Who will blow the whistle?

A President has about a 1 in 6 chance of dying while in office*, making it by far the most dangerous job in the United States. Sources of danger include stress, public speaking in inclement weather, and targeted violence. They clearly age rapidly, estimated by at least one doctor to be at twice the normal rate. Given this danger, their compensation seems comparably modest. One possible explanation is asymmetric information, though this should diminish after four years on the job, which leaves open the possibility of coercion. In what looks to me to be a truly awful and underpaid occupation, that so few Presidents step down after their first term is at least suggestive evidence that many Presidents serve under the duress of their parties. If it was any other job, OSHA would be inundated with complaints.

I’ve often said that Nixon resigning was the greatest day in the history of American democracy. The commander in chief of the most powerful army in the history of the world to that point was asked to give up power. And he did, with no blood shed, a moment arguably unprecedented in the history of the world. Yesterday the President chose not to run for re-election. He was, with little doubt, pressured by members of his party to do so. This is a truly great thing. Regardless of whether or not he would have won or lost, been a good President or not, the point is that powerful people wanted to influence a decision made by the most powerful person in the world and did so, again without any threat of violence. This is as good a sign as you can ask for that democracy is maintaining its single greatest advantage over other forms of government: the peaceful transition and acquisition of power.


*Yes, I know the 1 in 6 number is based on deaths throughout the 250 years and that it, like other jobs, has probably gotten safer. I still think the relative danger ranking remains accurate but, in any case, maybe just learn to play along.

One thought on “Who will blow the whistle?

  1. James Bailey's avatar James Bailey July 22, 2024 / 6:57 pm

    I think these guys love being President and are happy to accept the relatively low salary in exchange; the job has a lot of perks you can’t get anywhere else.

    That said, there was probably at least one Roman Emperor who was forced by an army to be Emperor (an even more dangerous job) against his will: https://roman-empire.net/decline/decius/

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