Showing posts with label #pcaa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #pcaa. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

PC Party of Alberta - Now Welcoming Sheep Applications

It is only through the opposition of ideas that we can learn to be self-critical, to work towards intellectual humility. - Tariq Ramadan

To the uninformed, emotion is more useful than facts. - Harry Tucker

The silent killer of all great men and women of achievement - particularly men, I don't know why, maybe it's the testosterone - I think it's narcissism. Even more than hubris. And for women, too. Narcissism is the killer. - James Woods

I was intrigued today when the Interim Leader of the PC Party of Alberta, Ric McIver, shared this tweet.

I was surprised by this tweet since it was not based on any data and it leveraged a private corporation in making a political statement.  The kiosks have been planned by McDonald’s for years, the company brand was leveraged without permission in order to make a political statement and there is no correlation between the number of kiosks installed and the number of jobs lost.

Since I thought the observation was groundless, I tweeted this observation to him:

The PC Party of Alberta does, after all, welcome dissenting opinions as they note on their Statement of Principles page of their website:

So, if we accept that opinions are welcome and that rational dialog, with the give and take associated with it being a cornerstone of democracy, it would be reasonable to assume that my comments would be responded to politely at best or ignored at worst.

Instead, I was blocked by Mr. McIver as he used the classic, ignorant, misinformed technique that small-minded people employ when an opinion comes their way that their brain or their ego can’t process.

When a miscreant trolls someone unfairly or uses language that is disrespectful, foul or threatening, I understand the process of blocking someone (even though it actually does nothing to prevent the blocked person from seeing their tweets anyway).

However, when I see the Interim Leader of a political party (both individual and Party claiming repeatedly to be listening humbly to the people after their sound thumping in the last general election) block someone for asking a question instead of merely ignoring or responding to it, it makes me wonder:

Has the Party actually learned ANYTHING at all from the last election or are its claims of listening to the people merely political drivel?

Are the leaders of the Party good role models for young people or is ignorant, immature behavior from public officials (who are paid by the people) the new model we would like our young people to emulate?

Who knows?

People comfortable with themselves, their capabilities and their opinions would be able to answer such questions.

The rest?

Well … they can go ahead and block me.

The Bottom Line

I’m not a fan of the NDP, their policies or their behavior in Alberta politics.

But if you want to prove yourself worthy of a second chance to be the governing party as the PC Party of Alberta claims they are, then such claims are demonstrated in what they show the people and not in what they tell them.

Rational, intellectual, well-informed people know this.

The rest are not worthy of our time …. or our vote.

However, they are accepting applications for sheep who are waiting for their opinion to be provided for them.

Are you one of them?

How do you know?

In service and servanthood,

Harry

PS Maybe I should share what PC insiders text to me regarding the current leadership of the PC Party of Alberta. I wonder if this would produce the humility necessary to begin listening to the people.

Maybe.

It's hard to predict the behavior or character of leaders when they hide from the people.

In the meantime, let's be proactive in support of Mr. McIver and start a petition to ban ATMs, self-checkout stations in supermarkets, etc.

That should fix everything.

Addendum - Checking the Data

Mr. McIver would have done well to have checked his opinion against McDonald's Canada data, where they indicate that the kiosks are part of a plan to hire 15,000 new employees as noted in this article - McDonald's Canada introduces self-serve ordering.

Unfortunately with reality, it doesn't care what you think or what you would like others to think.

It just exists - conveniently or inconveniently.

Friday, September 4, 2015

PC Party of Alberta–The Importance of a Post-Mortem

“Survival my only hope. Success my only revenge” ― Patricia Cornwell, Postmortem

Statistics are used much like a drunk uses a lamppost: for support, not illumination. - Vin Scully

Cognitive psychology tells us that the unaided human mind is vulnerable to many fallacies and illusions because of its reliance on its memory for vivid anecdotes rather than systematic statistics. - Steven Pinker

There are two ways of lying. One, not telling the truth and the other, making up statistics. - Josefina Vazquez Mota

When I was a young, impressionable lad growing up in a small town in Newfoundland, I would sometimes sit spellbound as older generations would tell ghost stories designed to frighten anyone.  A theme often used was the notion of someone who had died violently and without warning and as a result, their ghost was doomed to haunt the area where they had died because their spirit did not know that the body had expired.

Watching the PC Party of Alberta go down in a stinging defeat tonight in the Calgary-Foothills election, I wonder if I am witnessing a similar type of ghost – a political party that has died but which doesn’t know it yet.

When the PC Party was unceremoniously dumped in the general election in May of this year, they were accused of many things, including being dishonest, elitist, arrogant, indifferent and ignorant of the needs of the people (and those are the polite comments).

When the by-election process began in Calgary-Foothills, the PC Party candidate had some alleged discrepancies in education claimed versus education obtained, drawing comments from many (including myself in the post PC Party and Blair Houston–Isn’t Honesty Still the Best Policy?) about the potential dishonesty of the candidate.  The comments were never responded to by the candidate or his party.

The PC Party Interim Leader routinely quoted unnamed polls which claimed the candidate to be taking the riding by storm while no verifiable poll showed the candidate as even coming close.  There were even cries of violations of the Elections Act when a robocall from the Interim Leader cited unverifiable poll results without citing the source.

And then there were insidious personal claims regarding the candidate’s past which, fortunately for him, did not make the light of day.  Had the race been closer, I have no doubt that some unscrupulous person would have used them in a desperate bid for a victory over him.

Despite numerous requests for clarification regarding the allegations against the candidate and the sources of data for the so-called poll results, the candidate and the Interim Leader remained silent.

When I questioned an MLA about the dishonesty that was apparent in the campaign, I was told that what mattered was that the candidate needed to win.

It was this level of general dishonesty and values abandonment that caused me to re-examine the PC Party’s values and I came upon these items on their website:

We will be accountable for the responsibilities that we accept. We will consult with Albertans on public policy matters and we will provide Albertans with access to information to allow for an accurate assessment of our actions.

We are a Party for all Albertans. We welcome their thoughts, their efforts, and their support of the principles of progressive conservatism.

Members of the PCAA Board of Directors, PC Alberta Fund, respective committee members, PCAA Constituency Presidents, MLA’s, and MLA candidates/nominees shall treat each other with respect, honesty, dignity and fairness.

It reminded me that there is a significant difference between putting a lot of nice sounding phrases on a website and living them when it counts – when it is tempting to do anything but live one’s professed values.

So what happens next - the courage to examine one’s strengths and faults

The PC Party demonstrated that between the general election and this by-election, they have in fact learned absolutely nothing and repeated many of their earlier mistakes.

In the private sector, when we win or lose big, it is often of value to conduct a post-mortem, either to understand how the big win came about so we can recreate it or how the big loss came about so we can avoid it.

