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Tightknit organizations such as political groups, NGOs, and some corporations, among other types, have leaders who

  1. teach others to be leaders. leaders make more leaders.

  2. recruit people sincere about the cause and doing a good job. (conscientious)

  3. teach others to in-turn teach/lead/recruit

  4. recruit based on go-getters, on those who are proactive.

  5. organize along effective lines of operations, logistics, and intelligence, and the best people for each role

  6. have a strict understanding of chain of command or else an effective process for quickly resolving differences.

  7. are constantly studying opposition's motives, playbook, and operations to gain an edge.

  8. regularly take note of, and promote, high morale, seeing it as essential to operations.

  9. understand the importance of practicing procedure, training, drilling, and team-level competency.

  10. are always gauging the field, be it operational, or at the public perception level, taking notes of opportunities for gains, and minimizing loss at every turn,only ever toward and in conjunction with a broad-tent strategy or vision that can always be referred back to when in doubt about what the mission is.

  11. knows who to tell what. Compartmentalizes information, both to prevent leaks to opposition, and to keep each level and branch of the organization focused only on the essentials of what the job is, therefore maximizing their reliance on each other and steady communication.

Lets go over each

(1) If the biggest problem is a lack of leadership, as is often the case in politics, the social sphere, companies, and elsewhere, and people willing to lead are valuable, that makes leadership a weak link.

Therefore one of the most important traits of a leader, one of the main goals, is creating more people willing and able to lead. In a situation where leadership is targeted first by opposition, part of winning is assuring, even if a particular leader is removed, their loss does not cripple the org or network.

(2) A common problem organizations of all sorts face is infiltration, bad faith, or lackluster new members that aren't in it for the larger goal, or even for the people they work next to. The way to answer this is to filter by personality, and focus on people already dedicated or already part of a smaller group to be absorbed. This is also mass politics, the unification of disparate forces or groups towards a larger strategy.

(3) Often what happens in organizations is an otherwise effective leader will run things for a while, and then be removed from their position or leave. Whatever the case, their influence goes with them. The lessons and skills they have are not transmitted to the broader org. Those lessons do not become part of the culture and driving force. This can be counter-acted by training standards, policies, and peer-accountability. Make it a matter of habit to train newer people in more advanced roles the longer they are part of the org. In this way, when the vagaries of life, opposition, and circumstance remove people from your org, the organization remains flexible to the change.

(4) An organization made of random recruits, those who have to be 'motivated', above and beyond typical morale, is an organization that is lethargic and prone to developing a culture of inaction and retrospectives without follow through. To create an organization thats energetic, a leader has to ask the potential members why they're joining, and what they bring to the table. In the most general case, one recruit that is willing and able to do something, anything, toward the goal, is better than hundreds or thousands of well-wishers and near-do-wells who aren't prone to take their own initiative. Leadership makes it their goal to identify those with initiative and clearly lay out the impact that group effort can have versus "going it alone."

(5) Too many mechanics on the car ruin the engine. Too many drivers at the wheel wreck the car. So it is with organizations. Effective organization is about putting the right people in the correct roles that they're both suited for in terms of proficiency, and which they will excel in terms of disposition. For example, lets say an investor wants to build a factory. To sell to the hardware stores, and make sure his attempt at grabbing the market isn't squelched, he might have to understand where the various hardware stores in his chosen city are, and understand their delivery routes to get opportunities to make network connections to distributors on the ground. He would be ill-advised to therefore send a guy who has a spontaneous disposition and won't have the stamina to consistently follow the routines of competition and distributors. This example would be an intelligence position and requires someone with experience in logistics, and it highlights the importance of knowing who fits where in your org.

(6) An organization that cannot adapt, and utilize situational opportunities, quickly and efficiently, will miss opportunities, and incur risks. One of the easiest ways to assure planning and operations are efficiently carried out is to have every recruit trained and fully aware of what the chain of command is. By organizing around a chain of command, there is never any doubt, in an uncertain or unstable situation, who is in charge and what the final word on any matter is. There is no 'pull' in opposite directions. Everyone understands a single point of control, when in competent hands, allows the group to act in unison, maximizing its potential impact, as long as everyone agrees who is making final decisions. These may not always be the correct decisions in hindsight, or may not seem like the best at the time, or may seem incorrect because a member has limited information about why a decision was made (and that may be intentional even). This also assumes of course that there is room for disagreement or to raise an issue thats an obvious hazard if otherwise overlooked by a team leader. Every member is, through recruitment, made to understand they are there to support the mission whatever the mission or goal happens to be and that the best way for them to do this, is to carry out decisions and orders quickly and efficiently.

