Whatever may be said, who ever may say it - to
determine the truth of it, is wisdom - Thirukural
Reflections 2007 : Chinthanaigal
Reflection by Jayalakshmi Satyendra
Tuesday 18 December 2007
A Brave and Startling Truth
We, this people, on a small and lonely planet
Traveling through casual space
Past aloof stars, across the way of indifferent suns
To a destination where all signs tell us
It is possible and imperative that we learn
A brave and startling truth
And when we come to it
To the day of peacemaking
When we release our fingers
From fists of hostility
And allow the pure air to cool our palms
When we come to it
When the curtain falls on the minstrel show of hate
And faces sooted with scorn are scrubbed clean
When battlefields and coliseum
No longer rake our unique and particular sons and daughters
Up with the bruised and bloody grass
To lie in identical plots in foreign soil
When the rapacious storming of the churches
The screaming racket in the temples have ceased
When the pennants are waving gaily
When the banners of the world tremble
Stoutly in the good, clean breeze
When we come to it
When we let the rifles fall from our shoulders
And children dress their dolls in flags of truce
When land mines of death have been removed
And the aged can walk into evenings of peace
When religious ritual is not perfumed
By the incense of burning flesh
And childhood dreams are not kicked awake
By nightmares of abuse
When we come to it
Then we will confess that not the Pyramids
With their stones set in mysterious perfection
Nor the Gardens of Babylon
Hanging as eternal beauty
In our collective memory
Not the Grand Canyon
Kindled into delicious color
By Western sunsets
Nor the Danube, flowing its blue soul into Europe
Not the sacred peak of Mount Fuji
Stretching to the Rising Sun
Neither Father Amazon nor Mother Mississippi who, without favor,
Nurture all creatures in the depths and on the shores
These are not the only wonders of the world
When we come to it
We, this people, on this minuscule and kithless globe
Who reach daily for the bomb, the blade and the dagger
Yet who petition in the dark for tokens of peace
We, this people on this mote of matter
In whose mouths abide cankerous words
Which challenge our very existence
Yet out of those same mouths
Come songs of such exquisite sweetness
That the heart falters in its labor
And the body is quieted into awe
We, this people, on this small and drifting planet
Whose hands can strike with such abandon
That in a twinkling, life is sapped from the living
Yet those same hands can touch with such healing, irresistible
tenderness
That the haughty neck is happy to bow
And the proud back is glad to bend
Out of such chaos, of such contradiction
We learn that we are neither devils nor divines
When we come to it
We, this people, on this wayward, floating body
Created on this earth, of this earth
Have the power to fashion for this earth
A climate where every man and every woman
Can live freely without sanctimonious piety
Without crippling fear
When we come to it
We must confess that we are the possible
We are the miraculous, the true wonder of this world
That is when, and only when
We come to it.
Maya Angelou, poem written and delivered in honor of the 50th
anniversary of the United Nations
contributed by Nagalingam
Ethirveerasingham
Saturday 27 October 2007
"If you want to build a ship, don't herd people
together to collect wood and don't assign them tasks and work,
but rather teach them to long for the endless immensity of the
sea." -
Antoine de Saint-Exup�ry (1900-1944)
Sunday 14
October 2007
"They talk of patriotism. I believe in
patriotism, and I also have my own ideal of patriotism.Three things
are necessary for great achievements... First,
feel from the heart... This is the first step to become a patriot,
the very first step.(Second)
You may feel, then; but instead
of spending your energies on frothy talk, have you found any way out, any practical
solution, some help instead of condemnation...? (And Third) Yet, that is not all.
Have you
got the will to surmount mountain high obstructions. If the whole world stands
against you sword in hand, would you still dare to do what you think is
right?... Have you got that steadfastness?
If you have these three things,
each one of you will make miracles..."
Swami Vivekananda
on Patriotism
Sunday 7 October 2007
"There is nothing new in the world except the history
you do not know." Harry S Truman quoted by Stephen Kinzer in All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror
"Can we say of Reich, as
Andre Gide did of Dostoevsky, that he 'remains ever the man
of whom there is no way to make use! He is of the stuff which
displeases every party. Why? Because he never persuaded himself that
less than the whole of his intelligence was necessary to the part he
chose to play, or that for the sake of immediate issues he would be
justified in forcing so delicate an instrument or upsetting its
balance.'"
