I am also listening about how a newspaper Frederick Douglass founded after the Civil War struggled. And a bank founded for Black Americans had to close even though they made Douglass president as a last ditch effort to save it. Entrepreneurship is important but very hard.
In this 2014 interview, Blackstone's Stephen Schwarzman talks about how almost everyone rejected him when he tried to start the firm because it was new.
And now as a CEO he has a different role—he must be careful about everything he says.
In this 2019 interview, Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, emphasizes that in a massive organization, you can do a massive amount of good. (But, you have to be able to work with people!)
And Microsoft's purpose is to help others be entrepreneurial.
No! Why?! So sad! Police officers, why are we killing people? This is extremely upsetting for people in Minneapolis - St. Paul. Like, have police officers learned nothing? This is terrible.
@DrAaronNew Three points:
- We should be slow to take justice into our own hands as David was in 1 Samuel 24. Romans 12:19 "vengeance is mine …. says the Lord".
- Paige Patterson was untrustworthy as a shepherd and so was removed from his position.
@DrAaronNew If people want to read more, Paige Patterson writes the argument in the four views book "Who Runs the Church? 4 Views on Church Government" (Zondervan, 2004) for one pastor being in charge of a local church. The other three authors push back.
@DrAaronNew Paige Patterson is incorrect in how he describes an "overseer" "meaning literally 'to see above' … a term pointing … to his vision casting." This is a word fallacy, bad Greek, and anachronistic.
No, it is one who watches over, supervises, visits, looks upon, examines.
I continue to think that reading history is the best preparation for wise leadership. You are struck by details, attitudes, and relationships; and it registers in your mind:
"*That* made a difference. Inspiring!"
Or, "Look at how that capable person made a mistake! Duly noted!"
As I feel more optimistic about many getting the vaccine and the covid relief bill helping the poor in the US, I am reminded that there is injustice, suffering, and danger elsewhere: Myanmar, Belarus, Yemen, Ukraine, Russia, China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and North Korea. God help us.
1. I'm reminded to pray because it is overwhelming. 2. I appreciate experts keeping us up to date about their sense of horror about these matters. 3. May the US leadership be wise. 4. Long-term, let's encourage people to live in other countries with generosity and curiosity.
And Brazil with poor leadership and a terrible tragic crisis.
I have been thinking about how Jeff Immelt—who I remember being interviewed by Bill Hybels at the 2014 Global Leadership Summit (vimeo.com/128173175)—ended up not being a successful CEO of G.E. (). Do we listen to people prematurely? Or was he unlucky?
"This person is successful! They are CEO of a large company! Learn about leadership from them!"
7 years later: "This person took their company into the ground. They had repeated poor judgment and execution and integrity! I would not trust what they have to say!"
Lesson here?
I learned a lot about leadership from Jack Welch, Jeff Immelt's predecessor ... at least I think I did. Or did Welch just get lucky?
Fame and success can be fleeting!
You shouldn't name something after someone who is still alive because they still have time to disappoint you.
Vyacheslav Volodin is who Franklin Graham met with in March 2019. He has been sanctioned by the US and EU since 2014 for the Ukraine invasion. Volodin spews lies—suggesting Germany poisoned Alexei Navalny and that those arrested for the Capitol violence are political prisoners.
Franklin Graham said he believed Trump about Trump's questioning of the results of the election and then Graham said that the violence at the Capitol was from Antifa.