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Commentary by management consultant Michael Wade on Leadership, Ethics, Management, and Life
Monday, September 30, 2024
Journalistic Tradition
I saw great battles reported where there had been no fighting, and complete silence where hundreds of men had been killed. I saw troops who had fought bravely denounced as cowards and traitors, and others who had never seen a shot fired hailed as the heroes of imaginary victories; and I saw newspapers in London retailing these lies and eager intellectuals building emotional superstructures over events that had never happened. I saw, in fact, history being written not in terms of what happened but . . . according to various "party lines."
- George Orwell, "Looking Back on the Spanish Civil War"
Freedom of Speech vs. The Utopia of Scolding
Matt Taibbi's speech at the Rescue the Republic rally. An excerpt:
"Everything we found in the Twitter Files fits in a sentence: an alphabet soup of enforcement agencies informally is already doing pretty much the same thing as Europe's draconian new law."
Law School Faculty Contributions
Excess of Democracy blog has some very interesting charts.
So much for viewpoint diversity.
Sunday, September 29, 2024
Saturday, September 28, 2024
Technology and Change
A new technology does not add or subtract something. It changes everything. In the year 1500, fifty years after the printing press was invented, we did not have old Europe plus the printing press. We had a different Europe.
- Neil Postman
A Pedant's Progress
Commentary magazine: Joseph Epstein confesses to being a pedant. An excerpt:
Daily life generally offers this pedant a good workout. He calls his local library, and a robo-voice informs him that it “is now presently open.” Surely you mean “currently open,” he mutters into the phone. The play-by-play announcer for the Chicago Cubs says that “there’s two outs,” and the pedant mentally retorts, “There ‘are’ two outs, Schmuckowitz.” At the supermarket he gets in the express line, where he is greeted by a sign that reads, “Ten Items or Less,” and thinks, whatever happened to the more correct word “fewer?”
Friday, September 27, 2024
We Will Dance Again
Times of Israel: Before the BBC aired the film in Britain, it insisted that any references to Hamas as terrorists be taken out.
A Certain Way to Ruin
The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, or preventing all possibility of its continuing as a nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities.
- Theodore Roosevelt
First Paragraph
I did everything the university told me to. I let students choose their books. I conferenced with them one-on-one. I opted for conversations over consequences. I worked closely with an instructional coach to ensure I implemented a workshop model to fidelity. I let students into my room during lunch to build relationships. I communicated with parents and sought out student interests to guide my instruction. My classes wrote and agreed to their behavior codes. I provided alternative seating out of my own pocket. Nonetheless, misbehavior abounded and reading growth stagnated.
- From What is Wrong with Our Schools? The Ideology Impoverishing Education in America - and How We Can Do Better for Our Students by Daniel Buck
When Distance Makes the Heart Grow Fonder
There used to be "front porch campaigns."
Nowadays, some candidates have "basement campaigns."
And for good reason.
Thursday, September 26, 2024
First Paragraph
In 2015, a video of students shouting at Yale professor, Nicholas Christakis, went viral on social media. His crime? Being married to a woman who questioned whether Yale diversity administrators should be telling students what to wear on Halloween. This episode was mocked, yet it marked the beginning - not the end - of a cultural revolution that has since swamped the West. Just as political correctness was written off as a fad in the early '90s, we should be skeptical of optimists who assert that woke illiberalism is exiting stage left. When Robert MacNeil declared to a young Dinesh D'Souza on the MacNeil-Lehrer News Hour in June 1991 that political correctness "has already begun to pass" due to its excesses being ridiculed in the press, D'Souza wisely replied that while it was "somewhat on the defensive," the proponents of PC were "not a handful of radicals" but rather "institutionalized ... [representing the] establishment."
- From The Third Awokening: A 12-Point Plan for Rolling Back Progressive Extremism by Eric Kaufmann
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
They're Aways Out There
Jonathan Turley on the counter-constitutional movement.
A Very Wide-Ranging and Wise Techie
Stephen Landry's Blog comes from a CIO and much more.
It makes me want to abandon my Commodore computer.
Absolutely
Nicholas Bate with sound advice: Do not be ruled by units of time.
[And while you're on his site, check out his numerous books!]
The National Council of Teachers of English
Cultural Offering's Kurt Harden notes a bizarre shift by the teachers of English.
