Aside from the political discussion bound to happen here, I was surprised and happy to see the story of Hilltop highlighted. I used to buy filet mignon there for $7 a pound back in 2009 when I was living in Chelsea, as a recent migrant from California. I was very sad when it closed, and never knew the story.<p>It highlights a more general point: we, as humans, have a profound <i>attribution bias.</i> It's psychological. We tend to attribute success to our own individual characteristics, actions, and free will. Americans significantly more so.[<a href="http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/2786780?uid=2&uid=4&sid=21104247453601" rel="nofollow">http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/2786780?uid=2&uid=4&si...</a>]<p>This would be fine, if it were true; however this attribution bias causes a significant departure from reality. When people succeed, we tend to focus on their personal attributes and actions, instead of looking at the situation surrounding them. When we do that, we tend to think of them as "rising above their situation," or "using their advantages well." We like to think we can do the same, but it is truly a kind of collective delusion.<p>We have to recognize that this is simply fantasy. It's not backed up by truth. Statistics says much the opposite: that most people who try will fail, and that people will be significantly burdened by failure, and that people who have failed <i>or succeeded</i> are extremely affected by external effects; that most successes are the result of both individual <i>and</i> significant historical and contextual factors. Externalities are more important than we want to believe. They're not everything, but they deserve much, <i>much</i> more attention than they get, which is often nil.<p>We would be a different kind of society were we to match our perception of success and failure with the reality of that success or failure. We don't have to give up our sense of individualism and the respect for personal growth and contribution; we just need to back it up with a recognition of the surrounding factors that are extremely real and highly influential on all our lives. I know we would be a better society if we did.