MisterSteve

joined 1 year ago
[–] MisterSteve@lemmy.world 2 points 7 months ago

I was hoping for a recording of the news release about this discovery in that helium-elevated voice.

[–] MisterSteve@lemmy.world 18 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Part of the problem, IMO, is found in the deep divisions presently found in our country. Most forward progress comes from the network in which people exist (notwithstanding the myth of "rugged individualists" as the secret to success). Our present society is riven with deep divisions along generational, ideological, political, socio-economic, and racial lines. If we want to break out of the present "us vs. them" trap we're in, we have to begin to reach across the divisions in everyway possible. (And I am not suggesting that we give up our differences, only that we reference them only when they are appropriate to the overall welfare of our network/society/culture.)

It's a lengthy quote, but it comes from one of the foremost authorities on democratic leadership, James MacGregor Burns:

"The function of leadership is to engage followers, not merely to activate them, to commingle needs and aspirations and goals in a common enterprise, and in the process to make better citizens of both leaders and followers. To move from manipulation to power-wielding is to move from the arithmetic of everyday contacts and collisions to the geometry of the structure and dynamics of interaction. It is to move from checkers to chess, for in the “game of kings” we estimate the powers of our chessmen and the intentions and calculations and indeed the motives of our adversary. But democratic leadership moves far beyond chess because, as we play the game, the chessmen come alive, the bishops and knights and pawns take part on their own terms and with their own motivations, values, and goals, and the game moves ahead with new momentum, direction, and possibilities. In real life the most practical advice for leaders is not to treat pawns like pawns, nor princes like princes, but all persons like persons." ~Burns, 'Leadership,' (1978)

Edit: typo

[–] MisterSteve@lemmy.world 5 points 9 months ago

Title SHOULD read...

"North Korea launches a suspected intermediate-range ballistic missile that can reach distant US bases...ONCE."

NK would be a smoldering pile of radioactive ash before it made a second launch. And Lil' Kim knows it.

[–] MisterSteve@lemmy.world 7 points 9 months ago

Kid in old age, probably: "Yeah, I was working in the Salt Mines at 11. Then they petered out, so I got me a job at the Pepper Mill. By the time I retired, I was first shift at the Olive Garden, doling out shredded cheese like a fiend. Yessir! Them was the days!"

[–] MisterSteve@lemmy.world 8 points 11 months ago

This. Exactly how I ended up married!

(Come to think of it, the honeymoon ran like that, too.) /s

[–] MisterSteve@lemmy.world 7 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Harry Chapin

Or

Karen Carpenter

(I know, they're kinda sappy but they were on my Playlist when I was young and in love.)