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- <text id=94TT1696>
- <title>
- Dec. 05, 1994: Cover:Leadership-Real Points of Light
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 05, 1994 50 for the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER/LEADERSHIP, Page 76
- The Real Points of Light
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Its charter fading, its goals diverging, the nation needs to
- redefine what leadership means
- </p>
- <p>By Lance Morrow
- </p>
- <p> The story of American leadership--and its status now--owes
- something to the sagas of great American families. Read the
- classic plot as an allegory:
- </p>
- <p> A founding giant--visionary, ruthless perhaps--establishes
- the fortune. His sons try to consolidate it. As the generations
- follow one another, the founder's energy dissipates, like gases
- flung out from a star. Heirs proliferate. They squabble. Trust
- funds thin out. Distant cousins go for one another's throats.
- By the fourth or fifth generation, they are turning up with
- guilt complexes about the family name and about the founder's
- long-ago crimes of piracy. Some take to drugs, others to environmentalism.
- Some heir will tithe his trust fund to a cult. An heiress will
- be arrested in Saks for shoplifting. Some of the cousins will
- embrace penitential political correctness, the noblesse oblige
- of overcompensating elites. Everything--power, glory, wealth,
- dignity--will be ground down at last to the merely human and
- the occasionally scandalous. The family no longer breeds giants,
- just threadbare eccentrics and problem cases and a preponderance
- of ordinary Americans; the family will have evolved, so to speak,
- into a kind of democracy with a famous name.
- </p>
- <p> Like America.
- </p>
- <p> These are some of the plot elements of American leadership.
- The complex maturity of the national success brings with it,
- paradoxically, a diminution and dispersal. Hierarchies flatten
- out. Presidents of the U.S. and lesser leaders will be ground
- down, as the great families were. Scandals, like boll weevils
- (or special prosecutors), will chew into their administrations.
- Anyone's 15 minutes of fame is liable to end in a poofing flameout
- of indignity.
- </p>
- <p> But the story ends to begin again. Each dispersal regroups in
- a new coalescence. America, for all its disorder, has tremendous
- energy still. The nation remains programmed to reinvent itself.
- Fresh leadership somehow still manages to burst up from the
- chaotic but creative mix. New generations--even of a degenerating
- family--produce surprises, occasionally geniuses, just as
- new immigrants still struggle into the country full of fire,
- hoping to establish their own American sagas.
- </p>
- <p> But these energies are pouring into altered formats. Leadership
- was once attended by a certain amount of mystery. Today leadership
- is a subject enveloped not so much by mystique as by mystification.
- Just what is leadership? How does it work? Publishers churn
- out books on leadership by the hundreds--mostly treatises
- on technique, on how to function as an agile and adapting leader
- in the high-velocity channels of global business.
- </p>
- <p> The premise of the books is basic: the great family model of
- authority is defunct. The world has changed, and with it the
- context of leaders and followers--even the conception of what
- it means to lead.
- </p>
- <p> The end of the cold war--the vanishing of a huge external
- threat that helped give focus and a context of significance
- to both leaders and followers--has left Americans in a state
- of moral disorientation, as if they had lost a defining purpose.
- </p>
- <p> The rise of global competition has cost America its triumphant,
- unassailable postwar leadership in the world.
- </p>
- <p> Each expansion of democracy and power (for women, for example,
- or for minorities) in effect rewrites the social contract and
- thus disturbs the previous arrangement of leadership. Inundations
- of immigrants confuse the American sense of identity, of what
- it means to be an American.
- </p>
- <p> Cultural relativism rattles the self-confidence so critical
- to strong leadership and undermines the authority of established
- leaders. Challenges from constituencies all over the cultural,
- sexual and ethical map leave leaders confused not only about
- their priorities but also about their basic framework of right
- and wrong. How to accommodate gay rights, for example, to traditional
- religious beliefs?
- </p>
- <p> Equally destabilizing has been the almost inconceivably rapid
- democratization of information--the electronic saturation
- of the world. Once, the leader was the one who knew things and
- therefore understood what the followers did not: knowledge was
- power, and following was an act of faith. Now sheer, unexpurgated
- information accelerates history. It is also hell on mystique.
- The media help create leaders and then eat them alive--a sort
- of electronic Aztec sacrifice.
