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Zac Hill's avatar

I think underrated in the “why is working-on-government neglected?” discourse is just rote personal frustration on the part of would-be innovators. It’s much easier to postulate the need to work around it because of black-box failure-states than it is to go and read 85 pages of personnel policy (or whatever) and formulate an actionable thesis over a decadal time horizon. In other words, much ‘venture philanthropy’ presupposes venture-timeline yields. But a 250-year ship don’t always turn like that.

Keith Wilkinson's avatar

We talk about the greatest generation in awe then take none of the lessons. They were builders, of infrastructure, science, and state capacity. They were so good we've coasted on it ever since. So why do we not do it now?

One can hardly say the context is different, if anything parallels are shockingly similar.

It's not for everyone, but for those that take public service as a vocation they should have every tool available, every arrow in the quiver. We focus on elected officials who make big promises , but even if they are earnest who actually needs to do the work and implement it?

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