Wilhelm Reich: Life Force Explorer - James WyckoffMonday 1 October 2007
"..Man often becomes what he believes himself to be. If I keep on
saying to myself that I cannot do a certain thing, it is
possible that I may end by really becoming incapable of doing
it. On the contrary, if I have the belief that I can do it, I
shall surely acquire the capacity to do it, even if I may not
have it at the beginning..."
Mahatma Gandhi
Sunday 16 September 2007
"...The strong man holds in a
living blend strongly marked opposites. Not ordinarily
do men achieve this balance of opposites. The idealists are not usually realistic, and the
realists are not usually idealistic... But life at its best is a creative
syntheses of opposites in fruitful harmony... We must
combine the toughness of the serpent and the softness of the dove, a
tough mind and a tender heart...There is little hope for us until we become
tough minded...
A nation or a civilisation that continues to produce soft minded men purchases its own
spiritual death on an instalment plan..."
A Testament of Hope : The Essential Writings and Speeches of Martin Luther
King, Jr.
"...When we started there were perhaps 6 or 8 of us. Today there are
thousands. Of the original number, 3 or 4 remain. I do not
know how long I myself will be alive. But that does not matter. We
are building a road. Others will arise to take the road
further..."
Sathasivam
Krishnakumar, Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in conversation
with Nadesan Satyendra, 1991
Sunday 5 August 2007
1. �I began a revolution with 82 men. If I had to do it
again, I would do it with 10 or 15 and absolute faith. It does
not matter how small you are if you have faith and a plan of
action..� - Fidel Castro
2. "Life accepts only partners, not bosses, because self
determination is its very root of being." -
Margaret Wheatley
Saturday 21 July 2007
�The scientific search for the basic building
blocks of life has revealed a startling fact: there are none.
The deeper that physicists peer into the nature of reality, the
only thing they find is relationships. Even sub-atomic particles
do not exist alone. One physicist described neutrons, electrons,
etc. as �. . .a set of relationships that reach outward to other
things.� Although physicists still name them as separate, these
particles aren�t ever visible until they�re in relationship with
other particles. Everything in the Universe is composed of these
�bundles of potentiality� that only manifest their potential in
relationship.
We live in a culture that does not acknowledge this scientific
fact. We believe wholeheartedly in the individual and build
organizations based on this erroneous idea. We create org charts
of separate boxes, with lines connecting the boxes that indicate
reporting relationships and alleged channels of communication.
But our neatly drawn organizations are as fictitious as building
blocks are to physicists. The only form of organization used on
this planet is the network�webs of interconnected,
interdependent relationships. This is true for human
organizations as well. Whatever boxes we stuff staff into,
people always reach out to those who will give them information,
be their allies, offer support or cheer them up. Those lines and
boxes are imaginary. The real organization is always a dense
network of relationships.� -
Margaret Wheatley (see also Margaret J. Wheatley -
Leadership and the New Science: Discovering Order in a Chaotic World
)
Tuesday 9 July 2007
"சாதி மல்லிப் பூச்சரமே சங்கத் தமிழ்ப் பாச்சரமே;
எனது வீடு எனது வாழ்வு என்று வாழ்வது வாழ்க்கையா;
இருக்கும் நாலு சுவருக்குள்ளே வாழ நீ ஒரு கைதியா;
தேசம் வேறல்ல தாயும் வேறல்லா ஒன்றுதான்;
தாயைக் காப்பதும் நாட்டைக் காப்பதும் ஒன்றுதான்.. "
Pulamaipithan -
புலவர் புலமைப்பித்தன்
Sunday 1 July 2007
"...a communal purpose without which
we can neither live nor die in this
hostile world can always be called by that ugly word (nationalism). In any case it is a
nationalism whose aim is not power but
dignity and health. If we did not
have to live among intolerant,
narrow-minded, and violent people, I should be the first to throw
over all nationalism in favor of
universal humanity. The objection that we
Jews cannot be proper citizens of the German state, for example, if we want
to be a 'nation' is based on a misunderstanding of the
nature of the state
which springs from the
intolerance of national majorities. Against that
intolerance we shall never be safe, whether we call ourselves a people (or
nation) or not..."
Albert Einstein, 1929
Monday 18 June 2007
�Do you have the patience to wait till your mud settles and
the water is clear? Can you remain unmoving till the right
action arises by itself? The master doesn�t seek fulfilment. Not
seeking, not expecting, she is present and welcome all
things...� - Lao Tzu
�Courage and patience are qualities�one needs very badly
when�placed in difficult circumstances�. But above all
else, what is most needed in a community which considers itself
to be ill-treated at the hands of others, is the virtue of love
and charity.. There is hardly any virtue in the ability to do a
good turn to those who have done similarly by us. That even
criminals do. But it would be some credit if a good turn could
be done to an opponent.� - Mahatma Gandhi
Thursday 16 May 2007
"War is not evil. It is the things which make war
necessary that are evil."
