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Why Clever And Lazy People Make The Best Leaders

10 pointsby 0coolabout 11 years ago

3 comments

ArkyBeagleabout 11 years ago
Erich von Manstein may or may not have been an actual Nazi. The German ( Prussian, really ) Junkers ( pr. Yoonkurss ) class - and I do mean class in a hereditary sense - would have been more dependent on an honor code than on who happened to be Chancellor at the time.<p>Manstein was dismissed by Hitler at one point. He helped with the plausible deniability ... thing, the &quot;myth of a clean Wermacht&quot;[ Wikipedia ]. That was a Useful idea in resolving the legalities of the War. Whether it was true or not is almost moot.<p>No, there almost certainly can&#x27;t be any stats to back this up. It&#x27;s barely a just-so story.<p>The money shot is: &quot;Anyone who is both clever and lazy is qualified for the highest leadership duties, because he possesses the intellectual clarity and the composure necessary for difficult decisions.&quot; This statement is roughly descriptive and barely that. But it doubtless contains some measure of wisdom. Clarity is critical. Non delusional clarity is even better.<p>Another corollary aphorism is &quot;a smart man wouldn&#x27;t do that; a lazy man wouldn&#x27;t do that.&quot; That&#x27;s a &quot;koan&quot; about allowing that still small voice that nags you not to do something some credence. Especially in dynamic situations, allowing a situation to run to a critical state may be better than trying to anticipate something that&#x27;s too complex to map in detail.<p>I suppose the deeper irony of the piece is assuming away ethics as a given when the subject was imprisoned for &quot;war crimes&quot;. This being said, that&#x27;s one whale of an ethical conundrum, to have been an ostensibly Prussian military officer in those times.
m_cabout 11 years ago
The term &#x27;lazy&#x27; here is a bit misleading. In my view it&#x27;s not meant in the sense of someone who slothful, but rather someone who aims to do things as efficiently as possible.<p>Sticking with the military context, one of the British Army&#x27;s principles of war is &#x27;economy of effort&#x27;, which I think is a better description. Effective leaders focus on the high value activities, use resources well and delegate.
dm2about 11 years ago
Are there any stats to back this up?<p>A quote from a Nazi strategist does not answer the question of &quot;why&quot; or even prove the statement is true.<p>Lazy people certainly do not make the best CEOs. I don&#x27;t know a single person that I look up to that I would consider lazy.