Monthly Archives: May 2016

Who Cares About Leadership?

By | May 11, 2016

[May 11, 2016]  The other day I was perusing the Internet looking at the popularity of various ideas.  My interest was how the subject of leadership compared with other concepts such as gaming, music, food, and sports.  Leadership was hardly a blip on the radar (depending on how it’s measured), while music and television were consistently at the… Read More »

Political Leadership: Charles Krauthammer

[May 8, 2016]  Ideas!  Where we get them, how they develop, who argues for what, and how well ideas are argued have always been at the core of the understanding of any society.  No contemporary writer has been more significant and coherent than Charles Krauthammer; political commentator, syndicated columnist, former psychiatrist, confined to a wheelchair, and even loves… Read More »

Judgments: by Army Vet

By | May 7, 2016

[May 7, 2016]  Army Vet reflects today on COWED GENERALS and ADMIRALS. What to know something?  Generals and admirals are amateurs but not in the way common man thinks.  They’re amateurs in fighting new and immerging threats to their nations.  They’re amateurs because they’re soldiers when they should be warriors.  I say, think like a soldier, die like… Read More »

What to Improve in Teenager Leadership (Part 3)

[May 3, 2016]  In Parts 1 and 2 of this three-part series, I argued that teenagers lack leadership skills’ training and proposed that a formalized teenager leadership system be established.  When teenager leadership is overlooked, as it has been historically, the contributions of those young folks are stunted.  By teaching them early in their development, leadership will become… Read More »