Patrick
Pearse, 'the First President' of Ireland
"..Where there is no justice, there will be violence. We decry the need to
resort to violence. Those responsible for violence are not those who must resort
to it as a last resort. The responsibility of violence rests upon
those who deny justice. The resort to arms is justified, but only as
a last resort, only
after an appeal to reason is no longer
available. But when a resort to arms becomes necessary, it should be
done with pride and not with shame; it should be used with
compassion and not with uncontrolled hate; it must be taken up
always with a clear understanding that it is justified only for the
sake of
liberation of our people and not for the purpose of revenge
or suppression of another person's right to life and liberty and
self-determination " World Council of Indigenous Peoples, 1984
quoted in Jeff Sluka on
National Liberation Movements in Global Perspective
Friday 27 April 2007
�Culture is the way people conduct themselves in
an organization or in a community and the beliefs they hold and
share. Culture is born of a need or cause which galvanises a
group because of the intrinsic underpinning values which appeal
to them personally. The most powerful way to drive cultural
change is through the example of the chief executive.Culture is
bought and not sold. People buy into culture when the leader
�walks the talk'. If there is an alignment between what the
leader says and what he or she does, people will embrace that
change and it will create a momentum of its own. The trick is to
harness that momentum and to manage it so that it becomes an
integral message throughout an organization. Culture must be
institutionalised so that it becomes part of what you do, every
day.." Satyendra Chelvendra, Management Consultant to
Global Financial Institutions, former Managing Director,
Personal Banking, ANZ Bank - reported in the Sydney Morning
Herald, 10 February 2007
Saturday, 14 April 2007 - Hindu New Years Day
"...It is the fight for national
existence which sets culture moving and opens to it the doors of
creation. Later on it is the nation which will ensure the conditions
and framework necessary to culture. The nation gathers together the
various indispensable elements necessary for the creation of a
culture, those elements which alone can give it credibility,
validity, life and creative power. In the same way it is its
national character that will make such a culture open to other
cultures and which will enable it to influence and permeate other
cultures. A non-existent culture can hardly be expected to have
bearing on reality, or to influence reality."
Frantz Fanon at the
Congress of Black African Writers, 1959
"..மொழியும்,
கலையும்,
கலாசாரமும் வளம் பெற்று வளர்ச்சியும் உயர்ச்சியும்
அடையும பொழுதே தேசிய இனக் கட்டமைப்பு இறுக்கம் பெறுகின்றது. பலம்
பெறுகின்றது. மனித வாழ்வும் சமூக உறவுகளும் மேன்மை பெறுகின்றது. தேசிய
நாகரிகம் உன்னதம் பெறுகின்றது.."
Velupillai Pirabakaran
"...Nation building ... is not confined to national liberation
movements, charismatic leaders and liberators, wars of national independence, and the
struggle of national entities to emerge to independence from a position of relative
powerlessness and subservience to a dominant power. Nations are as much cultural as political forms, and the creation of a
unique high culture of world significance
is often central to their legitimation."
John Hutchinson, European Institute,
London School of Economics and
David Aberbach, Department of Jewish Studies,
McGill University, Quebec, Canada in Nations & Nationalism, Volume 4, 1999) |
Thursday 22 March 2007
"..If living
together is so hard....
....what about a separate state... for the Tamils? They have
as good a claim to a nation of their own as most
members of the United Nations. But as always it is a
question of power, and in Sri Lanka the
Sinhalese
have the power.." The
Washington Post, Editorial Page, August 5, 1983
"...Communal riots in which Tamils
are killed, maimed, robbed and rendered homeless are no longer isolated episodes; they are
beginning to become a pernicious habit." Paul Sieghart
International Commission of Jurists March1984 [see
also
1958,
1961,
1974 and
1977]
|
Sunday 11 March 2007
The Rules of Trust
Common sense tells us that there are seven cardinal principles
of trust we should keep in mind:
Trust is not blind. It is unwise to trust people whom you
do not know well, whom you have not observed in action over
time, and who are not committed to the same goals. In practice,
it is hard to know more than 50 people that well. Those 50 can
each, in turn, know another 50, and so on. Large organizations
are not therefore incompatible with the principle of trust, but
they have to be made up of relatively constant, smaller
groupings. The idea that people should move around as much and
as fast as possible in order to get more exposure and more
experience � what the Japanese call the horizontal fast track �
can mean that there is no time to learn to trust anyone and, in
the end, no point, because the organization starts to replace
trust with systems of control.