It is clear from how this election was conducted that this was either not done at all after the general election loss, not done well or done well but whose results were completely ignored, making it necessary to revisit the need for a post-mortem analysis to have some shot at improving the future of the Party.

A classic post-mortem has some primary elements in it, including but not limited to the following:

  • Allowing the appropriate amount of time to transpire between the event being analyzed and the post-mortem itself, allowing people to catch their breath and gather data but not allowing so much time to pass that people forget the need to have a post-mortem because “the sting” has faded.
  • Setting an appropriate post-mortem meeting format, including having specific time contracts and agendas that contain realistic, measurable expectations and outcomes.  Meaningless “it wasn’t my fault”, “it was someone else’s fault” or “we are completely helpless victims” messages in the form of witch hunts, gripe sessions or expressions of victimhood merely massage or destroy egos but don’t produce solutions.
  • Honesty in understanding what went right without inflating one’s ego too much.
  • Honesty in understanding what went wrong without destroying anyone’s ego too severely.
  • Understanding the real reasons for the win or the loss and knowing how to apply the right levels of discernment in identifying useful, valid information while rejecting the rest.
  • Inviting the right people to the meeting.  Not everyone deserves a voice and some voices that would prefer to be silent need to be heard.
  • Ensuring that the post-mortem be conducted by an objective, outside observer who has no vested interest in the team itself but instead, has as their purpose the need to produce a valuable post-mortem.
  • Ensuring that the post-mortem is respectful, honest, humble, ego-less, fact-focused and thorough, with measurable action items, assignable accountability / responsibility and delivery dates being a result of the process.
  • Ensuring that the leadership, leading up to, during and following the post-mortem, clearly motivate, communicate and monitor expectations, communication mechanisms, collaboration and results.  Servant leaders who successfully cast a positive vision are much more useful than bullies and dictators.
  • Ensuring that the results of the post-mortem are actually followed up on with appropriate communication and support mechanisms in place to ensure success.  Great ideas with no follow-up or success-focused mechanisms for support become sources of “I told you so” later (if anyone is left standing to say it).

Teams that are not afraid to examine themselves, to identify where they went wrong, to champion where they went right and to find a way to produce better results through intelligent strategic and tactical correction produce winning teams.

The others?

Well – they usually end up as examples for others to avoid:

Mistakes: It could be that the purpose of your life is only to serve as a warning to others.

Mistakes: It could be that the purpose of your life is only to serve as a warning to others.

The Bottom Line:

Winning when the wins come easy often take little effort and little is learned from such victories.

Losing requires a lot less effort than winning and little is learned if one’s ego or resources don’t allow for analysis of the loss.

Winning after having experienced a loss (especially a potentially catastrophic or fatal loss) requires significant levels of effort, courage, honesty, transparency, collaboration, respect, knowledge, data, strategy, intelligence, wisdom and humility.  While many who have experienced easy wins often go on and on about how great they are, the true measure of greatness is in how well one comes back after a difficult or staggering loss.

Will the PC Party of Alberta bounce back from the embarrassing losses of this year or is this how we will remember them?

PC Party of Alberta - "It was a good run while it lasted"

I guess it depends on how well they are able to examine themselves and if they are willing to do whatever it takes to become relevant again.

Do you think they are willing to do whatever it takes to turn their fortunes around?

Do you think they have what it takes to accomplish this?

Do you think they have the humility to see the importance of performing a post-mortem and the importance of executing it well based on their findings?

Does what they think even matter anymore?

How do you know?

In service and servanthood,

Harry


Addendum – The Inevitable Spin and Closing Thoughts

Many in the PC Party of Alberta (and some columnists) are spinning this loss as a victory for the PC Party because their third place finish was so close to the second place NDP.

Unfortunately, when one takes a riding that has always been dominated by one Party (even as recently as the general election four months prior to the by-election) and that same Party finishes almost 17% points behind the winner four months later, that’s definitely not a win.

Unofficial results

That’s an embarrassment, plain and simple.

The truth that the PC Party doesn’t want to discuss is that the Asian voters in the riding almost always vote for the PCs so the Party was guaranteed a certain percentage of the vote – a reality that will change over time as other parties begin to dominate the political landscape in the riding and across the Province.

Such a difference in how one sees such a loss is a primary example of the different lenses that a politician and someone in business use to view the world.

Meanwhile, the Interim Leader of the PC Party noted this on Twitter:

Ric McIver tweet

Unfortunately, this positive spin ignores a dishonest campaign but this will be forgotten in the memory of a Party striving for relevance.

But then again, this is what a politician is best at – spinning a loss into a win no matter what the data says to the contrary.

On a side note but related to the concept of “how does one spin something unfortunate”, the revelation a couple of days before the by-election that sitting PC MLA Sandra Jansen would be speaking at a Federal Liberal Party fund raiser demonstrates that the Party has lost its control over optics, message management and internal communication.  While I applaud her right to be bipartisan (we might be better off if more politicians did this), the poor timing and optics gave the PC Party more jabs to ward off in the critical days leading up to the election.  In politics and in business, we must define our own message lest someone else define one on our behalf, possibly to our detriment.

There is much to do within the PC Party of Alberta.

Do they have the will, the resources, the humility, the intelligence and the time to climb out of the death spiral that they are in?

Time will tell although history in Albert politics is not on their side, since every political party up to now has ceased to exist shortly after being removed from power and their initial stab at proving that they have changed hasn’t demonstrated much if any change at all.

Meanwhile …..

This is likely my last musing on the PC Party of Alberta – it’s time to move onto things that are more relevant.


Related posts:

  • PC Party of Alberta – Bless Me, Father, For I Have Sinned
  • Politics and the Mutability of Human Values
  • PC Party and Blair Houston–Isn’t Honesty Still the Best Policy?
  • PC Party of Alberta–Who Will Bell the Cat?
  • PC Party of Alberta–Proving Einstein and Churchill Right?


  • Saturday, August 29, 2015

    PC Party of Alberta – Bless Me, Father, For I Have Sinned

    We are moving toward a dictatorship of relativism which does not recognize anything as for certain and which has as its highest goal one's own ego and one's own desires. - Pope Benedict XVI

    I believe that the biggest problem that humanity faces is an ego sensitivity to finding out whether one is right or wrong and identifying what one's strengths and weaknesses are. - Ray Dalio

    The #1206 “fiction” series continues …


    It was a quiet evening in the church as the parish priest waited in the confessional in silence.  He sighed, looked at his watch and prepared to leave for the evening when he heard someone enter the confessional.

    He drew open the small door between them and waited.

    “Bless them, Father, but I honestly have no idea how many years it’s been since their last confession”, said a voice quietly.

    “Bless them, my son?”, the priest asked quizzically.

    “Well, of course”, replied the confessor, “We have worked for a very long time to convince the people that we are the only solution for their every need and they just don’t get it.  Clearly they have an issue that they need to deal with and I am here to discover how to help them.”

