Crises have a way of quickly showing whether individuals are heroes or zeroes. The financial crisis of 2008, and now 2009, is no different. It has quickly made evident the number of zeroes that exist in business and government.
Unfortunately, but not unexpected, there are many more zeroes than heroes nowadays. Hopefully, the proportion will change when we decide it's time to reward responsibility and to stop rewarding irresponsible behavior.
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This is not financial, political or policy advice. Please consult a professional advisor.Copyright © 2009 Achievement Catalyst, LLC
2 comments:
With one exception, I'd have to agree with your list.
The exception is Sarah Palin - a hero for providing so much entertainment value during an otherwise dull and predictable election.
Spitzer can be put down as another who went from hero to zero. Greenspan went from zero to zero in my book. The list goes on.....
Rick Santelli's on-air emotional tirade should not make him a hero. His short-term popularity bump is like Jim Cramer got when he almost had an on-air heart attack about a year ago, the bump was not for the message but the on-air meltdown. Add Rick Santelli to your ZERO list.
He is the standard-bearer for a double-standard: he doesn't want to provide relief for homeowners (especially for those who made bad decisions about ARMs, refinancing, or other forms of real-estate speculation) but feels its 'imperative' to do something to improve the markets' stability despite all of the irresponsible actions that have been perpetrated by people across the financial / banking / trading 'value' (?) chain.
You should also cut GIBBS some slack. Just compare him to Tony Snow or Scott McClellan. Gibbs may not be perfect, but he is far more competent, honest, and rational, than either of those two.
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