Showing posts with label Generals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Generals. Show all posts

Saturday, January 18, 2020

Headlines


Trump’s impeachment defense team to include Kenneth Starr, Alan Dershowitz

Job openings slide by more than half a million as the labor market tightens

Maddow ratings soar ...

AOC: People my age are scared to have children because of climate crisis

Biden: Tech’s liability shield ‘should be revoked’ immediately

US housing starts soar 16.9% in December to a 13-year high

‘You’re a bunch of dopes and babies’: Inside Trump’s stunning tirade against generals ...

Rand Paul: ‘I think the Bidens are as corrupt as the day is long’

Top Iran leader: Trump is a ‘clown’ who will betray Iranians

The US is running a $1 trillion deficit, but politicians and investors don’t see a problem

What happens when the Fed stops pumping?

Seven times the GAO found the Obama administration violated federal law

Saturday, September 10, 2016

Headlines


These headlines are real ... they have all been discovered on Internet news sites.

Tampons in men's rooms at [Brown] university ...

Goldman Sachs bans donations to Trump, but not to Clinton

Report: U.S. may have given Iran $33.6 billion in secret payments

FACEBOOK Co-founder commits $20 million to defeat Trump

Apple IPhone 7 slogan in Hong Kong translates to 'This is Penis' ...

Dr. Gorka: 'Good generals have been removed,' 'Political yes-mem have survived'

Italian high court rules public masterbation not a crime

Soros pushes online voting ...

Appeals Court blocks proof-of-citizenship voting requirement

Muslim men sentenced for raping 13-year old girl

Obama halts North Dakota pipeline after judge okays its construction

Apple pumps breaks on self-driving car strategy, laying off dozens

Monday, March 28, 2011

General Quarters


At an event this weekend I was asked (by a liberal … what else in Massachusetts) who my favorite President was. I said that, in my lifetime and although I didn’t vote for him, Ronald Reagan was the best, but probably Lincoln overall. Trying to bait me, I think, this amiable lefty then ticked off a number of, to me, awful presidents, Clinton, LBJ, Carter, etc. Then he mentioned General Eisenhower. I said he was OK, but not great.

This got me to thinking about Generals who later went on to be President … George Washington, Andrew Jackson, William Henry Harrison, Zachary Taylor, Franklin Pierce, Andrew Johnson, Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, Benjamin Harrison and Dwight D. Eisenhower. Clearly Washington was the standout General/President on this list … for he led our nation through its pre-political nascence with a steady, moral hand and established gentlemanly codes of conduct for the President and the Office of the President that have survived up until recently. All the others, although serving admirably militarily, in the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, the War of 1812, the Mexican-American War, and World War II did not, in my opinion, add much luster to the White House.

The question that then begs itself is why? Perhaps, it is because governance is so different from leadership in battle. As a General, your subordinates are a little more focused and loyal when they know (knew) that they could be shot at dawn for screwing up. More recently, Presidents have seen many of their staff write “tell-all” books in order to get their 15 minutes of Warhol fame. George Bush, in particular, was plagued by a retinue of incompetent direct reports. His loyalty to them usually far exceeded theirs to him. Barack Obama, unfortunately, seems to be suffering somewhat from this same lack of competent underlings, but with the loyalty ratio inverted. Generals have staff members who have survived years of testing in their respective jobs. Presidents, on the other hand, often surround themselves with fresh-faced political hangers-on who often mistake media fawning for good decision making.

Generals take an existing organization and move it forward. Presidents build a new organization every four or eight years and the good ones must be able to inspire these organizations to excel. In other words, Generals lead with their stars while Presidents lead with their ideas. Using this as criteria, General Colin Powell probably would not have excelled had he been elected President. And the U.S. electorate should probably pause before it next tries to promote a military hero to its Presidency.