    “I see”, replied the priest as he frowned in the darkened confessional, “And what makes you think it is they who have the issue when it potentially may be you?”

    “I have no idea what you are referring to”, said the confessor huffily, “We’ve done nothing wrong.”

    “We?”, asked the priest, “Why don’t we just focus on you, shall we?”

    “I don’t see why that is necessary”, replied the confessor, feeling his agitation begin to rise.

    “Well”, began the priest, “While I don’t ordinarily do this, I see we are an impasse and so I have no choice but to identify you.  While I won’t name you specifically, my son, I know your voice to be that of a well-known politician in the Province.  Why don’t we begin our conversation again with that understanding, shall we?”

    “Hmmmmm”, the confessor frowned, “Very well.  Here is my struggle, Father.  We lost the last election badly and now in the current by-election, people are all over us claiming that we have not changed at all and that we don’t deserve to win this by-election as a result.  Their argument for this has absolutely no merit at all and I am struggling to understand what they need to do to change their outlook on things.”

    “Is this in regards to the candidate who has some issues in his background that portray his campaign and your support of his campaign as slightly dishonest?”, the priest asked quietly.

    “Sort of”, replied the confessor, “But it’s more than just honesty or dishonesty.  Yes, we are being sort of dishonest about his background and I will admit that we are ignoring calls for transparency around this, but dishonesty for the greater good is a noble principle, is it not?  I mean , when it comes to winning, whether it be in politics or business, isn’t it better to do whatever it takes to win?  A small amount of dishonesty doesn’t hurt anybody, especially when it gets the best person elected for the job.”

    “Perhaps”, answered the priest, “but how do you define the difference between a small amount of dishonesty and a lot?  Who defines what is an acceptable amount of dishonesty?  And if we accept a little dishonesty now, can we claim to be disappointed later if other examples of dishonesty are found within the individual or the Party he represents?”

    As the priest spoke, the confessor listened carefully to his voice and suddenly a light dawned on him.

    “I know you”, said the confessor, ignoring the priest’s observation, “You used to be a well-known politician.”

    “Very true, my son”, replied the priest quietly, “But after what I thought was going to be a lifetime of public service, I decided to leave that Life and begin a lifetime of atonement for what I did in my political career and to really serve the people.”

    “So you know what I am going through, Father”, said the confessor earnestly, “You should be able to tell me what’s wrong with the voters.”

    He shivered in excitement as he realized he was getting closer to the answer he sought.

    “Slow down”, replied the priest, “I have been watching the demise of your political party for some time.  I remember some years ago when a member of your party wrote about the struggles within your party and he suggested that there was either a mole in your party who was deliberately tearing the party apart or that your party was the victim of excessive ego or incompetence.  Let me think …… ah yes … if I remember correctly, the piece was called The Trojan Horse of the 21st Century.”

    “That’s preposterous”, expostulated the confessor, “There is no mole in our party trying to deliberately undermine us.”

    “Well”, replied the priest, “He did suggest that it was either a mole, excessive ego or excessive incompetence.”

    “Like I said”, emphasized the confessor, “There are no moles in our Party.  I am sure of it.”

    “Well that leaves only two options, doesn’t it?”, the priest asked somewhat sarcastically, “Listen my son, when you come here to seek the forgiveness of our Lord, you must do it with a humble and contrite heart.  Otherwise, I can’t help you.”

    “So you are saying there is nothing you can do for me?”, asked the confessor.

    “Not at this time, my son”, replied the priest.

    “Hmmmmmmph”, grunted the confessor and he stood up to leave, “I expected much more of you than this, Father.”

    “I’m sorry I disappointed you, my son”, replied the priest, “Tell me.  I am preparing to retire for the evening.  Is anyone else waiting for confession.”

    The confessor opened the door and looked at the long line of people waiting, most of whom being his colleagues.

    “There’s a lot of them”, he said as he stepped outside, “Goodnight, Father.”

    “God bless you”, replied the priest, “Remember what I said.”

    As the confessor walked away from the confessional, the next confessor in line gestured with his hands and asked, “Well?  How did it go?”

    “Very well”, smiled the confessor, “He said that I was so good that there was nothing he could do for me.”

    The confessor in line smiled and gave him a two-thumbs-up as he entered the confessional.

    And with that, the confessor walked to the back of the Church, blessed himself and walked out.

    To be continued.


    © 2015 – Harry Tucker – All Rights Reserved

    Background

    When I watch a group that has been as badly burned as the PC Party of Alberta was in the last election and when I watch that same group show no change in transparency, accountability, leadership, awareness, strategy or execution as they are exhibiting in the current by-election in Calgary-Foothills, I can’t help but wonder if this continued behavior is because someone:

    • wants the Party to die (a mole)
    • doesn’t believe the Party did anything wrong, either in the past or in the present (excessive incompetence, indifference or ego)
    • doesn’t know how to fix the execution and the results of the Party but doesn’t have the humility to ask others for help either (excessive ego).

    Unfortunately, unless a cranial defibrillator is applied to members within the Party, any of these will produce the same result, none of which are in alignment with what the PC Party of Alberta desires.

    A Final Albeit Important Thought:

    Is it fair to throw Calgary-Foothills candidate Blair Houston under the bus for their failings or is he ruining their chances with his failings (or is it a combination of both)?  Either way, by sticking it out when he should have stopped running, he and the Party are inviting people to find more dirt on him in a rabid attempt to skewer him. 

    It’s one thing for people to strongly encourage him to stop running.

    It’s another thing to ruin him if he doesn’t comply.

    In such situations, he runs the risk of being ruined personally and professionally as well as politically if he persists in running anyway.

    The question is:

    Is he persisting willingly, begrudgingly or blindly?

    The answer would be very revealing of both the party and the candidate.

    Unfortunately, some answers may hasten the demise of the Party as well as the candidate if they are not careful.

    This reminds me of a post I did some time ago, National Security: Saying Everything By Saying Nothing, where I referenced The 9 Ways of Being an Accessory to Another’s Sin as described in the Roman Catholic Daily Missal:

    I. By counsel
    II. By command
    III. By consent
    IV. By provocation
    V. By praise or flattery
    VI. By concealment
    VII. By partaking
    VIII. By silence
    IX. By defense of the ill done

    I’d say many people have checked most, if not all, of this list off in this by-election.

    What do you think?

    This musing is related to earlier blog posts, including but not limited to:

    Series Origin

    This series, a departure from my usual musings, is inspired as a result of conversations with former senior advisors to multiple Presidents of the United States, senior officers in the US Military and other interesting folks as well as my own professional background as a Wall St. / Fortune 25 strategy and large-scale technology architect.

