Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts

6.08.2009

Lessons from the strange case of Rick Duncan

NYTimes: A Deception, and a Reluctance to Ask Questions

Excerpts:

A former Marine Corps captain who suffered brain trauma from a roadside bomb in Iraq and was at the Pentagon during the Sept. 11 attacks. An advocate for veterans rights who opposed the war. An Annapolis graduate who was proudly gay. With his gold-plated credentials, he commanded the respect and attention of not just politicians, but also police chiefs, reporters and veterans advocates for the better part of two years.

Yet, except for his first name, virtually none of his story was true. In reality, he was Richard G. Strandlof, a charismatic drifter with a history of mental illness and petty crimes who had moved from Montana to Nevada to Colorado, assuming different names and identities along the way.

Last month, after actual veterans uncovered his deceptions, Mr. Strandlof, 32, was detained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and then arrested by the Denver police on an outstanding warrant for driving with a suspended license. The veterans group he helped create, the Colorado Veterans Alliance, has disbanded. And now Mr. Strandlof, apparently penniless, remains in jail on $1,000 bail.

...

In addition to a scar on his head, which he said was from an improvised explosive device in Fallujah, Mr. Strandlof had intimate knowledge of the Veterans Affairs system, spoke authoritatively about events in Iraq and had a knowing bumper sticker on his car that read, “Got DD-214?” — a reference to the discharge papers for armed forces members leaving acting duty.

...

There were also things that made Mr. Strandlof seem not credible. He never mentioned what unit he served with. He claimed to have lost a finger, but had 10 digits. Minor details of his story would change from week to week.

“We attributed that to his wounds and to his P.T.S.D., and so were all easy on him,” said Joe Barrera, a Vietnam veteran whom Mr. Strandlof befriended.


Comment: Lesson ... we must follow leaders with proven character ... not simply leader-wannabes with charisma! More from CNN: Fake military veteran hid under 'ocean of lies'

1.13.2009

Presidents have "feet of clay"

I'm not sure if anyone needs reminding, but all human leaders are flawed. The press seemed to be humored by President Bush's admittance of the same in his final press conference. Some may know this, but I was a Pastor for 16 years (1980-1996). Trust me I am flawed and I made plenty of mistakes. None of them rose to the level of disqualification from the Pastorate (1 Tim 3) but there were mistakes of omission and mistakes of commission! Shocking hugh! We vest too much confidence in who a man is and what a man can do!

Back to the political front: Obama will not pay your mortgage. He will not solve the energy crisis! Many Presidents have tried but he will not usher in peace in the Middle East. He will not stop the melt of glaciers or turn about global warming* (* Pseudo-science anyways!). And he will not turn the economy around! (I think economic cycles are a lot like the common cold. Want a cure for the cold: Eat, drink, sleep, and wait 7 days. Cure for our economy .... government step out of the way and in time the markets will correct themselves.

Back to Presidents. Peggy Noonan comments:

Mere Presidents: American leaders are mortal, not magical

Excerpt:

The Founders, who were awed by the presidency and who made it a point, the early ones, to speak in their inaugural addresses of how unworthy they felt, would be astonished and confounded by the over-awe with which we view presidents now. We treat them as if they are the Grand Imperial Czar of the Peacock Throne, and we their 'umble servants. It's no good, and vaguely un-American. Right now patriotism requires more than the usual candor. It requires speaking truthfully and constructively to a president who is a man, and just a man. We hire them, we fire them, they come back for photo-ops. They're not magic.


Comment: Phrase "Feet of Clay" is from Daniel 2:31-33

More excerpts from Peggy:

Mr. Obama promised "dramatic action" and said that while the cost of his proposals will be "considerable," so will "the consequences of doing too little or nothing at all." He again promised a public works program. Much of it seemed designed to answer the question, "What would the WPA have looked like if FDR had been an environmentalist?" In its lack of price tags and specific size and scope of proposals, the plan seemed more a conversation starter, as they say, than a thrown gauntlet.

Toward all this I suspect Americans will maintain a stance of hopeful ambivalence. We are a center-right nation and at least formally oppose gusher-like spending. But once you've got a deficit of more than a trillion dollars, two trillion hardly seems worse. You're in the area of numbers so astronomical as to be unimaginable. It's like hearing Pluto is 50,000 light years away but Saturn is 48,000 light years away. They're both pretty far.

...

Soon after the speech, Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell reacted with caution. He was low key. He didn't attack. He said the current projected deficit of $1.2 trillion is "an eye-popping number," and said he liked the part of Mr. Obama's program that includes reducing tax rates for the middle class. "We intend to work with the new president . . . to try and get this right," he said. The Republicans in the Senate are like swimmers ten feet offshore. They're going to let the Obama wave roll over them, wait for the water level to even out, and then make a move. Who would believe them claiming to be the party of fiscal responsibility and smaller government now anyway? They need more time to pass between the high-spending Bush years and an eventual—and one hopes principled—opposition to Obamanomics.


....

... referring to the awe with which we view the presidency, the White House, and the famous office with no corners in which presidents so often feel cornered.

Here is an idea for everyone in Washington: Get over it. It's distorting the system. This week we saw the past four presidents standing in the Oval Office for a photo-op on the afternoon of their private lunch. As you looked at the pictures afterward you had to think: How flawed were they? How many were a success?

Did you notice how they all leaned away from Jimmy Carter, the official Cootieman of former presidents? It was like high-school students to the new girl: "You can't sit here, we're the Most Popular table."