The Peril Of Having ‘Yes Men’
APR 2,
2022
ROLLAND KIDDER
This is what happens
often with dictators, and it is what happened to Vladimir Putin. He has always
wanted to invade Ukraine and restore the old Soviet Union, so he surrounded
himself with people who would support that narrative. Now we see the result.
As you study
American history, you can see that the best Presidents were those who
surrounded themselves with people who were strong, who stood up for the truth,
and who would tell a powerful President what they really believed. Franklin
Delano Roosevelt did this but probably the greatest example was Abraham
Lincoln. A book about Lincoln’s Cabinet is titled Team of Rivals. Lincoln put
people in high places in his administration not only who disagreed with him but
who had run against him–William Seward probably being the best example.
The “yes-man” problem
is not only a problem in government. It can happen in business or in other
areas of life. Someone gets rich, thinks he is the smartest guy in town and
surrounds himself with “yes-men.”
History is
replete with business leaders who have “gone down the tubes” believing
their own press releases and listening only to what they want to hear.
Winston
Churchill once said: “No one pretends that democracy is perfect or
all-wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is the worst form of
government except for those other forms that have been tried from time to
time.” Dispute and political haggling are always a problem with
democracies, but the alternative is usually a one-man system (dictatorship)
full of worshipping and adoring “yes-men.” When that
happens, you get no honest or truthful information–only the one-way
communication of the weak and conniving.
So, this gets
us back to what happened in Russia with Vladimir Putin. He didn’t expect that
Ukrainians would put up any meaningful resistance when he invaded. His “guts” and
personal views were that Ukraine would be crushed, would quickly fold, and that
he would take control of the country. He surrounded himself with people to back
up that view. Now he is stuck in a quagmire in Ukraine with thousands of his
troops (including up to 7 generals) having been killed.
Usually, people
in power who get themselves into this kind of mess will have things fixed so
that others will “fall on their sword” to take the blame. There
has already been a report that a Russian intelligence chief is under house
arrest. The sycophants and “yes-men” will now
become the scapegoats.
The bottom line
is that though we may find disagreement and differing viewpoints to be unsavory
and “hard to swallow,” it is still better than
having a “yes-man” operation running the show. I am sure that Joe
Biden would rather not have to deal with dissident Democrats or criticizing
Republicans on Capitol Hill. But, he and we are better served because our
democracy is structured to bring dissident voices and variant opinions into the
arena of public policy making.
Churchill was
right. Despite all of its shortcomings, democracy is still the best choice that
mankind has found as a means to govern itself.
Rolland Kidder
is a Stow resident.
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