No wonder reading has declined among youth people.
The coming Reformation is going to improve elementary and high schools as well as colleges and universities.
Quietly, Quietly
Suppose we did our work
like the snow,
quietly, quietly,
leaving nothing out.
- Wendell Berry
[Photo by Filip Bunkens at Unsplash]
Strategic Anchors
Many leadership teams struggle with not wanting to walk away from opportunities. Strategic anchors give them the clarity and courage to overcome these distractions and stay on course.
- Patrick Lencioni
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
Cultural Insight
Nobody knows anything.
- Screenwriter William Goldman describing Hollywood
If We Had a Press Corps
Washington Examiner: Byron York on the curious lack of curiosity of American journalists during a presidential campaign.
They don't even pretend to be objective. The Particularist thought pattern is alive and well in journalism.
[I wrote about Universalists and Particularists on Substack.]
Why Good Teachers Leave
Shain Bergan, a spokesperson for the Kansas City school district, said the district's no zeros policy - which has frustrated [teacher Cory] Jarrell - is designed to ensure that a single zero doesn't have an undue effect on students' grades. Instead, students receive a minimum of 40% for each assignment.
- "More Teachers Burn Out on the Job" by Matt Barnum, The Wall Street Journal, August 28, 2024, Page A10.
Joke from the Soviet Union
Three men are in a hotel room in Soviet Russia.
The first two men open a bottle of vodka, while the third is tired and goes straight to bed. He is unable to sleep, however, as his increasingly drunk friends tell political jokes loudly.After a while, the tired man gets frustrated and walks downstairs for a smoke. He stops in the lounge and asks the receptionist to bring tea to their room in five minutes.
The man walks back into the room, joins the table, leans towards a power outlet and speaks into it:
"Comrade major, we want some tea to room 62 please."
His friends laugh at the joke, until there is a knock on the door. The receptionist brings a teapot. His friends fall silent and pale, horrified of what they just witnessed. The party is dead, and the man goes to sleep.
After a good night's rest, the man wakes up and notices his friends are gone. Surprised, he walks downstairs and asks the receptionist where they went.
The nervous receptionist whispers that the KGB came and took them before dawn.
The man is horrified. He wonders why he was spared.
"Well," Whispered the receptionist, "comrade major quite liked your tea joke."
Monday, September 23, 2024
Fleming. Ian Fleming.
Claremont Review of Books: Christopher Flannery has written a fascinating review of the new biography of Ian Fleming.
Update: I was stunned on the number of films that have been made from his James Bond novels.]
Special Report
If the quality of our medical care resembled the quality of our news media, we'd all would be using "eye of newt, and toe of frog, wool of bat, and tongue of dog, Adder's fork, and blind-worm's sting, lizard's leg, and owlet's wing."
[HT: "Macbeth" by William Shakespeare]
How Will You Invest Your Time Today?
Doing nothing is harmless, but being busy doing nothing is not.
- Eric Hoffer
First, Seal the Border
Center for Immigration Studies in February 2024: Elizabeth Jacobs analyzes the Senate's Border Security Bill.
Sunday, September 22, 2024
Saturday, September 21, 2024
A Singular "They" Pronoun?
City Journal: A report on the Chicago Manual of Style.
Mark Zuckerberg Reads the Room
Sometimes I almost feel sorry for Mark Zuckerberg. I know, I know. He’s the fourth-richest person in the world, and the social-media platforms he controls have blighted the childhoods of millions of teenage girls and helped turn the rest of us into phone-addicted zombies. Despite all that, I occasionally I feel a faint—okay, very faint—twinge of sympathy over the way the tech mogul’s life has devolved into an endless apology tour. In his latest mea culpa, issued just before Labor Day weekend, Zuckerberg expressed regret for how his company had caved to government demands to censor certain types of content flowing through its channels. His contrition sounds authentic, but I’m withholding judgement.
Read the rest of the essay by James B. Meigs in Commentary magazine.
Fending Off Barbarians and Robots
To note the obvious, we live in strange times.
We live amid devices that both simplify and complicate the world. They free us from chores that, although tiresome, rewarded us with a sense of achievement. Our sense of balance is thrown off by the speed of completion and travel. We are forgetting old skills, such as cursive writing, that gave us a subtle but better connection to thought and to others.
