Friday, 18 June 2021

Republican Congressional Committee to Accept Cryptocurrency Contributions

(Bloomberg) — The National Republican Congressional Committee will begin accepting campaign contributions via cryptocurrency, the party announced Thursday.

The NRCC, House Republicans’ campaign arm, said the move would allow it to use new technology to support the party’s House candidates.

“We are focused on pursuing every avenue possible to further our mission of stopping Nancy Pelosi’s socialist agenda and retaking the House majority, and this innovative technology will help provide Republicans the resources we need to succeed.” NRCC Chairman Tom Emmer said in a statement.

The NRCC will accept cryptocurrency using Bitpay, a provider of Bitcoin and cryptocurrency payment services.

Bitcoin, the most well-known cryptocurrency, has had a wild year. It doubled in value over four months to more than $64,000 in April, before pulling back to about $39,000 currently.

—With assistance from Kristine Aquino.



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Spurs open talks with Gennaro Gattuso after Paulo Fonseca move breaks down - The Guardian

  1. Spurs open talks with Gennaro Gattuso after Paulo Fonseca move breaks down  The Guardian
  2. Paulo Fonseca: Tottenham will not appoint former Roma boss after financial issues arise  Sky Sports
  3. "MAN UNITED ARE IN MORE DEBT!" Simon Jordan claims Man United's debt will be much worse than Spurs  talkSPORT
  4. Paulo Fonseca made to wait for first Tottenham signing as 'agreement' made for striker  The Mirror
  5. Paulo Fonseca has already told Tottenham players and Daniel Levy exactly what they want to hear  Football.London
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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No breakthrough during 'exhausting' online climate talks



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Hiker calls for help after being chased by bears — then vanishes, Alaska officials say



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Supreme Court rules in favor of Catholic charity that wouldn't allow same-sex foster parents



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Stacey Abrams says she supports Manchin's voting rights compromise



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Supreme Court rejects Republican challenge to Affordable Care Act



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Covid: Employers can put self-isolating staff on furlough - BBC News

  1. Covid: Employers can put self-isolating staff on furlough  BBC News
  2. Fury after Tory government 'hides' method for self-isolating Brits to get cash  The Mirror
  3. Treasury tried to stop self-isolating people claiming support, leaked emails show  The Times
  4. Ministers ‘reluctant’ to push furlough scheme for self-isolating workers  The Guardian
  5. Fury as self-isolating Brits WERE entitled to furlough sick pay but Government buried advice, leaked...  The Sun
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Scarlett Johansson criticises ‘hypersexualisation’ of Black Widow in Iron Man 2 - The Guardian

  1. Scarlett Johansson criticises ‘hypersexualisation’ of Black Widow in Iron Man 2  The Guardian
  2. David Harbour Smashes Marvel Stars in Destructive Game  TheEllenShow
  3. Scarlett Johansson speaks out over ‘sexualised’ Black Widow  The Independent
  4. Scarlett Johansson and a decade of gender politics in the Marvel universe  The Guardian
  5. Scarlett Johansson Reflects on Black Widow’s Sexualized First Appearance in Iron Man 2  Superherohype.com
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Ryanair and Manchester Airports Group take action over travel lists



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Dangerous heat expected in Kansas City as temperatures soar to record level



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Russia: Boy found in dinghy after parents fell overboard and drowned - Metro.co.uk

Russia: Boy found in dinghy after parents fell overboard and drowned  Metro.co.uk

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Paul Gosar's brothers called the lawmaker's comments about the Capitol riots 'despicable' and said he was a 'pathological liar'



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PS5 system update beta sign ups are now live - Gamesradar

  1. PS5 system update beta sign ups are now live  Gamesradar
  2. Sony launches PS5 beta program ahead of next major system update later this year  Eurogamer.net
  3. This PS5 beta program will let you test new console features before anyone else  TechRadar
  4. WW1 - Verdun and Tannenberg Free Weekend I PS5, PS4  PlayStation Universe
  5. PS4 Demon's Souls Discovered in PlayStation Database  Push Square
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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There's still no evidence of a Chinese lab leak. But here’s what's changed, scientists say.