My title in one large organization was MKR/32. In that capacity,
I wrote memos to FIN/41 or PRO/23. I rarely heard any names, and
I never met the people behind those titles. I had no reason to
trust them and, frankly, no desire to. I was a "temporary role
occupant," in the jargon of the time, a role occupant in an
organization of command and control, based on the premise that
no one could really be trusted. I left after a year. Such places
can be prisons for the human soul.
Trust needs boundaries. Unlimited trust is, in practice,
unrealistic. By trust, organizations really mean confidence, a
confidence in someone's competence and in his or her commitment
to a goal. Define that goal, and the individual or the team can
be left to get on with it. Control is then after the event, when
the results are assessed. It is not a matter of granting
permission before the event Freedom within boundaries works
best, however, when the work unit is self-contained, having the
capability within it to solve its own problems. Trust-based
organizations are, as a result, reengineering their work,
pulling back from the old reductionist models of organization,
in which everything was divided into its component parts or
functions. At first sight, the new holistic designs for the
units of the organization look more expensive because they
duplicate functions and do not necessarily replicate each other.
The energy and effectiveness released by the freedom within
boundaries more than compensates, however. To succeed,
reengineering must be built on trust. When it fails, it is
because trust is absent.
Trust demands learning. An organizational architecture
made up of relatively independent and constant groupings, pushes
the organization toward the sort of federal structure that is
becoming more common everywhere. A necessary condition of
constancy, however, is an ability to change: If one set of
people cannot be exchanged for another set when circumstances
alter, then the first set must adapt or die. The constant groups
must always be flexible enough to change when times and
customers demand it. They must also keep themselves abreast of
change, forever exploring new options and new technologies. They
must create a real learning culture. The choice of people for
these groups is therefore crucial. Every individual has to be
capable of self-renewal. Recruitment and placement be-come key,
along with the choice of group leaders. Such topics will require
the serious attention of senior management. They should not be
delegated to a lower echelon of human resources.
Trust is tough. The reality is, however, that even the
best recruiters and the best judges of character will get it
wrong sometimes. When trust proves to be misplaced-not because
people are deceitful or malicious but because they do not live
up to expectations or cannot be relied on to do what is needed �
then those people have to go. Where you cannot trust, you have
to become a checker once more, with all the systems of control
that involves. Therefore, for the sake of the whole, the
individual must leave. Trust has to be ruthless. It is
incompatible with any promise of a job for life. After all, who
can be so sure of their recruitment procedures that they are
prepared to trust forever those whom they select? It is because
trust is so important but so risky, that organizations tend to
restrict their core commitments to a smaller group of what I
call trusties. But that policy in turn pushes the organization
toward a core/periphery model, one that can, if practitioners
are not careful, degenerate into a set of purely formal
contractual relationships with all the outsiders. Nothing is
simple; there is paradox everywhere.
Trust needs bonding. Self-contained units responsible for
delivering specified results are the necessary building blocks
of an organization based on trust, but long-lasting groups of
trusties can create their own problems, those of organizations
within the organization. For the whole to work, the goals of the
smaller units have to gel with the goals of the whole. The
blossoming of vision and mission statements is one attempt to
deal with integration, as are campaigns for total quality or
excellence. Such things matter. Or rather, if they did not
exist, their absence would matter. They are not, however, enough
in themselves. They need to be backed up by exhortation and
personal example. Anita Roddick holds her spreading Body Shop
together by what can best be called "personal infection,"
pouring her energies into the reinforcement of her values and
beliefs through every medium she can find. It is always a
dangerous strategy to personalize a mission, in case the person
stumbles or falls, as the Body Shop nearly did last year after
unfavorable publicity, but organizations based on trust need
that sort of personal statement from their leaders.