And, of course, there are the barbarians who do not share our values. They regard the nation as a vending machine instead of a garden worthy of respect, protection, and cultivation.
Either group can sink us.
[Photo by Possessed Photography at Unsplash]
Friday, September 20, 2024
And That Was Back Then
It was once an American tradition to pay off the mortgage and leave the children the farm. Now we seem to be selling the farm and leaving our children the mortgage. By 1997, we will pay more for interest on the debt than for the national defense. That's right, more of our tax money will be spent to pay interest on government bonds than we'll pay for the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the Marine Corps, the intelligence agencies and the defense bureaucracy combined.
- From a speech by Newt Gingrich in 1995
Patrick Bet-David
The Spectator World: Inside the Unlikely Success of Patrick Bet-David.
An excerpt:
Bet-David’s biography makes his story even more improbable: he’s a refugee from Iran who spent his adolescence as a hard-partying club rat (and briefly bodyguard to a drug dealer) who turned his life around after signing up for the Army, the 101st Airborne to be precise, and finding God.
The Potential Revolutionaries
Were the world to treat us the way we treat ourselves we would turn into firebrand revolutionaries.
- Eric Hoffer
Thursday, September 19, 2024
To Read about Reading
For perspectives on reading, writers, and literature, I recommend the essays of Clive James and Joseph Epstein.
Beautifully written, very bright, and a lot of fun.
The Story Behind the Recent Immigration Story
My latest essay is up at Substack.
Please check it out and spread the word.
A Classic a Week
When you go to the Nicholas Bate site, be sure to check out his books.
After years of writing non-fiction, he has shifted to novels.
The man never sleeps.
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
The Debate: ABC Makes a Quasi-Denial
Megyn Kelly is correct. All ABC did was to raise further questions.
Truly a mind-boggling response because it increases suspicion of just what was shared with the Harris campaign.
Some Family History: My Great Uncle Isaac Imes's 5th Regiment of the Marines Citation
The Old Folks
The other day, I was remembering talks with my relatives who were old enough to have lived in Arizona before it became a state in 1912. No air conditioning. The ice man would drop off blocks of ice for the ice box.
The usual old people stuff.
But one of the surprising items was how much they traveled. Travel, of course, was far from the conveniences of today, but they went up into Colorado and Utah, over to California, down into Mexico, and throughout Arizona. The roads were often little better than paths and there was a lot of camping. Sometimes they took trains but most of the journeys were by automobile. My grandfather used a horse and wagon for hunting trips.
They had a sizable amount of patience in those days as well as an ability to get as much joy as possible out of the journey.
They were mature people.
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
Enlarged But Enslaved
City Journal: Andrey Mir on "The Platform Paradox." An excerpt:
Exposing yourself and your content for both the network effect and the platform’s own business is, in a sense, your platform fee. As media theorist Marshall McLuhan once said, humans are the sex facilitators to the machine world, the same as bees are to plants. The metaphor might also imply that, yes, humans make the honey for themselves, but the fruits of their labor ultimately belong to the beekeeper.
Looking into the Abyss
Commentary magazine: John Podhoretz on "The Assassination Wish Fulfillment."
Note: The article has been updated.
Monday, September 16, 2024
The Search for Nothing
I am serious about my study. I am a distinguished professor of mathematics at Brown University, though I have not for decades concerned myself with arithmetic, calculus, matrices, theorems, Hausdorff spaces, finite lattices representations, or anything else that involves values or numbers or presentations of values or numbers or any such somethings, whether they have substance or not. I have spent my career in my little office on George Street in Providence contemplating and searching for nothing. I have not found it. It is sad for me that the mere introduction to my subject of interest necessarily ruins my study. I work very hard and wish I could say that I have nothing to show for it.
- From Dr. No: A Novel by Percival Everett
Our Stumbling Secret Service
The argument that President Trump did not receive full Secret Service protection because he is not a sitting president is simply pathetic.
Donald Trump is a former president who is the presidential nominee of a major party. He also is the survivor of a previous assassination attempt.
A very close assassination attempt.
Given all of the above, it is the height of bureaucratic short-sightedness to withhold full protection.
It makes sense to err on the side of protection. He should get full protection.
Harris, Walz, and Vance should get it too. There is no guarantee that assassins wouldn't try to wipe out an entire ticket.
