On 8/15/13 9:41 AM, glen wrote:
But I don't think my critique of his actions or affect is ad hominem. I think such a critique is necessary.
Hmm, I often think "here we go again -- mythical man month" when people are added to a project -- in general you can expect things to slow down not speed up. Organizations are dumb. And leaders often aren't any smarter than the non-leaders, they 1) are time-tested individuals that have been observed not to screw things up terribly, 2) just the sort that like the satisfaction of giving directives and seek that gratification 3) are social people and `consensus builders' 4) have poor impulse control and it is mistaken for `leadership' (here thinking someone like Eliot Spizer or Anthony Weiner), or 5) somewhere up on the scale of psychopathic personality traits.

My impression is that individual faults are analyzed to death in the media just because an individual has some tractability and expectation of self-consistency. One personality is a specific thing to discuss, not a complicated contradictory system, like a corporation that no one has an expectations of other than, say, quarterly profits and shiny T.V. ads. Also, one person is vulnerable. I think there's a tendency to focus on the decisions of a person makes because they can be perceived as correctable. In contrast, if a pharmaceutical company puts out dangerous compounds and through a sustained and expensive campaign, when people start experiencing life threatening side effects, no one blames their CEO. It's just a fact of life. The `system' which is `good' did it. Meanwhile, Snowden or Cheney or Weiner are people we can all talk about, but I argue the criticism should be focused at those decisions of those at the top, and those decisions should be held to a higher standard.
So, finally, here's my question. In this age of "outsider everything", shouldn't we be seeing (and methodically classifying) a diversity of trust establishing methods? What new measures of trust do, say, the millenials (or younger) use? Or are we older folk doomed to tsk tsking and yelling "get off my lawn"?

Well, I don't really trust. I just accept that I'm often powerless. To the extent I can identify bad arguments, I avoid or try to stop the kind of people that make them over and over. If there is no story a person can rationalize or falsify, it's all just guesswork anyway.

Marcus

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