(7) Leadership understands that situations are fluid. That changing environments can present unexpected opportunities and unforeseen hazards. That material circumstances for the organization or even opposition, can change on a dime. And likewise that all actors within an environment have their own planning, operations, intelligence, motives, organizational goals, and strategies, some of which change and emerge during competitions between organizations.

Being aware of these facts, leadership seeks to get within the decision making loop of opposition, while attempting to likewise make their own organization opaque and confounding as possible. Opposition will attempt to keep its competition (you) busy, inactive, demoralized, and confused about their motives, strategies, and methods. When these start to become clear, that is when leadership knows it has entered into the opposition's decision loop.

(8) Mental state makes or breaks groups and organization, be it psyching people up for an event or group activity, or managing their expectations or reactions to events. Failing to maintain morale can see people leave, cast doubt on broader goals, or lead to infighting and ruined organization operations. Low morale also causes organizations to spin their wheels. Tactics that drag on too long are a drag as Alinsky himself wrote. Leadership endeavors to balance operations with downtime, and mixing up tactics to keep people from becoming demoralized. This may come in the form of things as wild as bonfires, parties, or simply a night out, or away time, for people to reassess and recommit as necessary. Ideally this downtime is spent with a member's immediate team so their membership does not simply devolve into a "work relationship".

(9) "leaders understand the importance of practicing procedure, training, drilling, and team-level competency."

No plan or organization's strategy survives a punch to the mouth but it is important understand what happens and what to do after things go sideways. Leaders understand reflexes and habits developed naturally are not by themselves the best response to a given situation, and seek to be prepared for all contingencies, with a best-case response when a situation goes south. And leaders understand the best way to be prepared for any outcome, is to train for that outcome until it becomes automatic, a reflex, even for individual events. Team and organization operations are meticulously laid out, drilled, and thought through, to look for flaws, oversights, and potential gotchas that competition or opposition might pursue. And then they are practiced until everyone in a team, or every relevant member, knows exactly what their role is and the roles of the people around them and has no last-minute hesitancy or doubt about what to do. Plans become practice. Practice becomes process. Process becomes procedural memory.

(10) Leadership is constantly looking at both the field of risks and opportunities, and asking for each, does this align with the goals or vision for the organization? Without a vision, when the center doesn't hold, when all else fails, when even the best leadership fails against simply bad luck or competition, its easy for an organization to collapse in on itself. The point of vision is to be able to ask in the worst case scenarios, what are you still about?

If everything else changes, if everyone quits, or if no one is left to keep things running, and nothing you try works, and you have to change everything about your org: what is the one thing that originally brought everyone to the table? The one idea that inspired everyone from the start? The one thing that made the organization or team what it is at its core? Because if the foundation is solid, then even if everything else crashes and burns in an organization, you can always tear it all down and rebuild on that foundation. Thats what vision is. It's a hot knife that cuts through the red meat of any situation and strikes at the bone. It's a jumping-off point to get restarted when circumstance knocks an organization off its feet. It's the position from which all other positions are reevaluated.

(11) If knowing the opposition is paramount, then preventing the opposition from knowing your organization is equally important. Effective leaders understand people operate best when they have all the details and information relevant to their role and the roles of those around them and no more. Too much information demoralizes for a variety of reasons, to little, the same outcome, demoralization. There may be disagreements about higher level goals, or how one branch operates compared to another branch. A good leader therefore seeks to compartmentalize an organization, to both prevent leaks, and keep an organizations various branches, teams, and members, focused on the task at hand, and not on low level disagreements and opinions, which are distractions from the broader goal.

This has been a brief overview of what makes effective leaders and organizations.

I encourage others to add their own know-how.

