
Marcus didn’t blink. He spent years pushing through a dry, technical ruling in 1985 to open those garbage bands for unlicensed public use. A total footnote. Yet that single, unheralded bureaucratic open door laid the invisible foundation for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and the entire wireless ecosystem running your life today. Marcus didn’t get a ticker-tape parade; he got political friction and a quiet transfer to a back-office enforcement role. No hero on horseback. Just a guy in a cubicle who rewired the world.
We do the same thing with politics. We rank presidents by the volume of their rhetoric or the body count of their wars. Meanwhile, men like Chester A. Arthur get left in the dusty margins of trivia. Arthur was the ultimate product of the spoils system—a New York machine politician who climbed to power on institutional corruption. Then James A. Garfield was assassinated, and Arthur was thrust into the big chair. Something clicked. Instead of feeding the machine that birthed him, he turned inward, defied his old patrons, and signed the Pendleton Civil Service Act. He dismantled the very patronage system he’d mastered. It was a stunning act of quiet integrity that killed his political future but saved the republic’s administrative soul.
Or take Frances Perkins. Ask the average student who gave them the weekend, the forty-hour work week, unemployment insurance, and the abolition of child labor, and you’ll get a blank stare. Perkins was FDR’s Secretary of Labor. She wasn’t a regular on the campaign posters. She just stood in the back of the room, turning abstract economic suffering into concrete human safety nets.
I’ve been sitting with this for a few days, thinking about my own career—and the times I mistook the loudest person in the room for the smartest. I chased the visionary founders with the spellbinding pitches. I ignored the quiet engineers and the mundane infrastructure choices that actually determine whether an idea scales or snaps. It takes a few painful, expensive missteps to realize that the real compounding interest of progress is almost always generated in the dark.
History isn’t a solo act. It’s an intricate, mostly anonymous collaboration between accidental reformers, stubborn bureaucrats, and regulatory footnotes. If you want to understand where we’re going, stop staring at the stage lights.
Start looking at the wiring.
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