    While this musing is just “fiction” and a departure from my musings on technology, strategy, politics and society, as a strategy guy, I do everything for a reason and with a measurable outcome in mind. :-)

    This “fictional” musing is a continuation of the #1206 series noted here.

    Sunday, August 23, 2015

    PC Party and Blair Houston–Isn’t Honesty Still the Best Policy?

    One of the reasons people hate politics is that truth is rarely a politician's objective. Election and power are. - Cal Thomas

    I was really too honest a man to be a politician and live. – Socrates

    [Author note: There are important addendums following this post, particularly addendums 2 and 3]

    Dear PC Party of Alberta / Blair Houston (Candidate for Calgary-Foothills):

    While a lot of my readers in Alberta have been enjoying (or hating me for) my occasional musing about the PC Party of Alberta and the missteps it has taken in recent years, writing about you has become a little boring for me and I would rather move on if you don’t mind.

    However, I can’t move on because I see political leadership as an essential component for creating a strong future for citizens and when I see flaws in political leadership, I know said flaws, if allowed, will fracture the future for the people that the politician and political Party claim to serve.

    As a long-time conservative, it matters to me where conservatives stand, what we represent, why we are allegedly the best choice and when we make mistakes (and we all do), what we intend to do to fix them.

    When the Calgary-Foothills election was called, I asked you and Mr. Houston publicly what had been learned from mistakes in the past general election and how the Party will re-engage the hearts, minds and votes of the voters.  After all, to win the vote, one must influence the mind of the voter and to influence the mind, one must touch the hearts of those voters.  As a long time strategy person on Wall St., this seems obvious to me – that a mea culpa and a new strategy are necessary to regain the support of the people.

    When I asked the question, I received insults which I found amusing enough to write about here PC Party of Alberta–Proving Einstein and Churchill Right? and here PC Party of Alberta–Who Will Bell the Cat?.

    However, I never received a reply from the candidate or the Party specifically answering my questions or concerns.

    Now a story is circulating about Mr. Houston’s alleged resume embellishment, where he claims to have gone to the University of California, a highly prestigious institution, while his campaign manager admits that he went to the College of the Desert (a two year technical school).  Here’s an important note – most people who have attended the University of California note the specific campus as many campuses have prestigious reputations of their own (e.g. UCLA, UC, Berkeley, etc).

    While I’m sure the College of the Desert is a fine institution and in fact, there is nothing wrong with having attended such a school, in the private sector where I live, intentional resume embellishment for the sake of employment / personal promotion is grounds for dismissal.

    That aside, you both have dodged the question in the media about Mr. Houston's education credentials which brings the same old question to mind:

    When will honesty and transparency become a part of the PC Party in its alleged desire to rebuild itself or are they just clichƩs to hide a desire for status quo under the guise of something different?

    Or ….

    Should we just give up asking any politician for honesty and transparency in the first place?

    If the claims are true and you are going to steamroll ahead anyway, then we are in the process of watching another dishonest person run for office.  If that’s the case, the PC Party hasn’t changed and honesty is still a rare commodity within the Party.

    If the claims are true, then Mr. Houston should do the honorable thing and step aside unless he has an excellent reason for the discrepancy.  To admit such a discrepancy, whether he decides to continue running for office or not, would take a lot of courage but would be the right thing to do.

    If the claims are not true, then one can make them go away instantly by merely responding to them.

    And finally, to at least publicly respond to the accusation would show some level of accountability and responsibility to the public.

    Because if we don’t have honesty, courage, accountability and responsibility in our political candidates and our political parties, what do we have?

    And if we don’t have that, we don't have anything and neither should any Party claiming to want to represent our best interests.

    Mr. Houston, please say something, otherwise you don’t deserve anything.  You claim to want to be the voice of the people – let’s here you speak when the people ask you questions.

    Your integrity has been called into question – defend it otherwise other people will define it.

    Yours most sincerely,

    A citizen who worries about the future we are creating for our children.


    In service and servanthood,

    Harry

    PS The difficulty with silence is that it usually (not always) suggests that an inconvenient truth has been spoken.  Human beings have a tendency to fill in the blanks when there is a vacuum of comment / information / response, often to the detriment of the person who has little to say in their own defense when others have much to say about them.

    Addendum 1 – A Call For Honesty

    The Calgary Herald ran a piece on Mr. Houston for the Calgary Municipal election in 2013 (found here).

    Ironically, he cited the importance for “respect earned by honesty” and for the need for people “to have faith in politics again”.

    It’s hard to know if he believes these things based on the afore mentioned musing.

    Calgary Herald quotes

    (click on image for larger version)


    Addendum 2 – Post Debate Conversation – August 24, 2015

    I attended the debate in the Calgary-Foothills riding tonight with the hope of requesting clarity on this item.

    I submitted a question regarding this to the moderators but it was included in the questions which were considered to be attack questions and so was rejected.  This is what I tweeted when I heard this:

    Tweet

    Since Mr. Houston was unavailable after the debate, I stopped by the campaign table set up outside the debate area and asked his staff why the brochures on the table still imply that he graduated from a school that he in fact, did not graduate from.

    The nice lady at the table stammered for a bit, suggested that he had graduated from there (which I refuted) and she suddenly had another answer.  She told me that the truth was that he had started to go to school at the University of California (didn’t know which campus which is still curious as previously noted) and that his mother had died while attending and therefore he had returned home.

    While this is unfortunate if true, I told her “But you imply in the bio that he graduated from there so this doesn’t make sense.  In addition, if this is the truth, then why don’t you just say that to the press and to the many people who are concerned about his honesty and integrity and settle it once and for all.  All it takes is one statement that says ‘I went to the College of the Desert and took some courses at the University of California but had to leave because my mother died’ and it becomes a non-issue.  Allowing confusion over his education credentials to grow this way, if this is in fact a true story, creates a vacuum of information which is likely to be filled by speculation that will likely not go in his favor.”

    She said “You should have been been his campaign manager” to which someone standing nearby, listening to the conversation, said “To hell with that – he should have been Harry’s campaign manager.”

    Here’s another idea.  If a candidate is discovered to have some “ambiguity” in how their education credentials are presented but the issue is admitted and corrected as soon as it becomes known, the candidate can actually leverage the correction as “Look at how honest and forthright I am”.  Some strategy people I know would take this one step further and leverage the death of the parent to tug at the heartstrings of the voters (this is a morally questionable strategy but happily used by some).  Unfortunately, this strategic opportunity was passed over by the candidate. 

    If there is concern about how a “lack of education” would be perceived, I couldn’t care less.  I have worked for Bill Gates, Larry Ellison and others and they didn’t have degrees when starting / growing their companies.  Formal education is fine but it is a human being’s inherent wisdom, knowledge, business savvy, communication skills, listening skills, collaboration abilities, life skills and other things that matter.

