We would need to agree on what characteristics were really unacceptable. — Bitter Crank
Megalomania is not desirable, but most leaders have at least a mild case, not matter what the field. Narcissism is undesirable, but again, most leaders have at least a modest degree of self-adoration (you just about have to have it). Insensitivity is undesirable, but a certain amount of insensitivity is a desirable feature when it comes to critical negotiations. Psychopathy is mot all or nothing, and many good executives have a modest dose of psychopathy -- it makes it possible for them to carry out unpopular policies with confidence (like laying off 5,000 surplus workers whose labor is no longer needed). — Bitter Crank
Maybe the next logical step is determining whether there is any truth in the claims that such and such an actual leader is disabled by some quality. — Bitter Crank
Most people have at least several minor flaws, and many people -- including famous successful ones -- have several major flaws -- and are none-the-less successful. Look at F. D. Roosevelt. Being confined to a wheelchair was a tremendous political liability (in that time, in that place). Roosevelt's methods of dealing with people could be quite opaque and manipulative. His marriage was not good. He broke a long-standing precedent in running for a third (never mind fourth) term. Was FDR altogether on the level?
John F. Kennedy also had some significant flaws in his health and character; Nixon too. Was Kennedy's many affairs while serving as president (2.7 years) unacceptable? What about his shaky physical health? Nixon? A lot of people loathed Richard M. Nixon for good reason before he became president. Tricky Dick had to assert that "I am not a crook!" Most presidents do not NEED to say such a thing.
Donald Trumps main liability seems to be that he had so little formal political experience before winning the election. But then, Eisenhower didn't have any political experience as such before he became president. — Bitter Crank
Look at F. D. Roosevelt. Being confined to a wheelchair was a tremendous political liability (in that time, in that place). — Bitter Crank
I'm not ideologically advocating a certain type of personality, just a personality that does not display undesirable traits. — Posty McPostface
I don't think there's a big chance of a 'true' psychopath making his or her way into the office. — Posty McPostface
ALL personalities (everybody) will display undesirable traits at times. — Bitter Crank
I agree; people who are very psychopathic do not behave normally; they do not display loyalty, stability in projects, long term residence, etc. There psychopathic behaviors make them very poor candidates for public office. — Bitter Crank
I said a little psychopathy might make someone a more effective executive. The problem comes when there is more than a little psychopathic distortion present, but not enough to be terribly noticeable. — Bitter Crank
Just a fun fact that because we didn't have TV's back then his voice was heard through the radio instead. Just thought that was kind of a cool thing to consider. — Posty McPostface
If there would be anything in my life that I would want to leave as a mark on human history, it would be to institute some kind of test to prevent people of such undesirable traits from ever taking office. — Posty McPostface
what IS the secret of keeping people like Donald Trump out of office? — Bitter Crank
what IS the secret of keeping people like Donald Trump out of office? — Bitter Crank
An educated electorate. — unenlightened
The number of college educated people has been consistently rising over the past few decades, I'm not sure the same can be said for the quality of our leaders, so the empirical evidence would seem to contradict this theory. — Pseudonym
The overwhelming majority of Members of Congress have a college education. The dominant professions of Members are public service/politics, business, and law.
18 Members of the House have no educational degree beyond a high school diploma;
eight Members of the House have associate’s degrees as their highest degrees;
100 Members of the House and 21 Senators earned a master’s degree as their
highest attained degrees;
167 Members of the House (37.8% of the House) and 55 Senators (55% of the Senate) hold law degrees;
22 Representatives18 and 2 Senators have doctoral (Ph.D., D.Phil., Ed.D., or D. Min) degrees; and
18 Members of the House and 3 Senators have medical degrees.19 — Congressional Research Service
I think this is due to the apparently anti-intellectual sentiment widespread in America. — Posty McPostface
I noticed that you posted in that linked thread, have your opinions and beliefs changed on the matter? — Posty McPostface
the empirical evidence would seem to contradict this theory. — Pseudonym
People vote for arseholes, because they are arseholes. — unenlightened
Therefore, that points at a certainpsychological profile(educational background) that one oughtnothave to assume positions of power and influence. (notice the 'not' now being crossed out and now affirming an ideologically driven norm).
Are you suggesting that the quality of our leaders has risen because they are well-educated, or are you agreeing that education is not the answer on the grounds that both our leaders and our electorate seem to be increasingly well educated yet still manage to run a country in a manner which is manifestly a shambles. — Pseudonym
I'm not sure if you're supporting the theory or opposing it. — Pseudonym
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