Friday, January 16, 2009
Bureaucracy: love of privilege
Taken from Václav Havel's speech of February 21, 1990, "A Joint Session of the U.S. Congress," appearing in The Art of the Impossible: Politics as Morality in Practice by Václav Havel. Translated from the Czech by Paul Wilson and others, published by Alfred A. Knopf.
In a speech he gave in 1991, Václav Havel, the President of Czechoslovakia, commented on the privileges that begin to accrue to someone in high office:
"I go to a special doctor, I don't have to drive a car, ... I needn't cook or shop for myself, and I needn't even dial my own telephone....
In other words, I find myself in the world of privileges, exceptions, perks; in the world of VIPs who gradually lose track of how much butter or a streetcar costs.... I find myself on the very threshold of the world of the communist fat cats whom I have criticized all my life.
And worst of all, everything has its own unassailable logic. It would be laughable and contemptible for me to miss a meeting that served the interests of my country because I had spent my presidential time in a dentist's waiting room....
But where do logic and objective necessity stop and excuses begin? Where does the interest of the country stop and the love of privileges begin?"
[Contributed] by Peg Tileston on www.holdthatthought.com: "In the United States, corporate executives rake in millions as their companies lay off workers." Peg has been a community activist in Anchorage for over 30 years. She is the chairperson of Alaska Common Ground, a non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to encouraging all Alaskans to engage in respectful dialogue on issues of importance to them.
In a speech he gave in 1991, Václav Havel, the President of Czechoslovakia, commented on the privileges that begin to accrue to someone in high office:
"I go to a special doctor, I don't have to drive a car, ... I needn't cook or shop for myself, and I needn't even dial my own telephone....
In other words, I find myself in the world of privileges, exceptions, perks; in the world of VIPs who gradually lose track of how much butter or a streetcar costs.... I find myself on the very threshold of the world of the communist fat cats whom I have criticized all my life.
And worst of all, everything has its own unassailable logic. It would be laughable and contemptible for me to miss a meeting that served the interests of my country because I had spent my presidential time in a dentist's waiting room....
But where do logic and objective necessity stop and excuses begin? Where does the interest of the country stop and the love of privileges begin?"
[Contributed] by Peg Tileston on www.holdthatthought.com: "In the United States, corporate executives rake in millions as their companies lay off workers." Peg has been a community activist in Anchorage for over 30 years. She is the chairperson of Alaska Common Ground, a non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to encouraging all Alaskans to engage in respectful dialogue on issues of importance to them.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Hi
Thanks for commenting. I'm the moderator of this blog, and will either post your comment in its entirety, or email you to ask you to edit your comment before posting. If you have any questions about your comments showing up on the blog, please email me at pub@PortGamblePublishing.com
Thanks,
Margie Doyle