Politics

October 31, 2008

  • Lee Greif - Politics And Peter Peyers

    Out of the many different careers Lee Greif has experimented in in the course of his life, the one he enjoyed the most was the five years he spent as a politician. (…)

October 30, 2008

October 29, 2008

October 27, 2008

  • Lee Greif - Role In Politics

    Out of the many different careers Lee Greif has experimented in in the course of his life, the one he enjoyed the most was the five years he spent as a politician. (…)

October 24, 2008

  • Lee Greif - Political Career

    Lee Greif has engaged in many different careers throughout his life, none of which he recalls more fondly than his five year stint in politics. (…)

October 22, 2008

October 21, 2008

  • Lee Greif - Chief Of Staff

    Lee Greif has had a wide variety of jobs and careers in his lifetime, but the five years he spent in politics are definitely among his favorite. (…)

October 19, 2008

October 16, 2008

September 9, 2008

August 6, 2008

  • Louis O'Neill as District Attorney

    Louis O’Neill handled numerous important case from investigation to sentencing, often tracking down criminals who had left little trace or had used complex mechanisms to hide their tracks.  In one particularly difficult case of fraud and theft, People v. (…)

July 7, 2008

March 23, 2008

  • Political Campaign Strategies

    Political campaign strategies seem to first rely on name and face recognition. This seems to fly in the face of our basic American values. (…)

June 5, 2007

  • Attributes Of A Leader

    Intelligence and Judgment-in-Action: There are bright people who lack judgment altogether (which may be the source of the observation that "there's nothing worse than a stupid person with a brilliant mind").  There are able analysts who cannot move from analysis to action.  And then there is the failing General Carl Spaatz had in mind when he said of one of his fellow officers in World War II, "He thinks things through very carefully before he goes off half-cocked."  Such people are unlikely to attain leadership. (…)