Imagine you're the head of a small business and you need to hire someone to run a portion of your company. How would you go about doing that? Well, a reasonable person would evaluate various job applicants. You would check their qualifications. Do they have the necessary job skills and experience? Are they honest? Do they have a good work ethic? Is their temperament suitable for the job? Do they demonstrate good judgment?
Today I want to share my thoughts on the role citizens play in a democracy. There is a common belief that we are separate from our government and that we, as citizens, have no power over it. I would argue it's quite the opposite. We are the government and we have all the power. We just need to use it.
America is a Business
To understand this, let's consider the American government in terms of corporate structure. America, as well as its government, is a business. It produces work products such as roads and bridges, timely weather forecasts, various economic reports. The government also provides services like firefighting, law enforcement, public schools, and libraries for its customers, the citizens in exchange for taxes.
The government is managed by its citizens, people like you and me, who act as both the Board of Directors and its customers. We hire the management team, the elected officials in whom we place our trust to operate the machinery of government according to our policy directives. Our corporation has a set of bylaws called the Constitution which the management team is bound to obey and enforce. We have a separate board called the courts that provides guidance regrading the application of the bylaws and their resultant policies. Ultimately, all power rests with the citizens since we are the ones who sign the management team to their multi-year contracts.
But with great power comes great responsibility. In our case it's management responsibility. We have the responsibility to be engaged and vigilant. We must hire carefully, and constantly evaluate the management team's performance. In order to be good at this role, we must understand what our government does and how it works. We must understand the bylaws and how they shape the government.
America Always Gets the Government It Deserves
So what happens when we neglect our management responsibility? A brief look around answers that question. In the year 2026, we have a deeply corrupt and incompetent government whose actions are dictated by a handful of wealthy donors, and these billionaires don't seem very interested in our well-being. So it's up to us to perform our management responsibility and straighten this mess out.
Now, I know that people are busy with their personal lives and don't have the time or necessarily the inclination to perform the required oversight, but the management of our government is important because it is tasked with securing our economic, societal, and environmental safety. Not something that you want to leave to chance or worse, exploitation by evil people.
Like they say, freedom isn't free.
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Rant: Management Responsibility
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