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Affordable Care Act Survives Latest Supreme Court Challenge


By Adam Liptak from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/3xs0tPF

Thursday, 17 June 2021

Southwest heat wave intensifies, 40 million likely to see 100-degree temperatures



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Bigfoot: How the Primal Scream-headlined music festival is going ahead - BBC News

Bigfoot: How the Primal Scream-headlined music festival is going ahead  BBC News

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RNC, without 'a hint of irony,' slams Biden for meeting with Putin



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Department of Education Erases More Than $500M in Student Debt for Defrauded Students

The U.S. Education Department said Wednesday it’s erasing student debt for thousands of borrowers who attended a for-profit college chain that made exaggerated claims about its graduates’ success in finding jobs.

The Biden administration said it is approving 18,000 loan forgiveness claims from former students of ITT Technical Institute, a chain that closed in 2016 after being dealt a series of sanctions by the Obama administration. The new loan discharges will clear more than $500 million in debt.

The move marks a step forward in the Biden administration’s effort to clear a backlog of claims in the borrower defense program, which provides loan forgiveness to students who were defrauded by their colleges. Claims piled up during the Trump administration, which stalled the program and only started processing claims after a federal court demanded it. There are now more than 100,000 pending claims.
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In announcing the new action, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona vowed to continue standing up for students who are deceived by their schools.

“Our action today will give thousands of borrowers a fresh start and the relief they deserve,” Cardona said in a statement. “Many of these borrowers have waited a long time for relief, and we need to work swiftly to render decisions for those whose claims are still pending.”

It follows another round of loan discharges in March, when the Education Department cleared $1 billion in federal student debt for 72,000 borrowers. Those claims all came from former students of for-profit colleges.

Borrower defense is among several education programs targeted for an overhaul by the Biden administration as it works to reverse Trump-era policies. Cardona is hosting a series of hearings this month as his agency considers changes to that policy and others.

The program was rarely used until 2015, when the Education Department received thousands of claims from former students of Corinthian Colleges. The chain of for-profit colleges had recently shut down following findings that it lied to students about job placement rates.

Following the collapse of Corinthian and other beleaguered for-profit colleges, the Obama administration moved to make it easier for students to get loans erased. But the overhaul was reversed by the Trump administration, which later wrote its own rules making it tougher to get relief. In changing the rules, then-Education Secretary Betsy DeVos said it had become too easy to get loans forgiven.

Cardona began chipping away at DeVos’ rules in March when he rescinded a formula that allowed the Education Department to give only partial loan discharges to students whose claims were approved. All borrowers granted relief will now get their loans cleared in full.

Many of the 18,000 claims from ITT Tech were approved after the Education Department found that the company lied about graduates’ job prospects. The agency said ITT made “repeated and significant misrepresentations” about its ability to help students get jobs. In reality, many students said it was harder to find employment when they listed ITT on their resumes, the department said.

Other claims were approved after the department found that ITT misled students about their ability to transfer course credits to other colleges. Credits were rarely accepted elsewhere, the department said, leaving students with “little to no progress” in their academic careers.

Borrowers will be notified about their claim approvals in the coming weeks, the agency said.



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Eviction ban on firms behind on rent is extended by nine months

The government's ban on landlords evicting companies in rent debt will now end in March 2022

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Southern Baptists elect new president, bucking effort to push denomination to the right



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Juneteenth Isn’t Just a Celebration of the End of Slavery. We Also Honor the Black Americans Who Helped Create Their Own Freedom

If you ask Black people born and raised on the island, Juneteenth marks the day Black soldiers in blue uniforms came with their guns to Galveston. That is the story they have told for generations, about the moment some of their ancestors knew freedom had finally arrived in Texas, the westernmost Confederate breakaway state.

That’s the truth as it’s widely understood by Black people in Galveston, even if the common story of that day often focuses on a single white man: General Gordon Granger, who led Union troops to the harbor there on June 17, 1865. Two days later, records in the National Archives tell us, he issued what’s known as General Order No. 3.

