I want you to try a little thought experiment.
Think about the last time you had a major problem. Maybe your car broke down on a busy highway. Or your kitchen sink started leaking all over the floor. Perhaps a family member had a health scare.
What was the very first thing you did? You probably didn’t call a committee meeting. You didn’t form a focus group to study the problem for six months. You assessed the situation with your own eyes. You used your past experience. You made a practical decision based on what was right in front of you.
You used common sense.
It’s the most powerful, readily available tool we have. It’s the accumulated wisdom of generations, passed down through simple phrases like “don’t spend more than you earn” and “look both ways before you cross the street.” It’s not taught in fancy universities. It’s earned in the everyday business of living.
Now, I want you to think about a problem you hear discussed on the news every single day. Something big, like the economy, or border security, or the cost of healthcare.
Notice a difference? The solutions proposed are never simple. They are always incredibly complex, wrapped in layers of jargon, and require giving more power and money to the same people who have been managing the problem for decades. The results, predictably, are more debt, more confusion, and more division.
This isn’t an accident. It’s a sign of a deep fracture.
The Rise of the Professional Problem-Solvers
Somewhere along the way, we were sold a bill of goods. We were told that the challenges of modern life were too complicated for ordinary people to understand. We needed a special class of experts—a political class—to handle things for us.
These people live in a different world. Their success isn’t measured by whether the pothole on your street gets fixed. It’s measured by their ability to raise money, win elections, and craft policies that sound impressive in a speech. Their theories are tested not in the real world, but in polls and focus groups.
Their entire world is built on complexity. If a solution is simple and can be implemented by you and your neighbors, what purpose do they serve? Their job security depends on convincing you that you are not capable of handling your own affairs.
So, they take a common-sense idea—like “we should help people who fall on hard times”—and turn it into a thousand-page bill that no one has read, filled with rules that make no sense to the farmer, the shopkeeper, or the nurse. When the program fails to deliver, their answer is never to simplify it. It’s to add more rules, more offices, and more funding.
It’s a perfect self-perpetuating machine. Create a complex problem, offer a complex solution, and when the solution fails, demand more power to deal with the new problems you created.
The Reality Gap and Why It Keeps Growing
The political class lives inside a bubble. They travel between the same insulated circles—government buildings, think tanks, media studios—and talk only to each other. They become completely disconnected from the consequences of their decisions.
Let’s take a real-world example. A politician with a security detail votes for a law that makes it harder for law-abiding citizens to defend themselves. This makes sense in the theory-sphere of a committee room. But for the single mother living in a neighborhood where police response times are slow, it’s a terrifying and impractical decree. Her common sense tells her she needs a way to protect her family. His theory tells him he’s scoring points with a special interest group.
Another example: A regulator who has never run a business imposes a new rule that costs small companies thousands of dollars to comply with. For the regulator, it’s just another line in a regulation. For the bakery owner, it’s the difference between giving an employee a raise or shutting their doors.
The gap grows because feedback is broken. When a theory fails in the real world, the people in the bubble rarely feel the impact. You feel the impact. Your neighbors feel it. But the theorist just gets a disappointing report on a spreadsheet and starts designing the next theory.
Taking Back the Wheel
So, what do we do? The goal isn’t to become experts in their system. The goal is to trust our own judgment again. We need to relearn the habit of looking at a proposed “solution” and asking simple, common-sense questions.
Here are a few you can start with today.
First, “Does this sound like something that would work in my home?” If your teenager proposed a plan to manage the family budget that involved massive borrowing with no plan to pay it back, you’d shut it down immediately. Why should we accept it from people who claim to be managing the country’s budget?
Second, “Has anything like this been tried before?” This is where common sense meets history. If a government program has failed for fifty years, pouring more money into it isn’t a new idea. It’s insanity. Common sense tells us to try something different.
Third, and most importantly, “Who benefits?” When a new law or regulation is announced, follow the money. Does it make life easier and more affordable for you and your community? Or does it funnel power and contracts to a small group of well-connected insiders? The answer is almost always obvious if you dare to look.
The Power of the Everyday
The political class wants you to feel helpless. They want you to believe that only they can navigate the complex world they’ve created. But that is their greatest weakness. Their entire structure is built on sand because it is built against human nature.
Common sense is the kryptonite to their theory-based world. It can’t be debated in a way that makes them look smart. It’s blunt, honest, and real.
You already have everything you need to see through the noise. Trust the wisdom you use every day to raise your family, manage your money, and take care of your community. That wisdom didn’t come from a textbook. It came from life.
The next time a talking head on television tells you that a problem is too complex for you to understand, smile. They aren’t talking about the problem. They are talking about their solution. And your common sense is the one thing they are truly afraid of.
It’s time we started using it. Not in anger, but with the quiet confidence of people who know how to get things done.