Not exact matches
[16:00] Pain + reflection = progress [16:30] Creating a meritocracy to draw the best out of everybody [18:30] How to raise your probability of being right [18:50] Why we are conditioned to need to be right [19:30] The neuroscience factor [19:50] The habitual and environmental factor [20:20] How to get to the other side [21:20] Great collective decision - making [21:50] The 5 things you need to be successful [21:55] Create audacious goals [22:15] Why you need problems [22:25] Diagnose the problems to determine the root causes [22:50] Determine the design for what you will do about the root causes [23:00] Decide to work with people who are strong where you are weak [23:15] Push through to results [23:20] The loop of success [24:15] Ray's new instinctual approach to failure [24:40] Tony's ritual after every event [25:30] The review that changed Ray's outlook on leadership [27:30] Creating new
policies based on fairness and truth [28:00] What people are missing about Ray's culture [29:30] Creating meaningful work and meaningful relationships [30:15] The importance of
radical honesty [30:50] Thoughtful disagreement [32:10] Why it was the relationships that changed Ray's life [33:10] Ray's biggest weakness and how he overcame it [34:30] The jungle metaphor [36:00] The dot collector — deciding what to listen to [40:15] The wanting of meritocratic decision - making [41:40] How to see bubbles and busts [42:40] Productivity [43:00] Where we are in the cycle [43:40] What the Fed will do [44:05] We are late in the long - term debt cycle [44:30] Long - term debt is going to be squeezing us [45:00] We have 2 economies [45:30] This year is
very similar to 1937 [46:10] The top tenth of the top 1 % of wealth = bottom 90 % combined [46:25] How this creates populism [47:00] The economy for the bottom 60 % isn't growing [48:20] If you look at averages, the country is in a bind [49:10] What are the overarching principles that bind us together?
It turns out that the constituency for
radical tax
policy changes is
very limited — at least for the kinds of
radical changes that have been proposed.
«I'm quietly confident, in a non-complacent way, that the people who are flirting with the Greens, a large number of them will end up voting Labour - for positive reasons, because we've got
radical policies on the environment, we've got
very good
policies on addressing inequality, the housing crisis, the NHS.
Surprisingly, IBB appears
very radical in his «restructuring»: a Federal Government with powers over just foreign
policy, defence, and the economy, eerily close to the confederal arrangement the Emeka Ojukwu - led Eastern Region called for in 1967.
His progressive,
radical, liberal
policies are undermining the
very tenets of our Republic and Constitution.
«For too long our state's fiscal
policies have focused on trickle down economic
policies that benefit the 1 % — the result has been a
radical redistribution of wealth to the
very rich.
The provincial teachers's association / union had managed to negotiate the disappearance / non-existence of giftedness, because it was unfair to other less able students, a result of the 1960s / 1970s
policy of
radical education «motifs» in the universities that were
very much in vogue, especially the idea that gifted kids were simply the result of middle - class hot - house parenting.
-- Anthony Watts, webmaster of WattsUpWithThat.com, September 30, 2011 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- «Having observed how the EPA has functioned for more than three decades, Carlin warns that its current «environmental
policy has been hijacked by
radicals intent on imposing their ideology by government fiat on the rest of us whether we like it or not... If environmental
policy is based on government fiat or «green»
policy prescriptions the results have been and are
very likely to continue to be disastrous.»
Unless there is a
radical change of thinking to the government's
policy on justice there is the
very real risk of further damage to the rule of law in the UK.