Trust is not and never can be an impersonal
commodity. Trust needs touch. Visionary leaders, no matter
how articulate, are not enough. A shared commitment still
requires personal contact to make it real. To augment John
Naisbitt's telling phrase, high tech has to be balanced by high
touch to build high-trust organizations. Paradoxically, the more
virtual an organization becomes, the more its people need to
meet in person. The meetings, however, are different. They are
more about process than task, more concerned that people get to
know each other than that they de- liver. Videoconferences are
more task focused, but they are easier and more productive if
the individuals know each other as people, not just as images on
the screen. Work and play, therefore, alternate in many of the
Corporate get-togethers that now fill the conference resorts out
of season. These are not perks for the privileged; they are the
necessary lubricants of virtuality, occasions not only for
getting to know each other and for meeting the leaders but also
for reinforcing Corporate goals and rethinking Corporate
strategies. As one who delivers the occasional "cabaret" at such
occasions, I am always surprised to find how few of the
participants have met each other in person, even if they have
worked together before. I am then further surprised by how
quickly a common mood develops. You can almost watch the culture
grow, and you wonder how they could have worked effectively
without it.
Trust requires leaders. At their best, the
units in good trust-based organizations hardly have to be
managed, but they do need a multiplicity of leaders. I once
teased an English audience by comparing a team of Englishmen to
a rowing crew on the river � eight men going backward as fast as
they can without talking to each other, steered by the one
person who can't row! I thought it quite witty at the time, but
I was corrected after the session by one of the participants,
who had once been an Olympic oarsman. "How do you think we could
go backward so: fast without communicating, steered by this
little fellow in the stern, if we didn�t know each other very
well, didn�t have total confidence to do our jobs and a shared
commitment � almost a passion � for the same goal! It is the
perfect formula for a team."
I had to admit it � he was right. "But tell me," I said to him,
"who is the manager of this team!" "There isn�t one," he
replied, after thinking about it. "Unless that is what you call
our part-time administrator back in the office." Manager, he was
reminding me, is a low-status title in organizations of
colleagues.
"Well, then, who is the leader ? "That depends," he said.
"When we are racing, it is the little chap who is steering,
because he is the only one who can see where we are going. But
there is also the stroke, who sets the standard for all of us.
He is a leader, too, in a way. But off the river, it's the
captain of the crew, who selects us, bonds us together, builds
our commitment to our goal and our dedication. Lastly, in
training, there is our coach, who is undoubtedly the main
influence on our work. So you see," he concluded, "there isn't a
simple answer to your question." A rowing crew, I realized,
has to be based on trust if it is to have any chance of success.
And if any member of that crew does not pull his weight, then he
does not deserve the confidence of the others and must be asked
to leave. Nor can all the leadership requirements be discharged
by one person, no matter how great or how good. -
Charles Handy
author of
The Elephant and the Flea in
How do
you manage people who you do not see
Monday 29 January 2007
" ...The irony is that to do things faster, you
often have to go slower. You have to be more reflective. You have to develop real trust.
You have to develop the abilities of people to think together. Why? Because it requires
you to go through basic redesigns. You need to build a shared understanding of how the
present system works.... People must trust one another through difficult systemic
changes...
...First off, we often don't take any
responsibility for what we have created, which is obviously
patently absurd at some level. Organizations work the way they
work because human beings create them that way! It isn't the
laws of physics. And then people's baseline reality, what they
often report, is that "the system is doing it to me. Our reward
systems are killing us. Our strategy is no good." It's always
something external to me, some thing which is now imposing
itself on me. So you might very well say, "Thought creates
organizations, and then organizations hold human beings
prisoner," or as
David Bohm
used to say, "Thought creates the world and then says 'I didn't
do it.'"
One very simple way to think about everything we are doing is to
just take that simple aphorism of Bohm's and say, "Thought
creates the world"; and then what if it says, "I did it"? That
would be the reintegration of mind and matter. That would be
like saying, "Oh! Our organizational systems are ridiculous. How
did we create these?" To me, the essence of what systems
thinking is all about is people beginning to consciously
discover and conceptually explain and account for how their own
patterns of thought and interaction, often very habitual and
unaware patterns, patterns that we haven't ever reflected on,
manifest on a large scale, and create the very forces which the
organization then 'is doing it to me.'
And then they complete that feedback loop, and
the most profound experiences I've ever had in consulting have
always been when people suddenly go, "Holy cow! Look what we
are doing to ourselves!" And I have literally heard people
say things like that. Look what we are doing to ourselves.
Given the way we operate, no wonder we can't win! And what
is always significant to me, in those moments, is the we.
Not "you," not "them," but we."
