His actions have always been constrained by what I believe is the “group mind” of this large organization. In any large organization there is always a fear of the new. There is also always present a fear of the potential of an idea or a project’s failure and of being made the party to take the fall for what went wrong. Finally there is always the fear best stated as the “what happens to my world, my fiefdom, my way of living”, question that bogs things down with inertia so massive it could stop Jupiter in its orbit. He has never been one that has shown those kinds of fear or who has let those fears stand in the way. He has always pushed people to do better.
With the disdain that has been heaped upon government workers by conservative groups through the years it is amazing that any of us hang on. But public service is something that is honorable. As long as we government employees remember (and make it our focus) that we are representing the “people” and that we are ultimately accountable to the “people” there is no shame in being a government employee. It is not the forms we fill out or the paper we shuffle (for transparency and accountability) that matter, it is what service we have provided our fellow citizens. He has embodied as high a standard of service as any government employee I know. He will be missed.
2 comments:
Gee. You never said that when I retired! Hmmmmm
So who's leaving??? Or better yet, who's left???
As God is my witness I knew that is what you would say. Borucki. His last day is today. John everything I had to say to you I said to your directly. I don't think I was using my blog the way I am now. I have been trying very hard to find things to talk about, things that make sense. Rick's depature leaves us with no real institutional history, at least not from the DAAD side. Ugh.
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