Showing posts with label hopefulness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hopefulness. Show all posts

Friday, December 26, 2025

Trump Is Getting Weaker, and the Resistance Is Getting Stronger; The New York Times, December 26, 2025

 MICHELLE GOLDBERG, The New York Times; Trump Is Getting Weaker, and the Resistance Is Getting Stronger

"It has been a gruesome year for those who see Donald Trump’s kakistocracy clearly. He returned to office newly emboldened, surrounded by obsequious tech barons, seemingly in command of not just the country but also the zeitgeist. Since then, it’s been a parade of nightmares — armed men in balaclavas on the streets, migrants sent to a torture prison in El Salvador, corruption on a scale undreamed of by even the gaudiest third-world dictators and the shocking capitulation by many leaders in business, law, media and academia. Trying to wrap one’s mind around the scale of civic destruction wrought in just 11 months stretches the limits of the imagination, like conceptualizing light-years or black holes.

And yet, as 2025 limps toward its end, there are reasons to be hopeful...

While Trump “has been able to do extraordinary damage that will have generational effects, he has not successfully consolidated power,” said Leah Greenberg, a founder of the resistance group Indivisible. “That has been staved off, and it has been staved off not, frankly, due to the efforts of pretty much anyone in elite institutions or political leadership but due to the efforts of regular people declining to go along with fascism.”"

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Marriott’s CEO Demonstrates Truly Authentic Leadership In A Remarkably Emotional Video; Forbes, March 21, 2020

Carmine Gallo, Forbes; Marriott’s CEO Demonstrates Truly Authentic Leadership In A Remarkably Emotional Video

"Authentic leadership is, by definition, real and genuine. Authenticity is more than a management buzzword. It’s a way of acting and communicating that inspires loyalty. 

Marriott International CEO, Arne Sorenson, is an authentic leader and he proved it this week with the release of a 6-minute video to Marriott employees, shareholders, and customers. 

“This is what leadership sounds like,” one person said after watching the video on Twitter. Others said Sorenson’s video was “heartfelt and inspiring.” Yet another Twitter said, “a master class in leadership.” 

What, exactly, did Sorenson do that elicited such an outpouring of favorable comments? 

In short, Sorenson lowered the shield. He was candid, vulnerable, humble, emotional and hopeful."