Tightknit organizations such as political groups, NGOs, and some corporations, among other types, have leaders who 1. teach others to be leaders. leaders make more leaders. 2. recruit people sincere about the cause and doing a good job. (conscientious) 3. teach others to in-turn teach/lead/recruit 4. recruit based on go-getters, on those who are *proactive*. 5. organize along effective lines of operations, logistics, and intelligence, and the best people for each role 6. have a strict understanding of chain of command or else an effective process for quickly resolving differences. 7. are constantly studying opposition's motives, playbook, and operations to gain an edge. 8. regularly take note of, and promote, high morale, seeing it as essential to operations. 9. understand the importance of practicing procedure, training, drilling, and team-level competency. 10. are always gauging the field, be it operational, or at the public perception level, taking notes of opportunities for gains, and minimizing loss at every turn,*only ever* toward and *in conjunction with* a broad-tent strategy or vision that can always be referred back to when in doubt about what the mission is. 11. knows who to tell what. Compartmentalizes information, both to prevent leaks to opposition, and to keep each level and branch of the organization focused only on the *essentials* of what the job is, therefore maximizing their reliance on each other and steady communication. Lets go over each (1) If the biggest problem is a lack of leadership, as is often the case in politics, the social sphere, companies, and elsewhere, and people willing to lead are valuable, that makes leadership a weak link. Therefore one of the most important traits of a leader, one of the main goals, is creating more people willing and able to lead. In a situation where leadership is *targeted first* by opposition, part of winning is assuring, even if a particular leader is removed, their loss does not cripple the org or network. (2) A common problem organizations of all sorts face is infiltration, bad faith, or lackluster new members that aren't in it for the larger goal, or even for the people they work next to. The way to answer this is to filter by personality, and focus on people already dedicated or already part of a smaller group to be absorbed. This is also mass politics, the unification of disparate forces or groups towards a larger strategy. (3) Often what happens in organizations is an otherwise effective leader will run things for a while, and then be removed from their position or leave. Whatever the case, their influence goes with them. The lessons and skills they have are not transmitted to the broader org. Those lessons do not become *part of the culture* and driving force. This can be counter-acted by training standards, policies, and peer-accountability. Make it a matter of habit to train newer people in more advanced roles the longer they are part of the org. In this way, when the vagaries of life, opposition, and circumstance remove people from your org, the organization remains flexible to the change. (4) An organization made of random recruits, those who have to be 'motivated', above and beyond typical morale, is an organization that is lethargic and prone to developing a culture of inaction and retrospectives without follow through. To create an organization thats energetic, a leader has to ask the potential members why they're joining, and what they bring to the table. In the most general case, one recruit that is willing and able to do *something*, anything, toward the goal, is better than hundreds or thousands of well-wishers and near-do-wells who aren't prone to take their own initiative. Leadership makes it their goal to identify those with initiative and *clearly* lay out the impact that *group effort* can have versus "going it alone." (5) Too many mechanics on the car ruin the engine. Too many drivers at the wheel wreck the car. So it is with organizations. Effective organization is about putting the right people in the correct roles that they're both suited for in terms of proficiency, and which they will excel in terms of disposition. For example, lets say an investor wants to build a factory. To sell to the hardware stores, and make sure his attempt at grabbing the market isn't squelched, he might have to understand where the various hardware stores in his chosen city are, and understand their delivery routes to get opportunities to make network connections to distributors on the ground. He would be ill-advised to therefore send a guy who has a spontaneous disposition and won't have the stamina to consistently follow the routines of competition and distributors. This example would be an intelligence position and requires someone with experience in logistics, and it highlights the importance of knowing who fits where in your org. (6) An organization that cannot adapt, and utilize situational opportunities, quickly and efficiently, will miss opportunities, and incur risks. One of the easiest ways to assure planning and operations are efficiently carried out is to have every recruit trained and fully aware of what the chain of command is. By organizing around a chain of command, there is never any doubt, in an uncertain or unstable situation, who is in charge and what the final word on any matter is. There is no 'pull' in opposite directions. Everyone understands a single point of control, when in competent hands, allows the group to act *in unison*, maximizing its potential impact, as long as everyone *agrees* who is making final decisions. These may not always be the *correct* decisions in hindsight, or may not seem like the *best* at the time, or may seem *incorrect* because a member has limited information about why a decision was made (and that may be intentional even). This also assumes of course that there is *room* for disagreement or to raise an issue thats an obvious hazard if otherwise overlooked by a team leader. Every member is, through recruitment, made to understand they are there to *support the mission whatever the mission or goal happens to be* and that the best way for them to do this, is to carry out decisions and orders quickly and efficiently. (7) Leadership understands that situations are fluid. That changing environments can present unexpected opportunities and unforeseen hazards. That material circumstances for the organization or even opposition, can change on a dime. And likewise that all actors within an environment have their own planning, operations, intelligence, motives, organizational goals, and strategies, some of which change and emerge *during* competitions between organizations. Being aware of these facts, leadership seeks to get *within* the decision making loop of opposition, while attempting to likewise make their own organization opaque and confounding as possible. Opposition will attempt to keep its competition (you) busy, inactive, demoralized, and confused about their motives, strategies, and methods. When these start to become clear, that is when leadership knows it has entered *into* the opposition's decision loop. (8) Mental state makes or breaks groups and organization, be it psyching people up for an event or group activity, or managing their expectations or reactions to events. Failing to maintain morale can see people leave, cast doubt on broader goals, or lead to infighting and ruined organization operations. Low morale also causes organizations to spin their wheels. Tactics that drag on too long are a drag as Alinsky himself wrote. Leadership endeavors to balance operations with downtime, and mixing up tactics to keep people from becoming demoralized. This may come in the form of things as wild as bonfires, parties, or simply a night out, or away time, for people to reassess and recommit as necessary. Ideally this downtime is spent with a member's immediate team so their membership does not simply devolve into a "work relationship". (9) "leaders understand the importance of practicing procedure, training, drilling, and team-level competency." No plan or organization's strategy survives a punch to the mouth but it is important understand what happens and what to do *after* things go sideways. Leaders understand reflexes and habits developed naturally are not by themselves the best response to a given situation, and seek to be prepared for all contingencies, with a best-case response when a situation goes south. And leaders understand the best way to be prepared for any outcome, is to train for that outcome *until it becomes automatic*, a reflex, even for individual events. Team and organization operations are meticulously laid out, drilled, and thought through, to look for flaws, oversights, and potential gotchas that competition or opposition might pursue. And then they are practiced until everyone in a team, or every relevant member, knows exactly what their role is and the roles of the people around them and has no last-minute hesitancy or doubt about what to do. Plans become practice. Practice becomes process. Process becomes procedural memory. (10) Leadership is constantly looking at both the field of risks and opportunities, and asking for each, does this align with the goals or vision for the organization? Without a vision, when the center doesn't hold, when all else fails, when even the best leadership fails against simply bad luck or competition, its easy for an organization to collapse in on itself. The point of vision is to be able to ask in the worst case scenarios, what are you still about? If everything else changes, if everyone quits, or if no one is left to keep things running, and nothing you try works, and you have to change everything about your org: what is the one thing that originally brought everyone to the table? The one idea that inspired everyone from the start? The one thing that made the organization or team what it is at its core? Because if the foundation is solid, then even if everything else crashes and burns in an organization, you can always tear it all down and rebuild on that foundation. Thats what vision is. It's a hot knife that cuts through the red meat of any situation and strikes at the bone. It's a jumping-off point to get restarted when circumstance knocks an organization off its feet. It's the position from which all other positions are reevaluated. (11) If knowing the opposition is paramount, then preventing the opposition from knowing *your organization* is equally important. Effective leaders understand people operate best when they have all the details and information *relevant to their role* and the roles of those around them and no more. Too much information demoralizes for a variety of reasons, to little, the same outcome, demoralization. There may be disagreements about higher level goals, or how one branch operates compared to another branch. A good leader therefore seeks to compartmentalize an organization, to both prevent leaks, and keep an organizations various branches, teams, and members, focused on the task at hand, and *not* on low level disagreements and opinions, which are distractions from the broader goal. This has been a brief overview of what makes effective leaders and organizations. I encourage others to add their own know-how.