"America's political parties no longer exist"
UnHerd magazine: Michael Lind examines the changes with the political parties. An excerpt:
"...Both Democratic and Republican primary voters are more likely than voters in general to have college degrees and to have completed postgraduate study; they also have considerably higher household incomes."
Sunday, September 15, 2024
Saturday, September 14, 2024
On the Subject of "Fire the Jerks"
The "Fire the Jerks" subject will strike a nerve with anyone in the workplace.
The Lost Art of Waiting
Americans are more impatient than ever.
See Christine Rosen's essay in The Free Press.
It's from her book The Extinction of Experience: Being Human in a Disembodied World.
First Paragraph
Those little bastards were hiding out there in the tall grass. The moon was not quite full, but bright, and it was behind them, so I could see them as plain as day, though it was deep night. Lightning bugs flashed against the black canvas. I waited at Miss Watson's kitchen door, rocked a loose step board with my foot, knew she was going to tell me to fix it tomorrow. I was waiting there for her to give me a pan of corn bread that she had made with my Sadie's recipe. Waiting is a big part of a slave's life, waiting and waiting to wait some more. Waiting for demands. Waiting for food. Waiting for the ends of days. Waiting for the just and deserved Christian reward at the end of it all.
- From James: A Novel by Percival Everett
Friday, September 13, 2024
Shared History and Collective Purpose
First Things: Ronen Shoval on "The Broken Promise of America." An excerpt:
This transformation is not limited to the churches; it reflects a broader void in American life where the role of moral institutions has diminished. Into this void, “woke” ideology steps confidently, offering a new set of rituals and a new pantheon of virtues. It seeks to replace the cohesive moral vision that once unified communities with a fractured collection of identities and causes. This isn't merely a new expression of values—it's an attempt to rebuild the sacred around the self, often at the expense of shared history and collective purpose.
Topics for My Substack Column
I have an extensive list of various topics for my Substack column. Most pertain to leadership, management, ethics, history, literature, and government.
Those of you who have been following this blog for some time will have a sense of my areas of interest. If there are any topics that you'd like me to explore, don't hesitate to list them. I can't guarantee that I'll write about them, but who knoweth?
I'm very flexible. Part of this week has been spent in a review of U.S Department of Labor programs.
You know, exciting stuff.
Thursday, September 12, 2024
Expansive, Not Exclusive
Reading is expansive, not exclusive. If Caribbean, African, Arab, and Indian writers get more attention today, if the Booker prize is won by Ben Okri from Nigeria or Peter Carey from Sydney, if readers approach the work of women and blacks without prejudice and without the sense of tiptoeing up on a special case, our shared culture grows and rejoices. We learn how other kinds of cultural consciousness can occupy the speaking center of literary forms. But how could this conceivably be a reason for not reading Eugene Onegin or Pope's Epistle to Lord Burlington?
- From Culture of Complaint: A Passionate Look into the Ailing Heart of America by Robert Hughes (published in 1993)
First Paragraph
I can't remember at what point I realized that I would probably go two years without a hug. Nobody knew how much worse the pandemic would get, but I knew I would be stuck in place for the duration. My friends felt a world away. Phone calls with my family had become strained. I couldn't tell how they were really doing or articulate how I was handling the stress. The fact is I had stopped showering altogether, and I was watching the Lord of the Rings movies repeatedly.
[NOTE: The author was a Peace Corps volunteer in Central Asia during the bird flu pandemic in 2004.]
- From The Loneliness Epidemic: Why So Many of Us Feel Alone and How Leaders Can Respond by Susan Mettes
Wednesday, September 11, 2024
The Successor Caste
The expansion of corporationist, bureaucratic, and etatist trends that we have noted on the political side can also be seen, indeed scarcely are to be avoided, in the arts. Cyril Connolly once wrote, "better a state which can't read or write than one which begins to take a positive interest in literature." But it is not only a matter of the state. There is also a proliferation, well past the reasonable, of what we might call cultural nongovernmental organizations, especially in the United States. These last are, usually, Foundations, often created by millionaires but after a transition period end up promoting various social and other agendas alien to the intentions of their founders. In the case of the arts, many of the successor caste succumb to fashions emanating from art activists (and not affecting the economic or economic-social attitudes of millionairedom).
