
“History is always written from the viewpoints of the leaders. And increasingly, in our age, war leaders do not get shot at with any serious consistency.”
Preface - 'To Us Old Men'
WWII (1975)
Context: History is always written from the viewpoints of the leaders. And increasingly, in our age, war leaders do not get shot at with any serious consistency. Leaders make momentous, world-encompassing historical decisions. It is your average anonymous soldier, or pilot, or naval gunnery rating who has to carry them out on the ground. Where there is often a vast difference between grandiose logic and plans and what takes place on the terrain. What it is that makes a man go out into dangerous places and get himself shot at with increasing consistency until finally he dies, is an interesting subject for speculation. And an interesting study. One might entitle it, THE EVOLUTION OF A SOLDIER.
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James Jones 52
American author 1921–1977Related quotes

Source: Quote, The Concept of Strategy, 1971, p. 88 (in 1980 edition)

Source: Managing the Non-Profit Organization: Principles and Practices

“A leader has to appear consistent. That doesn't mean he has to be consistent.”
Post-Prime Ministerial
Source: The Harvard Business Review (1 November 1986)
University of Colorado Leeds School of Business Commencement Address (2013)

“A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes.”
As quoted in "A View from the Asylum" in Philosophical Investigations from the Sanctity of the Press (2004), by Henry Dribble, p. 87
Attributed from posthumous publications

Dune Genesis (1980)
Context: Reevaluation taught me caution. I approached the problem with trepidation. Certainly, by the loosest of our standards there were plenty of visible targets, a plethora of blind fanaticism and guilty opportunism at which to aim painful barbs.
But how did we get this way? What makes a Nixon? What part do the meek play in creating the powerful? If a leader cannot admit mistakes, these mistakes will be hidden. Who says our leaders must be perfect? Where do they learn this?

Frederic Mullally, Fascism inside England (Claud Morris Books, 1946), p. 15
Speech at Brighton, March 1934.

Source: The Uncertain Trumpet (1960), p. 179-180