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Walk the walk, don't just type the talk. There are 50,000,000 liberal voters. I think we ought to see at least 1,000,000 new business model companies out of that group, wouldn't you think?
Why do liberals sit and complain about what conservatives are not doing when liberals ought to be out there showing us the way?
So I'm planning on it.
Unless you are prepared to rip the still-beating heart of your competitor out of his chest and eat it while his children look on in tears, you better go into academia.
Altruism is a reward for success, not a means to it.
This idea of promoting mediocrity in our business schools, discouraging arrogance and risk taking and buffering the impulse of the best and brightest to win while leaving the severed heads of their competition on the gates of their estates as trophies is a prescription for disaster.
Just as the U.S. military seeks the best pilots who have the skill and courage to push jets to the point just before the wings break off, the business community needs to push their industries to the same untested limits. That is what makes this country the leader in business.
Crashes are part of the program and a learning experience, but not a reason to stop testing the limits.
Business is not for the faint-at-heart. Let the mild mannered strap themselves into a bus seat for the ride to their cubicles each day but for god’s sake keep them out of the way of the real movers and shakers riding a rocket down the middle of the street.
That has a sinister tone to it. It goes far beyond converting heads of business into the equivalent of activists and brainwashing them to pursue politically correct, "social responsibility" and other lefty goals.
It's interesting talking to people from different cultures. I was discussing this very thing with a coworker from India and he said that India is awful when it comes to the boom/bust cycle and corruption, and that very few companies (regardless of size) achieve long lasting success....except for the ones that explicitly are dedicated to "social responsibility" and helping not only its workers but the community at large, especially during hardship. He said that the owners aren't extravagantly wealthy and the executives make in the low million range...and that the reason for their success is that during tough times people remember that and flock to their products and they don't make dumb moves during boom times. He was optimistic (well pretty much all Indians are) about the future of the country in good part because a lot of the companies have started adopting this business model due to its success.
Any thing else is a waste of time and effort...