Masonry Magazine April 2011 Page. 36
FULL CONTACT PROJECT MANAGEMENT
By "Coach" Gary Micheloni
Ronald Reagan on Project Leadership
Right about now, all across the country, people are remembering Pres. Ronald Reagan and celebrating the 100th anniversary of his birth. As with all great leaders, and most American presidents, a love-hate relationship among the citizenry usually exists. Some love everything about the leader, while some hate everything the leader ever did or said. Most are somewhere in the middle, appreciating the positive things accomplished. In the spirit of full disclosure, I confess to being much closer to "love" when it comes to this particular figure, and you can figure that this column is colored that way.
Reagan was elected to office in 1980, and this is what the country's economic landscape looked like: double-digit inflation, home mortgages in the high-teens, an oil crisis and a hostage crisis in the Middle East. Hey, change the mortgage rates for unemployment rates, and things look remarkably similar to today, don't they?
The top marginal tax rate was 70 percent. Let me spell that out: seventy: What a joy it was back then, as a contractor, to take all of that risk, and then give 70 percent of my profit to the Uncle. Yikes!
Pres. Reagan cut income taxes - yet revenues to the Federal government increased substantially - something we seem to forget today. He also rebuilt the U.S. military, was a staunch supporter of the "Star Wars" missile defense idea which ultimately resulted in the old Soviet Union giving up on the idea of world domination, and resulted in its breakup into the several republics we see now.
That's a synopsis from my viewpoint, though I'm not really here to talk about or argue political points, but leadership style. Pres. Reagan was known as "The Great Communicator" and was effective at delivering his messages to other world leaders and to the American people.
One of his very memorable speeches occurred at the Berlin Wall. We forget that Germany was once divided (since the end of WWII) into East and West Germany, and the city of Berlin into East and West Berlin. Over the years, people from the East were shot by border guards as they attempted to reach the freedom available in the West. Reagan came to Berlin on June 12, 1987, at the Brandenburg Gate, and said:
"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!
In fact, the Wall did come down shortly thereafter, in 1989.
On Jan. 28, 1986, most of America, including millions of schoolchildren, watched on television as the space shuttle Challenger was launched. Moments into the flight, it exploded, all seven astronauts were killed. All of America mourned. Later that evening, Pres. Reagan addressed the nation:
"The future doesn't belong to the fainthearted; it belongs to the brave. The Challenger crew was pulling us into the future, and we'll continue to follow them."
Well before he became president, on Oct. 27, 1964, in a campaign speech he gave in support of a losing presidential candidate, he reminded us of American greatness, with this:
"You and I have a rendezvous with destiny. We will preserve for our children this, the last best hope of man on earth, or we will sentence them to take the first step into a thousand years of darkness. If we fail, at least let