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

Ngos have money, they sucker people in.

You do the best you can you MUST be honest and for your men and any one below you. The old saying, walk the walk and talk the talk. You walk the path of the righteousness and talk the words of the righteous to prove you are not corrupt. Since to win you will have to not take more and show in victory and in conflict you are the same person that you present in public as in private.

This is where the usual leader fucks up. They try to, if honest when starting, to show a different side after their conflicts.

If you say you want little but try to live like the rich then you are fooling yourself or your people that pushed you there. I though even I know it would be considered an insult serve someone visiting, even a rich man visiting. I would serve something like shake and bake chicken, baked potato and a vegetable for a dinner. If the man even a world leader was a true man not one trying to live a dream of being born a king would see the meal and not complain.

A true leader and righteous man that knows he's a man of god would see the meal, (if it was not a food against his religeon like "pig" which some even the Catholics "we forget" are not supposed to eat), and he would pray.

He would eat it and realize it was not a slight but a sign that the man in front of him was real and not an act. I think our leaders that drink fine wine and are fat forget that their fighters and supporters have put them there and they live then a path of decadence and lust and other sinful things.

A man that shows another leader that he disdains his people shows that leader this person forget his past, his debts of gratitude, his morality, and does what enriches only him. If he tries to use sin as in offering, drugs, drunkeness, and women to the other then he's a snake and the other leader must call him on it, or face having his own people and his land being treated like dogshit on that leaders shoe.

