NC legislative leaders and the inevitable temptations of power

https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4ITEtU_0v82qI3S00
A fountain is shown outside the North Carolina Legislative Building in Raleigh. Corey Friedman | Restoration NewsMedia
https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4DLkaQ_0v82qI3S00
Rob Schofield

In an acceptance speech he delivered in 1991 at a Copenhagen awards ceremony honoring his contributions to European civilization, Vaclav Havel — a poet and playwright who had risen from Soviet-era dissident to become president of what was then still known as Czechoslovakia — used the opportunity to hold forth on the temptations of political power.

Employing simple, easy-to-understand examples, Havel explained how it becomes inevitable — even for politicians with the purest of motives — to succumb to the temptations of privilege, perks and shortcuts.

While, he noted, some privileges he enjoyed as president made obvious sense — a chauffeured limousine, staff to do his shopping and cooking — they were also part of what easily became a slippery slope: “I myself wage a constant and rather unsuccessful struggle with the advantages I enjoy, and I would not dare say that I can always identify that moment clearly. You get used to things, and gradually, without being aware of it, you may lose your sense of judgement.”…

Story continues

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

TRENDING ARTICLES