    I have no idea if her story is even true, especially the way it was told to me after I refuted the first story she told me.  It may be a sad, true story or it may be a fabrication.  For the many universities that I have taken the occasional class from, I do not claim to have “attended” the institution because it would likely create some confusion as to my education credentials.  For those classes, I note them as “class x completed from institution y” so as to not imply that I obtained degrees from those institutions.  If Mr. Houston had intended to attend full time and didn’t convocate, there is nothing wrong with merely stating that.

    During the debate tonight, Mr. Houston claimed to be a “relationship builder”.  He and his campaign team have a long ways to go to better manage public expectation using effective communication.  I and others asked him and the Party several times for clarity and they never even bothered to answer (something that would have taken a minute or less).

    As I noted before, we can define our reputation or allow others to define it for us.

    The nice lady at the table said that he chose not to address these concerns because he felt that he didn’t need to.

    When one makes this choice, one has chosen to allow others to define who they are, a move that is not very astute or strategic in the political world, sending the wrong message to potential voters while simultaneously projecting an air of arrogance or incompetence.

    Bottom Line - Control the Message

    Maybe if people like myself and others keep giving these guys free consulting advice, that they will finally use it, otherwise they can continue to produce the result they are producing. Smile


    Addendum 3 – The Mutability of Human Values – August 26, 2015

    I was told by PC Party execs and some MLAs that the resume embellishment is known but that it is important that the candidate stay in the race anyway without a public correction since officially addressing the issue may damage his chances.

    This suggests to me that the human value of honesty is mutable and wavering within these individuals, being something that can be paraded around when convenient / useful but can be modified or ignored when required.

    What does this say about politicians and political parties?

    What does this say about us if we accept it?

    Does it remove our right to complain when individuals let us down later, when we suddenly learn all over again that their values and ours aren’t in alignment?

    Why do we care more when the politician lets us down after being elected instead of caring more about the details of the people before we elect them?

    Politicians rely on the apathy, indifference and ignorance of the electorate.

    What does this say about them?

    What does this say about us?


    Addendum 4 – Questioning the Strategy – August 28, 2015

    Watching the lackluster performance of Mr. Houston in several debates and recognizing that he is a perpetual candidate who has ran for various seats over the years without winning any of them, I wonder why the PC Party chose him over a “ringer”, especially if the riding is as important to the Party as they claim.

    Is this a strategic failure on the part of someone within the PC Party or did they believe or fear they were going to lose despite their desire for a win, thus not wanting to sacrifice a more important player?

    Only a select few know.

    Saturday, August 15, 2015

    PC Party of Alberta–Who Will Bell the Cat?

    The opposite for courage is not cowardice, it is conformity. Even a dead fish can go with the flow. - Jim Hightower

    The most courageous act is still to think for yourself. Aloud. - Coco Chanel

    The heavy response to my blog from a couple of days ago, PC Party of Alberta – Proving Einstein and Churchill Right? and earlier posts such as To Demand Better of Your Politicians, Demand Better of Yourself, Going Bat Sh*T Crazy with Alberta Premier Jim Prentice and other posts remind me of a funny children’s story I read as a young boy.

    The story, Who Will Bell the Cat (and its variants), goes like this:

    A group of mice were arguing in a mouse hole one day about a cat that had been terrorizing them.  With every passing day, the cat would sneak up on one of them without warning and would make off with the unsuspecting victim.  The mice were now tired of this and were arguing about what to do about the villain.

    One mouse suggested that if they put a bell on the cat’s neck, then he would no longer be able to creep up on them unawares.

    Recognizing the brilliance of the solution, the mice spent considerable time congratulating themselves on how they had solved the problem when their celebration was interrupted by a lone voice in the back of the mouse hole.

    “The solution may be brilliant”, observed a wise old mouse, “but who will bell the cat?”

    Silence filled the mouse hole and eventually the mice went about their business, realizing that there is a big difference between being full of ideas and having the courage to carry them out.

    The PC Party of Alberta has been plagued by difficulty for some time, with a significant amount of dissension within the ranks regarding a number of things, including but not limited to very interesting personal interests and habits of former MLAs that have not been revealed to the public, interesting personal interests and habits of current MLAs, significant unhappiness with the current Party President and her lack of publicly visible leadership, significant concern over the potentially unethical, immoral (and possibly illegal) actions of some MLAs in the last election, the performance of the current interim leader, the belief by some that the last election wasn’t really lost (really?) and other things.

    Then there are the Party members who discourage dialog by shouting down anyone who dares to suggest that something might be wrong and the grotesquely diabolical who actively discouraged dialog around change before the election (because everything was perfect), came to an amazing epiphany after the election that dialog around change was welcomed and needed (and wrote beautifully moving passages to promote this) and yet who work behind the scenes to make sure that such dialog is still controlled, restricted or prevented.

    Whew … take a breath.

    Meanwhile, members pound tables in frustration in coffee shops, covertly send emails and text messages back and forth and post vague or thinly disguised messages of concern on social media.

    Interestingly, many of these messages (including the private ones) end up on my laptop and phone, with people saying “you should say something about this”, which is curious enough, but it is always followed by “but make sure you don’t quote me”.

    The content is so intriguing, titillating and damning and its delivery so covert that I feel like The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

    Occasionally, I make observations about the PC Party (and other political parties, to be fair) and there is a public gasp of “I can’t believe he said that” and a private whisper of “Thank you for saying that – you have much more courage than I do.”

    My suggestion to members of the PC Party of Alberta is this:

    If you see ways to make the Party better for the sake of the Party itself, its members and the people of Alberta, such ideas won’t see the light of day if you choose not to take action or if you insist that the ideas only be discussed in dark recesses and alcoves that allow you to whisper your ideas without someone discovering your identity.

    It takes courage to make change.

    Lack of courage with plenty of ideas merely produces dissent, cynicism, frustration and wasted energy.

    And it doesn’t get you re-elected.

    After all, drinking the Kool-Aid is like drinking vehicle coolant – both have the potential to produce blindness.

    People kept quiet in the past, often selling their own souls, their ethics and their morals, so that they wouldn’t be thrown out of power.

    But the difficulty now is that doing the same thing keeps one from improving, both from within the Party to root the rot out and to present a stronger Party that is more in tune with the people of Alberta in the 21st century.

    Until this happens, the ethical, moral, ideological and yes, legal foundation will never be there to form another government …. ever.

    The problems have been identified.

    The “villains” have been outed.

    Many great ideas and brilliant people exist (especially younger people) to make a significant, positive difference to the Party and to the Province of Alberta.

    However, brilliant ideas and an endless supply of passion require courage in action to bring these ideas to fruition.

    So … the only question remaining is …..

    ….. who wants to bell the cat?

    In service and servanthood,

    Harry


    Addendum – Members Weigh In …. Anonymously

    A number of members have emailed or texted me to thank me for posting this musing.  Ironically, they prefer to remain anonymous, thus demonstrating the depth, breadth and scale of the problem that exists within the Party.


