Tuesday, March 22, 2005



Memory remains, and the images I have created and still not molded in flesh. They will leave their harsh mark on me, it is true! But my heart is left me, and the same flesh and blood which Likewise can Love and suffer and desire and remember, and this is, after all, life. On voit le soleil! Well, good-bye, brother! Do not grieve for me Dostoevsky On Terri Schiavo

Art of Living & Literature Across Frontiers: Paranoia at Large: Athena of 'Stinging Sensation'
Nick O'Malley, Workplace Reporter, touches on what many of us have known for many years. There are Hitler’s little helpers in many management and leadership positions.

One in 10 Australian managers are deceitful, cold-hearted manipulators bent on attaining power for its own sake, new research shows. Devoid of empathy, they are reckless and leave a trail of wrecked careers, corporate destruction and a legacy of fear.
A psychotherapist with the consultancy Banks Management Group, Dr Glyn Brokensha, has coined the term "powerpath" to describe such managers to differentiate them from criminal psychopaths. He describes powerpathic behaviour as being on a continuum - all of us behave in such a manner occasionally, but powerpaths take it to an extreme.
Dr Brokensha said powerpaths, typically articulate, charming and confident, thrive in businesses with autocratic management cultures where they can curry favour with peers and superiors, while causing misery for those who report to them.
"You'll get senior management say, 'So-and-so is really good. He has cleared out all the deadwood, all the non-performers.' And then find three years later that the deadwood has not been cleared out. He has cleared out anybody who knew what he was, anyone who opposed him," he said. "He is actually a glib non-performer himself."


Beware the office powerpath - the boss who leaves a trail of destruction [Mother of all mysteries: why she killed her family ; A Link Between Intelligence And Suicide? ]
• · The birth of Attention Deficit Trait. Think being busy and working harder is working smarter? Maybe, maybe not. You may just have ADT. I would venture to say all regular bloggers have this and according to this ComputerWorld article it is addictive. Attention Deficit Trait ; Google on ADT
• · · Programming junkies will plough through this story Send in the clones: Desperate programmers ; Audiences for America's evening newscasts has been declining for some time. It's not difficult to see why. Maybe it's time to try something different - a thinking person's news program? Looking For A Better TV News Model ; Oh, And Flickr Goes to Yahoo..
• · · · As one of the newest Saudi writers to make a buzz in literary world, Yousef Mohaimeed has quickly proven that he has both the talent and the incredibly good nose to stir things up Journey into Mystery: Saudi Censorship Starting To Crumble ; The Automatic Critic Who needs critics anymore? They're unreliable. The latest web services will do your cultural sorting for you. Describing or categorizing any new cultural product is taxing and time-consuming Connecting the Dots
• · · · · I've heard that 42 per cent of statistics are contrived to suit a purpose. I agree 100 per cent Lies, damn lies and statistics ; Al-Saadi Gaddafi, the elusive, jet-setting Chinese-food-loving son of Libya's Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, has been sighted here, there and everywhere since Spike reported last week that he had been spotted dining with his entourage at The Golden Century. But Soccer NSW is one group less than pleased to see him back. Scarlet Pimpernel
• · · · · · Maybe you pine for the sound of the pirate voice whispering: Tatoo. It began with people tattooing themselves. Then folk started sticking junk in their faces. Such measures were once the sole preserve of brawlers and sailers and creatures of the night, but today, every kid from Cranbrook to SCEGGS has a Tibetan dragon cuddling his bicep and a metallic booger swinging from his nose Out on a limb ; Australian Red Cross could only make 17th place on the table with total revenue of $374.5 million Charity sector worth $70b a year: report