All leaders in the world and the people they protect for this also. You do not get a pass on sin and are above judgement from the masses or God but are there to set an example.

This is why I don't trust people in over $5000 clothing, or that feast while everyone else starves. I know that I see democrat leaders and republican ones that are drunk as shit at a convention interview and realize they are not as good as they claim.

I saw Trump a billionaire trying to bring up people at the bottom and make rich men do their duty and pay taxes and come home to the US and I see good since they are using slave labor in China and other countries.

I see him speak and people hate and realize that people are stupid and gullible since when you promise and do the opposite your not trustworthy. I see them meet with people that do evil and kill and Trump stop wars and piss of the evil men for them and knew that he did walk the walk and talk the talk. Sure he's fucked up in the past, I've had my share of chasing pussy so I don't judge that since he is not doing it in office and it's not my place to judge that just understand that we all sin.

I see the world as I was a short time ago and realize we all want to have an illusion of being better to others in appearance. I understand now if I am not real the illusion will be seen through like it is just hot air. Leaders are not leaders today, they are actors. They are children living a corrupt dream but they'll be judged or just fall with no one willing to save them when they fall.

I see them try to hide being fat like Hillary's $20K pantsuits and think "If she lived right she wouldn't need to hide it". I see women wearing makeup to trap a man and realize they are going to be unhappy when the idiot "might even been me" find out his dream was shattered when he saw past her illusion.

I once was thinking "We need the banks they did bring us to this point in prosperity". I then look and see slave labor in our country in low paying jobs, other countries people using actual slave labor to build smart phones that are priced like I would pay for a used car. I see people starving in the streets and killing for drugs, I see money has corrupted even the good for shiny crap then make decisions to support their bad past decisions.

I see fear and greed and desire clouding our minds. I then realize this dream life style we think we want all because the rich and the ones controlling the money are the things that fucked this world up. I see men with more money than a lot of countries wanting more money and power and know the fear they have of losing it all or even some or not getting richer makes them kill, enslave, look down on the ones that are not of the elite class they believe they are.

I see them making good men hate, kill, and sin otherwise to help or to hurt them. The circle of corruption is strong in this time. It's like in France centuries ago.

We need a reset but not the way the politicians are thinking. I see people who are healthy taking taxpayer handouts from just above broke workers where the politicians are creating hate.

I see women marrying 4 times and having 7 kids not working just fucking, and realize the Vatican are fucking up allowing this corruption of the word and allowing stupid people to marry for stupid corrupt reasons.

My sins are huge and what pushed me to seek the truth sins they dug the hole I was in. My heart grew cold and I know since I've been there see my sins and the ones around me so clearly but not as good as the Lord sees them not even close since the Lord was the one that showed me I know I am still a human thus still a fool but a fool with one of ultimate wisdom to let me know when I stray from his will he steps back and I cannot feel him. I once thought violence was a good solution to take back the world but I realize restraint of ourselves and restraint of evil are the only cures. We need leader that are good. We also need leaders that are wise.

I see Trump and he says take the vaccine and we judge him to be one of them. I also realize I just found out medicine is "not the workers" all bullshit. We need men to close cuts, to mend bones, but viruses are made in our bodies and no one knows this hardly. Trump has not been likely enlightened. He like us is human and maybe someone needs to show him and the medical people in the world that it's all a lie for evil money. Take a pill, there is no magic pill they say and they are more right than even they could imagine. Live a good life and you don't need a doctor most times. If you get injured then you need a doctor but a disease you likely need to stop doing something or just a lifestyle change overall. We need a government reset, we need to stop playing games and watching TV and filling our heads with fantasy "I have been guilty my entire life".

We need to forget that fast car to show off and show our faith and goodness and point out to others where they are mistaken. We need to make sure evil does not ascend to positions of power. We need leaders like Washington who lead from the front and suffered like the men who died around him. World wars would not happen if the ones in the command room were on the beach of Normandy. We must realize we shouldn't expect sacrifices when the ones asking are not willing to sacrifice themselves also to walk the walk not talk the bull like so many.

The world is so sad like a self made and approved hell when we take off as has been said the rose colored glasses and look for real at how we supported the evils and corruption with glee and take responsibility for our own choice now and learn from our mistakes and most of my life was a huge mistake and now we have to let the ones around us know what we have learned.

[–] 1 pt

Shawnh, very honest post you made. I want to direct you to some valuable resources that may give you some insights:

If you do anything, at least watch the first two.