    Addendum 2 – The Importance of Data – August 24, 2015

    After the PC debate in Calgary-Foothills tonight, this item was posted by a PC Party supporter (click on image for larger version):

    Wrong data

    The data used by Ms. Walker to confirm that Mr. Houston is the best candidate is either humorous or pathetic, depending on how you look at it.  With powerful insight like this, how can the Party go wrong?


    Addendum 3 – Questioning the Strategy – August 28, 2015

    Watching the lackluster performance of Mr. Houston in several debates and recognizing that he is a perpetual candidate who has ran for various seats over the years without winning any of them, I wonder why the PC Party chose him over a “ringer”, especially if the riding is as important to the Party as they claim.

    Is this a strategic failure on the part of someone within the PC Party or did they believe or fear they were going to lose despite their desire for a win, thus not wanting to sacrifice a more important player?

    Only a select few know.

    Thursday, August 13, 2015

    PC Party of Alberta–Proving Einstein and Churchill Right?

    If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough. – Albert Einstein

    Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. - Albert Einstein

    However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results. - Winston Churchill

    [Author note: A sequel to this blog post can be found here - PC Party of Alberta–Who Will Bell the Cat?]

    When the PC Party of Alberta announced a candidate for the upcoming by-election in Calgary-Foothills, I was curious:

    What has the PC Party learned from the election loss in May and what would their candidate do differently as a result of those lessons?

    With that in mind, I posed a simple question on the Facebook pages of the candidate and the PC Party.  The question was this:

    On what platform will he run? Have we admitted our weaknesses yet, why we lost and what we need to do to regain the confidence of the people? No nasty answers please - this is an honest question from someone who would like to understand if stuff from the past has been resolved.

    I thought the question to be fair, legitimate and respectfully asked.

    The candidate never answered the question as of the time this post was published.

    However, on the PC Party wall, I was blessed with this fascinating interaction (click on the image for an easier-to-read version).

    PCAA

    “Clowns like me”.  We’re off to an excellent, cerebral start in our exchange.

    The interaction continued ….

    PCAA

    Now I’m a “clueless clown”.  I’m having trouble keeping up with the elevated intellectual level of the exchange but I feel I must persevere despite my obvious shortcomings.

    Mr. June’s rant continued before the PC Party finally addressed my question and I responded:

    PCAA

    Note that they did not attempt to refute his comments at all – a curious thing.

    However, in a desire not to feel left out of the exchange, Mr. June re-entered the conversation:

    PCAA

    Clearly I am not worthy of the intellect of this individual and I disengaged before embarrassing myself further.

    The reality is that there are always idiots (Individuals Derogatorily Opining Trite S**t) out there who can’t wait to share their weak, fact-less, disrespectful opinions on the Web.  I feel bad for anyone whose lives are limited in such ways – it must be a dark, frustrating, powerless way to live.

    However, what I am fascinated by is that the PC Party did not attempt to silence the individual or publicly disassociate themselves from his opinions.  Even though it is THEIR forum, they are allowing others to shout down anyone who dares to engage in public discourse for the sole reason of making something better and they are not making any comment to the contrary.

    And when someone speaks on someone else’s behalf and the latter chooses not to refute what was said, you have to wonder if they agree with what was said or if they don’t care what the potential result could be if they don’t refute it.

    The difficulty here is that what we don’t condemn today, we accept tomorrow …..

    ….. and what we accept today, we embrace tomorrow.

    Does the PC Party know what it may be embracing with such a hands-off attitude regarding the comments of the dull and the ignorant?

    Does the PC Party care?

    Perhaps the PC Party prefers that difficult questions not be asked.

    I can’t tell – they don’t answer them but they do allow others to be the hammer in an effort to squelch public discourse, potentially presenting a desirable outcome for the PC Party since someone else gets to play the heavy when the questions are awkward to answer.

    Again, I don’t know and can’t guess if an answer is not forthcoming from anyone except the people who have little to share and a lot of energy to do it with.

    Interestingly enough, only one individual by the name of Maxim pointed out that the response to me was unfair.  Such little response suggests that others agree with intimidation tactics, no one cares about the interaction, no one cares to take action when they see something wrong, no one cares enough about the PC Party in general or they have better things to do with their Life.

    None of these things send a positive message to the PC Party or to the people who might observe or participate in such interactions.

    Voter influence is all about perception and so far, the campaign in Calgary-Foothills is off to a bad start from my perspective.

    The fact that people prefer me to be in their camp instead of attempting to drive me to the opponent’s camp through intimidation or indifference is a subject for a different day. Smile

    The Bottom Line

    You should never allow someone else to define who you are with their own message on your behalf.  It may be the last or only message that others receive and you may fall victim to the reputation that becomes attached to you if the message is not a positive one or one that properly reflects what you represent (or at least what you want it to represent).

    If you don’t like what that reputation is, then do something about it.

    Because if you don’t do something about it, maybe you agree with the message being promoted or if nothing else, you may be perceived as agreeing with it.

    Either way, the perception of the recipient will be the same whether you like it or not.

    Do you care what reputation is defined for you by others?

    Does it matter?

    How do you know?

    What are you willing to do about it?

    For the PC Party, failure to shut down the ignorant who define the reputation of the Party may be proving Einstein and Churchill to be right.

    I wonder if they care.

    In service and servanthood,

    Harry

    [Author note: A sequel to this blog post can be found here - PC Party of Alberta–Who Will Bell the Cat?]


    Addendum: A member of the PC Party, after observing the interaction, texted me this thought:

    The PC response is pathetic: we’ll get to a platform when we stop being so busy.  How do you commit to run without a platform?

    An interesting thought indeed.


    Addendum 2 – A Response From the PCAA

    The PC Party Twitter account sent me this tweet in response to my observations:

    PCAA Response

    PCAA Response

    A few observations regarding their response:

    1. It addresses the subject without really addressing it, since it doesn’t reject the comments as not reflecting the position of the Party or the candidate.  While entertaining all opinions is noble, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to understand when some participants are abusive and should be banned. 
    2. The tweet takes the politically correct stand of “we don’t want to say a specific person was naughty” so we will generalize it to be “some people” which technically could include me for refusing to accept the aggressive nature of others.  Meanwhile, last time I checked, “some people” were still continuing their abuse of the opinions of others.  Convenient?
    3. If one does not have a policy for healthy discourse in 2015, one is seriously behind the times.  Beg, borrow or steal someone else’s – there are many to choose from.  “Grow a set” as the expression goes and know when it is obvious to shut down those who merely seek to shut down discourse for their own misguided reasons.  We can’t be everything to everyone, otherwise we end up standing for nothing.