- Robert Conquest in The Dragons of Expectation: Reality and Delusion in the Course of History
From the John Barry Soundtrack to "Mary, Queen of Scots"
Marvelous.
Post-Debate
Last night's presidential debate was both interesting and predictable.
Kamala Harris wisely stayed on script.
Donald Trump unwisely wandered from it but returned for a strong finish.
All in all, the win has to go to Harris, but her victory was tainted by ABC's moderating which was stunningly biased in her favor.
They didn't even pretend to be objective. That is disappointing because regardless of one's political views, we need a reasonably objective media in this country.
Tuesday, September 10, 2024
True
First Paragraph
Our ancestors have been human for a very long time. If a normal baby girl born forty thousand years ago were kidnapped by a time traveler and raised in a normal family in New York, she would be ready for college in eighteen years. She would learn English (along with - who knows? - Spanish or Chinese), understand trigonometry, follow baseball and pop music; she would probably want a pierced tongue and a couple of tattoos. And she would be unrecognizably different from the brothers and sisters she left behind. For most of human history, we were born into small societies of a few score people, bands of hunters and gatherers, and would see, on a typical day, only people we had known most of our lives. Everything our long-ago ancestors ate or wore, every tool they used, every shrine at which they worshipped, was made within that group. Their knowledge came from their ancestors or from their own experiences. That is the world that shaped us, the world in which our nature was formed.
- From Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers by Kwame Anthony Appiah
Monday, September 09, 2024
American Foreign Policy
The Free Press: H.R. McMaster on America's weakness. An excerpt:
"Never have I been more concerned about the fate of my nation - and of the free world."
Churchill Endures
Michael Mandelbaum has an excellent essay in The New Criterion.
Upcoming on My Substack
Many thanks to all who've subscribed to my Substack column. Special thanks, of course, go to the paid subscribers.
The posts on Light and Shadow and the one on Winston Churchill have drawn a lot of attention.
Among my future Substack topics will be the game of Gotcha!, the need for truth-tellers, the importance of firing jerks, the management styles of Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy, the best performance evaluations, meeting skills, motivation techniques, the big mistake of results-focused managers, crisis prevention, presidential transitions, dictatorial management, and how sports teams can be dangerous management models.
These and much more are in the pipeline.
Choose a free or paid subscription and you'll get notices of the posts via email.
I'm glad that you're on the blog but please don't miss the Substack!
Sunday, September 08, 2024
Saturday, September 07, 2024
Barbarism
Barbarism is not the prehistory of humanity but the faithful shadow that accompanies its every step.
- Alain Finkielkraut
A Plain but Effective Strategy
You know it and I know it.
But all of us need occasional reminders.
Do what you know you should be doing, even if you do not want to do it.
Friday, September 06, 2024
How a Generation Lost Its Common Culture
From 2016: Patrick Deneen explores what's happened to our students. An excerpt:
My students are know-nothings. They are exceedingly nice, pleasant, trustworthy, mostly honest, well-intentioned, and utterly decent. But their brains are largely empty, devoid of any substantial knowledge that might be the fruits of an education in an inheritance and a gift of a previous generation. They are the culmination of western civilization, a civilization that has forgotten nearly everything about itself, and as a result, has achieved near-perfect indifference to its own culture.
College Free Speech Rankings
The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) College Free Speech Rankings are out.
Thursday, September 05, 2024
WWII Reality
The Free Press: Victor Davis Hanson on The Truth About World War II.
The Media's Situational Ethics
Read Christine Rosen's dissection of the media in Commentary magazine. An excerpt:
But in late June, Biden appeared on a debate stage with Trump, and the narrative collapsed. Biden was clearly not up to the task of four more years as president. Like colony-collapse disorder in bees, however, while his supporters fled, Biden remained in charge and was still running for reelection, tended to by an ever-smaller circle of loyalists, namely, First Lady Jill Biden, her staff, and Biden’s son Hunter. The media, given an opportunity to fully report on what they had previously willfully ignored, instead accused the White House of orchestrating a “cover-up” about Biden’s condition, and they largely refrained from any examination of their own complicity in hiding his condition from the public.
A DEI Tracker?
The Chronicle of Higher Education website has a DEI Tracker to determine actions regarding DEI programs.
That Which is Around Us
The true prophet is not he who peers into the future but he who reads and reveals the present.
- Eric Hoffer