We're so focused on perfection that if we find a blemish with somebody, we sort of dismiss them outright. Is there a way that we can change that for society, or go about doing that better? I think it's a question of maturity. My personal journey, most vhiselly, has been with roberty lee. And i'm not prepared to throw him on the ash heap of history and say he's an evil person. He literally got to the fork in the road and went the wrong way. So i know a lot of people hod been wrong alot of things, to include me.
Retired United States Army General Stanley McChrystal calls on more than three decades of military experience to discuss the fundamental tenets of leadership, and practical advice for taking calculated risks and making important decisions. This wide-ranging conversation includes insights on mitigating risk, making decisions under uncertainty, why civilian leadership is tougher than military leadership, developing mental toughness, teaching discipline, and so much more. A veteran of four U.S. wars in the Middle East, McChrystal was a four-star general best known for his command of Joint Special Operations Command from 2003-08, when he oversaw special operations in both Iraq and Afghanistan. His troops were responsible for both the capture of Saddam Hussein in 2003 and the 2006 death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the leader of Al-Qaeda in Iraq. After retiring from the military in 2010 he joined Yale University as a Jackson Institute for Global Affairs senior fellow, and in 2011 he founded a consultancy firm, McChrystal Group, which helps organizations tap into human potential in service of stronger business outcomes. --
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