    The Bottom Line

    The damage is done – my question went unanswered by the Party and by the candidate and others have expressed a lack of interest in speaking up as a result.  Is this a deliberate act under the guise of “we don’t have a policy for healthy discourse”?  This would be very convenient if true.

    Not much appears to have changed since the Party attitude, poor perception of what the voter wanted and lack of strategic foresight brought the Party down in May of 2015.

    Oh wait, many PCAA members still don’t believe that they really lost that election and maybe that’s the problem.  This is especially true given that many PCAA members keep citing the strange, unrelated statistic that since the PC Party and the Wildrose Party combined took more popular votes than the NDP, then it means that the NDP didn’t really win.

    To those people, I ask them to look at who sits on the Government side of the Legislature.  That is the only answer that matters.

    Those people remind me of the belief of some that if someone dies in a violent way, their ghost remains where the person died, unaware that they have actually died.

    A pompous attitude when you are “on top of the pile” is not appropriate.

    A pompous attitude when you are not is not intelligent.

    One causes you to lose.

    One prevents you from winning.

    Is there any difference between the two in the end?

    Saturday, July 11, 2015

    To Demand Better of Your Politicians, Demand Better of Yourself

    Those who stand for nothing fall for anything. - Alexander Hamilton

    One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors. - Plato

    What is tolerated today becomes accepted tomorrow. - Various Attribution

    An interesting conversation this week on the Facebook page of a member of the Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta reminds me of why we have the politicians we have.

    It’s because we accept anything they give / tell us.

    And while we like to rant and rave about what politicians allegedly do to us as we claim victimhood at the hand of their alleged incompetence or corruption (as some people claim), the reason politicians do what they do boils down to one thing.

    It’s because we accept anything they give / tell us.

    On the previously mentioned Facebook page this week, there was a discussion around the right-leaning parties of the Alberta political sphere and the possibility (or impossibility) of the two primary parties, the Wildrose Party and the Progressive Conservative Party, reuniting against the left-leaning NDP Party currently in power.

    While the conversation was interesting and mostly respectful, I asked a couple of questions, specifically around whether people can come to an agreement regarding the definition of the words “progressive”, “conservative” and “values”, since failure to come to an agreement on what these words mean would prevent any such alliance from happening.

    This sparked a healthy exchange until a former member of the Alberta government proceeded to give their views.  The individually waxed poetically about such concepts as principles, values, forgiveness and acceptance and the need “to do better and be better for, and, to each other.”

    I thought it was a pretty cool, unifying message although one thing remained stuck in my craw from the previous election loss, a rumor that had been attached to this MLA and which suggested or implied unethical or potentially illegal behaviour and so I asked if the rumor were true.  There was no issue with stating it publicly since it had been rolling around in the public space anyway.

    [Background Note] In my world and in the public-facing role I have, questions come in my direction every day, some friendly and inquisitive and some accusatory / confrontational.  When one accepts a public-facing role, one does one’s best to answer every question respectfully and as fact / data-based as possible.

    When I asked for clarity on the rumor that was already in the public space, the former MLA and others supporting this person immediately demanded that my question be removed and made the demands in such a way that the person who owned the Facebook wall felt threatened as exhibited in this text exchange between the Facebook wall owner and myself.

    Screen Shot 1

    Screen Shot 2

    The reason he gave for deleting my request for clarity was also intriguing.

    Screen Shot 3

    So the mere act of asking for clarification on something being discussed about a former politician (who has a desire to be re-elected) in the public space provides people with a reason to feel fearful of asking for clarity or for allowing the request to stand.  This is especially intriguing given that the person being questioned had just cited the need “to do better and be better for, and, to each other.”

    Meanwhile an executive within the PC Party texted me this message as he observed the events that unfolded.

    Screen Shot 4

    I wonder how a Party can expect to rebuild itself on values, transparency and the like when people who request clarity on same are threatened or an effort is made to intimidate them into silence.

    The Bottom Line

    While many tout our democracy as the greatest form of government on the planet, they forget that the key elements of it need to be constantly, consistently and vigorously earned, re-earned, defended and championed.

    One of the tenets of our democracy is the right to request transparency in the actions of those who claim to represent our best interests in our legislatures.

    However, a dual crime of democracy occurs when someone who claims to serve us dares to shout us down instead of providing a response to requests for clarity AND the person being shouted at acquiesces without resistance or reason.

    When these things happen, our democracy is in danger of producing a result that is not as ideal as that which we desire or deserve.

    In such situations, if our democracy or the results it produces is tarnished in any way, we can’t blame the people we put in office nor can we criticize their actions because the reality is that we put them in office and if we accept their actions and keep re-electing them anyway, we have only ourselves to blame.

    After all, when we have high expectations of our government and its elected representatives and they appear to be disappoint us consistently, maybe we need to re-examine our expectations of ourselves before criticizing the people we elect.

    Unfortunately, I think it is always easier to hold others to a higher standard rather than ourselves since dodging responsibility and accountability requires much less effort when we expect both to be exhibited by others and not ourselves.

    What do you think?

    Does it matter?

    What are you doing about it?

    Forget asking what a politician stands for – what do YOU stand for?

    In service and servanthood,

    Harry

    Addendum For the history buff who wondered if I chose the Alexander Hamilton quote deliberately on the 211th anniversary of his death in a duel, I can assure you that it was pure coincidence. Smile

    My friends at the Bank of New York used to joke that on the day he died, he told employees of the Bank that he founded not to do anything until he got back.  Hey .. it’s their joke … not mine!  Great people over there with a great sense of humor. Smile


    Addendum 2 – Things That Make You Go Hmmmm – July 12, 2015

    I received a cease and desist letter from a legal firm representing an unrelated person who thought I was writing about them.  Oooops – guilty as charged for a crime as of yet unknown by anyone except the perpetrator.  I guess there are more skeletons present than people are aware of.

    As a friend of mine pointed out today, Israeli police sometimes offer something of interest to see who takes the bait, referring to the process as the integrity test.  The party drawn out is clearly guilty – one just needs to figure out the crime.

    In the spirit of offering to help people as much as I can, I offer politicians the quick reference guide to lying as shown below.  Click on the image for a larger version.

    Politicians Quick Reference Guide to Lying


    Addendum 3 – Closing Thoughts – July 18, 2015

    What I find interesting about the party in question is that many people who blocked progress before and who fought openness in order to prevent embarrassing truths from coming out are now the same people writing blogs about the importance of truth and openness while simultaneously still blocking the truth.

    They wanted to be the hero then by preventing the truth from coming out, they want to be the hero now by pretending to offer enlightenment that is allegedly unknown to everyone else and they are attempting to be the hero of the future by keeping skeletons buried in the closet.

    You can’t have it all.


    Addendum 4 – I Guess I’m Not Done – August 12, 2015

    With a by-election being called in Calgary-Foothills, I dared to ask what the strategy was to win the hearts, minds and votes of the people after the devastating loss by the PC party in May.

