Rommie wrote:Btw, for FZ, only tangentially related but was listening to a podcast the other day where there was a line I thought you'd like- "in order to be a great man in history you need to be a bad man first." Episode was about Ghengis Kahn and the point essentially was if you look at famous people in history it's almost always a requirement that you have to be willing to murder innocent children (or at least order it), and most of us never will and will thus never be "great." (Only exceptions I can think of are artists/musicians/scientists etc) Thought you might be interested in that line.
To be a great leader you have to be a leader first then be put in a position where you are forced to make hard choices. Usually that means war and casualties.
I just find it weird that people associate "greatness" as being put into a position where you have to conquer or resist but if you weren't put into such a position somehow you aren't. Greatness is also written by the winner in most cases. Great leaders can't be great if they lost to a larger power regardless of the impossibility of the situation.
Exceptions though rare also rely on the tactic they used to have won them the war rather than lost it, Ghandi stands out to me quite clearly there.
Another, and maybe others will disagree is Gorbachev.
He was a great leader who unfortunately couldn't hold back the tide that was coming even though tried and,stated that the Soviet Union must to head to Democracy slowly to allow people to adjust and to provide a minimum impact. He was right but paid the price for that position. The reason Russia is in such a mess now is that they got freedom too quickly and no one could adjust to it. Then we get the shit stain Putin who wants to take things back to the way they were.
Speaking of freedom. It's my belief that what freedoms a person has at any particular instance isn't how we should measure freedom.
It's how they got to be given those freedoms that is more important. So tests of how free a country is based purely on its current laws or policy is flawed.
e.g. Let's say that Communist China decided that as of right now, there will no longer be any political prisoners. They release all theirs as a gesture of that principle.
Does the average person on the street suddenly feel free to go and protest their government?
Nope. What they have right now isn't what defines a persons sensation of freedom. It's how they got it.
It will take years for that to go and then there will be the standard overshoot where people will push beyond what they would have if they were born into the same freedom. naturally it will then swing back and forth till it settles. That swinging (we call ringing) is where the unstable part is of a country.
It's why Gorbachev wanted to slow things down so the country could be stable and not risk falling back into where it was.
Unfortunately most politicians have about as slightly more understanding of this as an ant does about the internet but less chance of learning more.