In his Second Inaugural Address, Lincoln fashioned a story to help the nation see where it had been and where it needed to go. The best leaders tell stories that guide America forward.
Terry Newell is currently director of his own firm, Leadership for a Responsible Society. His work focuses on values-based leadership, ethics, and decision making. A former Air Force officer, Terry also previously served as Director of the Horace Mann Learning Center, the training arm of the U.S. Department of Education, and as Dean of Faculty at the Federal Executive Institute. Terry is co-editor and author of The Trusted Leader: Building the Relationships That Make Government Work (CQ Press, 2011). He also wrote Statesmanship, Character and Leadership in America (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013) and To Serve with Honor: Doing the Right Thing in Government (Loftlands Press 2015).
In his Second Inaugural Address, Lincoln fashioned a story to help the nation see where it had been and where it needed to go. The best leaders tell stories that guide America forward.
We often employ simplistic mental strategies to deal with our own mental exhaustion.We are endangering democracy by doing so.
Money’s influence in politics seems here to stay, but for those who feel we need to change that, there is a solution. It’s called voting. It might seem naive to say it, but democracy can actually solve this problem with democracy.
Every candidate insists that he or she “represents the people.” Why, then, is there such a disconnect between what elected representatives do and what Americans who are polled say they expect of government?
If we let the land enter our hearts and surround us with its smells, sounds and scenes, it becomes more than a surveyor’s plat, more than a mortgage, more than an address. The land, experienced emotionally, has a hold on us.
As impermanent as we are, as fleeting as are our creations, our stories are permanent enough to help us know that our lives meant something. Nothing in life lasts. But our stories remain
When we look for reasons to explain poor student achievement, there is one we seem reluctant to cite: the students themselves. If we were to make a list of who’s responsible for ensuring they do well in school, the first group on the list should be students.
The notion of geographically isolated election districts, each with its own interests and a representative chosen freely by the people, was central to the republican model created by the Constitution. It is worth asking if some of the core assumptions of that model, especially the idea that large concentrations of wealth could not control public policy, still hold.
The Tea Party is on to something in America, and that this something is important to understand. The Tea Party may just be the canary in the coal mine, the harbinger of a looming explosion.
Our legacy is not just our work accomplishments. It is also the way we make people feel. People will remember us less for how much work we crammed into our days than for how much caring we brought into their lives.
If America is the land of opportunity and optimism, why, from one area to another, do we seem driven not by the soaring rhetoric of hope and promise but by the sinking call to lower our expectations?
In the contract society, “citizens” have become government’s “customers,” and they judge government by how satisfied they are with what they get. That’s not a prescription for healthy governance.
In our times, we seem so cynical about our leaders and our institutions. Moral exemplars, great Americans, can remind us of both who we have been and what we can still become.
The anchor effect suggests that we tend to “anchor” or rely too heavily in our decision making on a single piece of data to the exclusion of other information. Once the anchor is set, it dominates our thinking and moves us in the direction of the anchor.
Vacations are not considered the”real world.” But the work of truly living, the responsibility to appreciate life before losing it, both also possible when we leave our daily lives, is the “real world” too.
Einstein said that if he had a minute to live and only one question he could answer, he'd spend 59 seconds framing the question. He knew the power of a well-framed question. Asking the right question is worthy of a greater investment than we usually give it.
Every time the national debt increases without a way to pay for it, our taxes pay the interest on that larger debt. Call it the “debt tax.”
It’s the bane of public servants that Americans want statesmen and stateswomen – people with the courage to do the right thing for the country despite the personal consequences – but almost routinely punish them for doing just that.
Distractions cost time, resources, and attention. They leave us confused and uncertain about where to focus. As a nation, we have been distracted too long from serious attention to our problems
Our problems and possibilities are too many and too complex for one human being to understand and address. Leadership in a republic demands something other than a “Lone Ranger” on a white horse.