- </p>
- <p> A citizen in a bad mood sees a long devolution from the original
- giants, a fragmentation of American purpose and identity, a
- collapse of the nation's organizing energies. Which, according
- to this pessimistic reading, is where leadership stands now:
- at the feuding, fifth-cousin stage.
- </p>
- <p> A citizen in a good mood sees that, all things considered, the
- fifth cousins are doing well enough for themselves--leading
- the world, for example, in the information fields that will
- shape the next century. Reports of the death of American vitality
- are exaggerated.
- </p>
- <p> Mussolini remarked, "It's not so much that it is difficult to
- rule Italy. It's useless." Surveying the postelection wreckage,
- Bill Clinton may be tempted to endorse a similar thought. But
- the age of Mussolinis has ended (one trusts) in what are now
- the Western democracies. The age of pre-eminently powerful presidencies
- may be over as well. The focus of leadership disperses. The
- real "thousand points of light" in America are the new multiple
- centers of leadership in business, the sciences and arts, politics,
- religion, community life and so on.
- </p>
- <p> There is no sense in getting too inspired or sanguine. In the
- 1990s a cynic's eye reads a certain rotted sociology in important
- places--an America disuniting into self-righteous tribalism
- (gridlocking interest groups; the indignant, victim-singing,
- litigating, on-the-make cousins, who are fighting over a national
- patrimony spread too thin).
- </p>
- <p> It is not coincidental that the crisis of leadership arises
- at a time when a baby boomer sits in the White House and his
- generation has inherited positions of power throughout the society.
- In a traditional sense, the baby boomers never learned leadership.
- They did not inherit self-confidence and instinctive ease as
- leaders. They taught themselves, in fact, that leadership was
- suspect, corrupt, sinister and patriarchal. During the 1960s
- Americans began a decisive journey across the moral border from
- the old territory of duty to the new land of rights. The old
- culture of duty encouraged the skills of leadership and assumed
- its legitimacy. Then, in part because of the disastrous exercise
- of American "duty" in Vietnam, duty gave way to the very different
- universe of rights and, after that, of entitlements (which represent
- the decadence of the American guarantee). John Kennedy's Inaugural
- "Ask not" was a perfect expression of the duty ethic. The new
- culture of rights reversed the flow from individual to society:
- it said, "Ask what your country can do for you; you are a victim,
- and everyone owes you."
- </p>
- <p> The need for leadership in national crisis is always clear.
- If leadership fails, disaster results: cause and effect. The
- imperative for leadership in today's America--a mature democracy
- in relative peacetime, ramshackling along on cruise control
- (though with engine knocks, a hole in the muffler and rust on
- the underbody), not quite dysfunctional--is not nearly so
- clear and immediate.
- </p>
- <p> And yet problems remain. They have much to do with the world's
- problems now (the economy, trade, environment, nuclear proliferation,
- foreign policy to address immense slaughter and tumult elsewhere),
- as well as sizable issues at home, moral and otherwise (crime,
- poverty, drugs, education, abortion, affirmative action).
- </p>
- <p> Old-style leaders were expected to have a vision, a solution,
- and then lead followers to it. This was, of course, sometimes
- dangerous: suppose that the leader, endowed with charisma and
- a gift for keeping the military happy, turns out to be a visionary
- monster, a Hitler? Such leadership is always a temptation, the
- path of least resistance, especially during unstable times.
- </p>
- <p> But for the moment, a new story of American families seems to
- be emerging, along somewhat less traditional leadership lines.
- The sort of leader needed today is the kind who can assume a
- reasonably well-educated and informed electorate but help it
- sort through the inundations of information and opinion (much
- of it corrupt, self-serving, pseudo-moral) toward solutions.
- Americans need leaders who will not so much enforce a vision
- (though visions remain indispensable) as lead people to understand
- the problems they face together and the costs and effort necessary
- to solve them--the changes in behavior and attitude sometimes,
- the sacrifices and above all the need to think and adapt. The
- key to leadership now is to get Americans to act in concert
- and take responsibility for the courses that they have set for
- themselves.
- </p>
- <p> The energy and the real light sources--the new leaders--are there. The job for Americans--after passing through a
- stage of disunion and redefinition--is to try to find their
- way toward common ground again. Enough of the Pluribus, for
- the moment; a little more of the Unum.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-