Peter Senge author of
the Fifth Discipline
Thursday 25
January 2007
"...The guerrilla force is independent of the civilian
population, in action as well as in military organisation; consequently it need not assume
the direct defence of the peasant population. The protection of the population depends on
the progressive destruction of the enemy's military potential. It is relative to the
overall balance of forces: the populace will be completely safe when the opposing forces
are completely defeated....... By restricting
itself to the task of protecting civilians or passive self-defence, the
guerrilla unit ceases to be the vanguard of the people as a whole and
deprives itself of a national perspective... By choosing to operate at this level, it may be able to provide protection
for the population for a limited time. But in the long run the opposite is true:
self-defence undermines the security of the civilian population.... limiting oneself to passive defence is to place
oneself in the position of being unable to protect the population and to expose one's own
forces to attrition. On the other hand, to seek for ways to attack the enemy is to put him
on the permanent defensive to exhaust him and prevent him from expanding his activities,
to wrest the initiative from him, and to impede his search operations..."
Regis Debray in Revolution in the Revolution?
Sunday 22 January 2007
"God gives us opportunities to be of service to
humanity, to our country, to ourselves. You must be ready and equipped to make use of
those opportunities ...More than 2500 years ago a
great Tamil poet wrote "Every country is my country, every human being is my
kinsman". The brotherhood of man and universal love are themes central to
practically all religions of the world. From this followed human rights such as the right
to life, right to freedom of thought and speech and right to equality between man and
man........ According to the Upanishads life is work and work is
worship. So in the evening of my life I have fought many a battle as a member of the Civil
Rights Movement... I have won a few and lost many. I console myself with the thought
that what matters is the fight for the cause and not the results. What is important is the
fight and struggle for justice and not the victory nor the defeat.The saying in
Bhagavad Gita
'To action you have a right but not to the fruits thereof' has been a source of great
comfort to me in my life as it has enabled me to cultivate a sense of detachment which is
necessary for happiness and peace of mind." - from
Somasunderam Nadesan at the Peter Pillai Award
Presentation, 1984
Saturday 13 January 2007
"...A key psychology for leading from good to great
is the Stockdale Paradox. Retain absolute faith that you can and will
prevail in the end regardless of the difficulties, and at the same
time confront the most brutal facts of your current reality,
whatever they might be... Create a culture wherein people have a
tremendous opportunity to be heard and, ultimately, for the truth to be
heard. Creating a climate where truth is heard involves four basic
practices: 1 Lead with questions, not answers. 2 Engage in dialogue, not
coercion. 3. Conduct autopsies without blame. and 4. Build red flag
mechanisms that turn information into information that cannot be
ignored. Leadership does not begin just with vision. It begins with
getting people to confront the brutal facts and to act on the
implications...Spending time and energy trying to 'motivate' people is a
waste of effort. The real question is not 'How do we motivate our
people?" If you have the right people, they will be self motivated.
The key is not to de-motivate them. One of the primary ways to
de-motivate people is to ignore the brutal facts of reality.."
Jim Collins in Good to Great
Tuesday 9 January 2007
"For a moral order to be sustained it has to take on
a form which compels us, which we can feel and which can be
acted upon. The process of re-enactment reinforces
meaning. That is why religion is full of ritualised enactments of
ceremony.... Historical continuity is a profound psychological need. We
also need to believe
in a good past
that endorses our present. We all like
to think well of our forbears. It is apart of a healthy self image. As a
result we need to give great credence to the past. This may sound
anachronistic in an age where change is meteoric and the past tends to
be dismissed as arcane. But psychological continuity is the foundation
stone of our sense of order.. Our
traditions make us secure.." Mark C.
Scott in Reinspiring the Corporation: The Seven Seminal Paths to Corporate GreatnessBritish Foreign Secretary, Lord Palmerston
(1784-1865)
"War is nothing but a
continuation of politics with the admixture of other means" -
Karl Von Clausewtiz
(1780 - 1831)
"...We must never forget, that under modern conditions of
life, science and technology, all war has become greatly brutalized and that no
one who joins in it, even in self-defense, can escape becoming also in a measure
brutalized. Modern war cannot be limited in its destructive method and the
inevitable debasement of all participants... we as well as our enemies have
contributed to the proof that the central moral problem is war and not its
methods..."Harry L. Stimson, US Secretary of State 1929-1933, 'The
Nuremberg Trial: Landmark in Law', Foreign Affairs, 1947 - quoted by
Albert Speer in
Inside the Third
Reich 1970
"Just because you don't take an interest in politics
doesn't mean politics won't take an interest in you."-
Pericles, 430 BC
Continued
- Reflections
2006......
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