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Carnes Lord

  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    Second, and more to the point of the contemporary moment, if this book can be said to belong to the literary genre of “mirror of princes,” no one today better resembles the face in that mirror than the forty-fifth president of the United States.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    the practice of American statecraft has shown little improvement in the Bush and Obama eras, while the negative trends I identified in areas such as public administration, law, and education have worsened markedly. Indeed, they are a significant part of the explanation for the Trump revolution.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    In these and other respects, they look to presidents not only for competent management of the nation’s affairs, but for justice and a measure of inspiration. This is why the character of presidents matters. Indeed, given the ethos of instant gratification that pervades popular culture throughout much of the West today, personal integrity in our leaders seems both more fragile and more necessary than ever.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    “Leadership” in such contexts is something almost wholly benign. It is seen as an exquisitely democratic activity, one in which the interests of leaders and the interests of followers mostly coincide, leaders are keenly sensitive to the needs and wants of followers, and decision-making is highly consensual. As such, it is a fundamentally apolitical concept, one that ignores central concerns of political leadership such as power and authority. It has succeeded in making leadership entirely respectable, not to say “politically correct,” but at the price of a loss of clarity about the problematic aspects of leadership in democratic as well as other societies.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    Leadership is less necessary in times and places where state and society are in good working order. In times of economic prosperity and international stability, the issue of leadership tends to recede still further in the general consciousness. It is reasonable to assume that the advanced democracies today are less in need of strong leadership than are the emerging or would-be democracies of the former Communist bloc, or for that matter the democracies, nominal democracies, and traditional and autocratic regimes of the developing world.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    Some may find it odd that a study of modern leadership makes occasional use of examples from the ancient world; the explanation is that the character of modern leadership reveals itself fully only from a vantage point beyond itself.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    Machiavelli’s Prince (1513) is the most famous treatise on political leadership ever written.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    As I will argue (), the science of politics as studied in our universities is not such a theory, nor, given its fundamental premises, is it capable of providing one. I will suggest that traditional political science, especially in its original incarnation in the thought of the Greek philosopher Aristotle, comes closer to providing, if not a full-blown theory of statecraft, at any rate a conceptual foundation for one that is in important respects more satisfactory and better suited to contemporary requirements.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    Particular statements about contemporary leaders must be understood in the context in which they appear and in the light of the argument of the work as a whole.
  • juanmanuelliehas quoted2 years ago
    Constitutional democracy is supposed to rely on the rule of law rather than the rule of men.
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