James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© March 14, 2014
REFERENCE:
Those that are
regular visitors to this blog know that it covers a multitude of subjects which
are expressed in common language, language easily translated into the reader’s
first language by referring to the indicator on the left of the subject. Many have discovered this blog over recent
months as activity has increased from a few hundred to nearly 10,000 a month
now. Thank you. We hope you find the information useful.
Currently, I am
proofreading a work of mine going into second edition, Work Without Managers: A View from the Trenches. First published nearly a quarter century
ago, it remains relevant because this transitional and transformational period
in our global society has not only been a challenging one, but has found
inordinate resistance to accept the fact that this is happening.
While technology is
swimmingly engulfing us with little apparent resistance, our cultures and
institutions, indeed, our places of employment hold desperately on to tradition
and power. So it has been since the
beginning of time.
The little excerpt
that follows is taken from the pages of Work
Without Managers as it first appeared.
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Fairness is an
interesting issue, largely because there is no such thing. Whether we are
winners or victors, losers or victims is, to a considerable degree, a function
of how we see ourselves. Not how others see us, but how we see ourselves.
Workers who are obsessed with finding fairness, consistently find instead, the
lack of it. What they fail to see is that they allow unfairness to happen… not
always, of course, but most of the time. It’s the true ‘bad break,’ however
that they cling to— labeling it unfairness.
When destiny is tied
to someone else’s rainbow, life is forever a disappointment.
Peter Drucker is
emphatic: “To predict the future, one must create it.”
William Jennings
Bryan adds, “Destiny is not a matter of chance, it is a matter of choice; it is
not a thing to be waited for, it is a thing to be achieved.”
In that same connection,
Percy Shelley adds, “As to us — we are uncertain people, who are chased by the
spirits of our destiny from purpose to purpose, like clouds by the wind.”
And, finally, Robert
Louis Stevenson submits, “Wherever we are, it is but a stage on the way to
somewhere else, and whatever we do, however we do it, it is only a preparation
to do something else that shall be different.”
Incidentally, the
Fairness Issue is generally viewed in terms of deprivation, rather than excess.
Yet how often we read of the children of celebrities who fail to cope with the
excess of privilege… from Dianne Barrymore (Too Much Too Soon, 1961) to Lindsay
Crosby (Parade Magazine, February 25, 1990). Death comes to them at an early
age because of alcohol, depression, debauchery, and failure as men and women.
Once the support system of family is removed, they see themselves as worthless
because they cannot face the future without money… and so they either slowly commit
suicide by drugs and drink, or more quickly with the gun.
Read the biographies
of Drucker, Bryan, Shelley, and Stevenson, and you will learn that adversity
was their constant companion. And like a mad bull, they rode it to achievement.
Life and work were
not always fair, but their focus was on making the most of their respective
situations; of taking charge of their respective destinies; of looking for
opportunity, rather than justifying complaint; of making things happen, rather
than waiting for them to occur. We do not find steel in our spine by filling it
with Teflon.
Yet, having said
this, Human Resources has been successful in making the Fairness Issue a
predominant factor of work for the majority and the minority; for professionals
and skilled tradespersons; for men and women alike. As such a dominant issue, fairness
confirms the thesis of worker counter dependence on the organization. Thus, the
organization’s debility is a function of the dependence of the workers. Rather
than taking control of their destiny, many workers suffer from a sense of being
controlled —and therefore subjected to the will and caprice of management.
Rather than sensing
their own empowerment, they find solace in comforting each other by whining
about how unfairly they are being treated. They take consolation in playing the
‘victim of the system,’ which insulates and isolates them from the Culture of
Contribution.
Lost in this
preoccupation with fairness is recognition of worker power. In the Information
Age — where knowledge holds most of the trump cards in this game of Bridge that
links the past with the future — workers hold a finesse hand, while continuing to
play the dummy. It would be comedic if it weren’t so tragic.
It is an endless
battle of control, with those exercising control (management) not having it;
and those having control (workers) not exercising it; with productive work
falling between them. In praise of fairness, it is reduced to a praise of
folly. Who orchestrates this scenario? Human Resources.
To be fair, an oblique
explanation of this development can be traced to the rise of college educated
blue-collar workers. Many of these
college graduates went into the “helping professions,” which included Human
Resources. These first and second generation
professionals came from families used to taking orders, not giving them; to maintaining
the agenda of management, not contributing to its design; being influenced by
management, not influencing it; following, not leading.
As a consequence,
Human Resources unwittingly became management’s union instead of workers’
advocate, selectively creating cosmetic changes that were no threat to either
management’s power or its control.
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