👔 Coaching | 🎙️Podcast | ⏱️ Stopwatch | ⏰Off The Clock | & Guild | 📚 BooksThis is a long one. But it’s an important topic. I urge you to set this aside and bookmark it if you don’t have time for it right now. Your reading experience may be better on the web or in the app, as the footnotes will appear as quick and handy pop-ups. And if you’d like to get the full offering, I’m offering this because you’re already a subscriber — this offer does not appear anywhere else in the newsletter. “Wealth tends to corrupt the mind and to nourish its love of power and to stimulate it to oppression. History proves this to be the spirit of opulence.” —Gouveuneur Morris, 1787 A personal note: This was a surprisingly difficult topic to write about. Its ubiquity means there are many examples to choose from — so many, in fact, that it becomes overwhelming. I even considered abandoning it altogether. But ignoring reality doesn’t change reality. One of the principles of great leadership, as taught by former Ford CEO Alan Mulally is: “Expect the unexpected and expect to deal with it.” The concern is that leaders are dumping empathy and humanity in exchange for riches. Principles are giving way to greed. These are not new concepts to human nature, and in this essay, you’ll find the observations from the Old and New Testaments, Montaigne, Jefferson, Lincoln, Thoreau, Theodore Roosevelt, and a healthy dose of Lewis H. Lapham, whose crusade against the equestrian class of his upbringing was something of his life’s work.¹ There are timeless and timely links below for further reading, along with a recommended book and documentary, should you have the time or inclination. The 1980s were something. Power ties and power lunches that gave way to power grabs, where corporate raiders and hostile takeovers dominated the headlines, with executives like “Neutron Jack” Welch celebrated for their ruthless cuts to employee headcount. The bottom line was the bottom line, as Gordon Gekko’s² smooth intonations implored us to accept that “Greed is good,” and Americans dutifully worshipped at the temple of Mammon. Greed as a character trait is not something that was generated in the factories of the 1980s (especially since leadership then was hard at work declaring war on labor unions³), nor something from the Gilded Age. Greed and power are vices that have been with us since humans first understood the concept of money. And greed does seem to be good, given how richly its rewarded. The ROI of ethics and principles seems to be suffering from the law diminishing returns, slowly circling the drain toward obscurity. Welcome Your Oligarch OverlordsI don’t know if you’ve noticed, but there seems to be an inordinate number of billionaires who are influencing life in America (and the world more broadly) at the moment. I have nothing against capitalism; it is what has allowed the world to grow, prosper, and bring along the greatest number of people. But all too many people seem to have either chosen or resigned themselves to an oligarchy in what once was a proud democracy (okay, okay: a “democratic republic” for the pedants in the back). While contemplating on this sad fact, I began to wonder just when we abandoned our principles for the promise of riches. The Origins of GreedThis concept is documented as far back as the book of Genesis in the Bible, where we find Esau selling his birthright for a mess of pottage: he gives up his standing as the firstborn son in exchange for a bowl of lentil stew.⁴ It isn’t only our own principles we betray for money; the New Testament of the Bible also contains an instance of the betrayal of others — specifically one other — for a small sum:
Money and power go hand in hand. The founders were not unaware of the influence of money in statehood. They studied history and appreciated human nature. “Money, not morality, is the principle of commercial nations.” — Thomas Jefferson, 1810 Thomas Jefferson read Montesquieu, who said that when finance is honored, the state is lost. Monarchies are destroyed by poverty, but traditionally, republics are brought down by luxury and excess. There are those who naively think power-hungry billionaires are benefactors to society, that their wealth indicates some higher morality, since they don’t need more money. As if additional wealth accumulation plays any part in their decisions. “The greatest crimes are caused by surfeit, not by want. Men do not become tyrants in order that they may not suffer cold.” — Aristotle, c. 375 B.C. Aristotle knew that an abundance of wealth than lack of it is more likely to cause corruption, greed, and abuse. The wider the gap between the haves and have-nots always leads to a populace that supports and even welcomes tyranny. The wealth gap is a permission slip. Observing the transformation of the Roman Republic into an empire, the historian Sallust attributed the wish for despotism to, among other causes:
The question is: what are our principles? What do we hold dear? What do we truly value? Plato identified the problem with worshiping money: “When wealth and the wealthy are valued in the city, virtue and good men are less valued. What is valued is practiced. What is not valued, is not practiced.”⁵ Balancing wealth, power, and humanity requires practicing empathy — a virtue that is in short supply, particularly among the narcissistic billionaire class... Continue reading this post for free in the Substack app |
Malefactors of Great Wealth
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Malefactors of Great Wealth
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