    Here is one person’s response (click on the images for larger versions):

    PCAA 1

    PCAA 2

    I guess the PC party (or at least the loudest people within it) have some learning to complete.

    Tuesday, June 2, 2015

    When Social Media Reveals Our Character … Or Our Hypocrisy

    Hypocrisy is not a way of getting back to the moral high ground. Pretending you're moral, saying your moral is not the same as acting morally. - Alan Dershowitz

    The only vice that cannot be forgiven is hypocrisy. The repentance of a hypocrite is itself hypocrisy. - William Hazlitt

    Back in December of 2013, a then member of the public communication team (which in the modern era means social media team) for then Premier of Alberta Alison Redford had an interesting response to a simple question from a member of the public.

    The “public communications expert” tweeted this to the citizen:

    "You are a truly disgusting human being #ableg"

    As a member of the same political party to which this “expert” belonged, I thought this and other tweets attributed to the team he was a member of were terribly impolite and unprofessional to citizens merely asking for accountability and so I demanded from the Premier that we choose our words more carefully when addressing the public at large.

    Curiously enough, I didn’t give this individual much thought after that until last week when I was making some comments (politely as I usually do) in a political forum and the same individual surfaced again with these observations directed at me:

    So yes, I can speak about good government. I was given a first hand lesson by voters. One you apparently have opted not to learn. Care to address the issue or do you just want to attack the PC's?

    There was the same attitude again, confrontational and insulting, to someone merely asking questions.  When I challenged the author of the statements as to why he continued to be so insulting to people on social media, he wrapped up a reply with these words.

    Do you know that after the "terrible human being" tweet I cried for hours in my office and offered my resignation three times for the disgrace I caused? For the cruelty I showed towards Michael. That it was on my suggestion that I should apologize personally because I felt it was the right thing to do?

    Followed later by ….

    None of this belongs on Facebook Harry, I would welcome the chance to actually sit down and have a friendly conversation with you.

    And with those words, I thought “Fair enough – the guy indicated he was remorseful for that foul event in the past and had sought to make amends for his error.”

    I accepted his Facebook request with an eye toward fruitful dialog, after which he then chastised me again in private.

    So much for remorse.  It reminded me of this Despair.com poster of people who cannot rationally discuss pretty much anything.

    Arrogance: The best leaders inspire by example.  When that's not an option, brute intimidation works pretty well too.

    Arrogance: The best leaders inspire by example.  When that's not an option, brute intimidation works pretty well too.

    I don’t dwell on such stuff and so I moved on until it was revealed this week that an executive of the PC Party made an inappropriate jab at the weight of the new Health Minister of Alberta as noted in McIver to investigate after PC executive mocks weight of Alberta Health minister (the executive has since apologized when he noted on Twitter – “I recognize I made a dumb comment. I apologize to Sarah Hoffman and all who read it for my insensitive remark. Once again, I'm sorry”).

    Now I could make an observation that good people should never think such things, let alone say them, but given that none of us are perfect, I let the original mistake go since we are supposed to accept apologies and move on.

    However, I was surprised by the public reappearance of the afore mentioned former member of the Premier’s communication staff who made this statement on social media in response to the PC executive’s faux pas (click on the image for a larger copy – *warning* harsh language).

    mitchell 2

    While much can be suggested or inferred from such a response including the need for a more positive view of himself, it is also clear that while this individual demands forgiveness for his mistakes, he is quick to judge the mistakes of others.  It is also interesting to note that when paid by the PC Party, he attacked others ruthlessly but once released from the employ of the Party, he now takes offense at others who do the same for the same Party.

    Even his Twitter bio reveals some hypocrisy:

    Many of us are blessed with either time or money. Please use them to help your community! :}

    He falls into the classic trap of social media – the notion of feeling empowered to say something that:

    1. We wouldn’t have the courage to say to someone’s face
    2. We wouldn’t want said to us if we made a mistake
    3. May not be a reflection of who we really are (good or bad)
    4. Oftentimes is made before we have taken a moment to rationally think the statement through instead of letting anger carry the day.

    It reminds me of the Parable of the Unmerciful Servant from Matthew 18:21-34:

    Then Peter came to Jesus and asked, “Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother or sister who sins against me? Up to seven times?”

    Jesus answered, “I tell you, not seven times, but seventy-seven times.  Therefore, the kingdom of heaven is like a king who wanted to settle accounts with his servants.  As he began the settlement, a man who owed him ten thousand bags of gold was brought to him.  Since he was not able to pay, the master ordered that he and his wife and his children and all that he had be sold to repay the debt.

    At this the servant fell on his knees before him. ‘Be patient with me,’ he begged, ‘and I will pay back everything.’  The servant’s master took pity on him, cancelled the debt and let him go.

    But when that servant went out, he found one of his fellow servants who owed him a hundred silver coins. He grabbed him and began to choke him. ‘Pay back what you owe me!’, he demanded.

    His fellow servant fell to his knees and begged him, ‘Be patient with me, and I will pay it back.’

    But he refused. Instead, he went off and had the man thrown into prison until he could pay the debt. When the other servants saw what had happened, they were outraged and went and told their master everything that had happened.

    Then the master called the servant in. ‘You wicked servant,’ he said, ‘I cancelled all that debt of yours because you begged me to.  Shouldn’t you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you?’ In anger his master handed him over to the jailers to be tortured, until he should pay back all he owed.”

    The Bottom Line

    The PC Executive’s disparaging remarks against the Health Minister were not professional, ethical or fair (and not very intelligent, to be honest).

    However, when we see something that needs to be fixed, how we call out the person who made the error and how we choose to address the issue reveals much about our character – possibly more than the character that we choose to criticize in others.

    Demanding a higher standard is not enough.

    We must live it.

    Do you live to a higher standard or merely demand it of others?

    Are you sure?

    How do you know?

    In service and servanthood,

    Harry

    Addendum:

    I didn’t share his Twitter or Facebook profiles because while I believe he serves as an example of what not to do in social media, I didn’t want to make this post about him personally.

    When I pointed out to the individual in question about his inconsistency between how he expects forgiveness for himself but gives none to others, he blocked me on social media.  It is unfortunate when “blocking” is used as a shield to hide one’s ignorance, hypocrisy or lack of authenticity instead of recognizing that they had an opportunity to make things right as they expected it to be made right for them in the past.

    It’s also a shame when people don’t realize that “blocking” doesn’t really block anything nor does it prevent their rants from becoming public.

    But sometimes when we allow anger to be our guide, lucid, rational, respectful, solution-focused thinking takes a backseat to pretty much anything and oftentimes reveals our true character.

    For those who are vehemently defending his current actions, perhaps they should review his past, lest they be corralled into something else moving forward. 

    We are, after all,  the company that we keep … or “like” …. or “retweet”.