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In doing so, Granger laid out the meaning of freedom more explicitly than any U.S. government official had to that date, says Robert C. Conner, author of General Gordon Granger: The Savior of Chickamauga and the Man Behind “Juneteenth.” The order declared “absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves.” As word spread, so did jubilation, shock, religious awe and anger.

Declaring freedom and creating it are two different things, as Deborah Evans, secretary and director of communications with the National Juneteenth Observance Foundation, tells me. After all, Granger was there because, though the Emancipation Proclamation had liberated the enslaved in the Confederate states, slaveholders in places like faraway Texas still clung to the idea that U.S. law didn’t apply to them.

Among the Black and white troops who came to Galveston to enforce the Union’s dictates was William Costley, who with his two sisters and mother had been the first enslaved people freed by a then newly minted lawyer named Abraham Lincoln in 1841. The KKK would try to burn certain records of that case, and portions of his service records went up in flames, thanks to another KKK faction. Costley himself was likely illiterate, says Carl Adams, who wrote the book Nance about Costley’s mother’s fight for freedom. Whatever the young soldier felt in Texas has, like so much that happens to those whose lives are not thought worth recording, been lost.

The story of William Costley, the baby freed by Lincoln who grew up to set others free, like the story of Juneteenth, cannot be told fully without oral tradition. Yes, newspaper accounts of organized Black public revelry—and white enmity—survive. But so too, in some circles, have folk stories attesting that some of the Black soldiers in Galveston that day changed history by insisting that Granger make clear the freedom of those still enslaved. If he didn’t do it, the story goes, they would do it themselves.

My grandmother’s grandmother was a child made free that June day—however it happened. But Black people have always been involved in the fight to make our own American lives, demanding something of the country that stole so much from us. That fact is, by folktale and firm record, key to the Juneteenth story.

Last year, Juneteenth came to an America awakened to racial injustice, prompting new groups to recognize a holiday heretofore celebrated mostly by Black people with Texas connections. This year, it’s a reminder of the fight.

A Senate bill to make Juneteenth a federal holiday failed in 2020 by one vote. On Tuesday, a similar bill was passed by the Senate; it is likely to be passed by the House. Among those Senators who cast their votes was Jon Ossoff, a Georgia Democrat whose election this year helped flip the Senate. His victory has been widely attributed to the organizing power and electoral force of the Black vote.

Two days after that first Juneteenth, the New York Herald published a dispatch from Macon, Ga., whose white citizens finally saw that “slavery is dead and nothing remains but to bury its carcase [sic].” Abraham Lincoln was gone by then, but he probably would have liked General Order No. 3 for making a national reality plain and involving in its delivery the Black troops he praised, says David S. Reynolds, author of Abe: Abraham Lincoln in His Times.

For those whose Juneteenth story does not put Black people at its center, consider that there is no evidence that Granger ever spoke about his role in freeing Texas’ estimated 250,000 slaves. But Black people have kept telling the story—and each time that happens, Juneteenth is created anew.

—The View is reported by Mariah Espada and Simmone Shah

A version of this piece appears in the June 22, 2021 issue of TIME



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John Lewis boss says young staff lack basic numeracy skills

Chairwoman Dame Sharon White says that new recruits' literacy and numeracy are weak.

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'Mediocre' male managers are stopping women's rise

A survey of women in finance finds men are progressing because they are better at office politics.

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Kyrie Irving welcomes first child with partner Marlene Wilkerson



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Another man arrested in Euless murder of man forcibly tattooed with girlfriend’s name



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Mexico missing students: Remains of third victim identified



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The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard Is Proof That Some Franchises Deserve to Die

Like mirrored sunglasses and beer koozies, the brainless summer entertainment is a warm-weather staple. But the act of not thinking is its own act of consciousness. We all have only a finite amount of time to waste, not just through a summer but throughout our lifetimes. Do you really want to fritter away your hard-earned time-wasting currency on The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard?

The Hitman’s Bodyguard, directed by Patrick Hughes and starring Samuel L. Jackson and Ryan Reynolds as, respectively, a bad-ass hit man and the has-been bodyguard assigned to protect him, was a 2017 summer hit, the kind of movie you shuffle into when you need to get away from the heat, your spouse, your day-to-day woes. The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard is more of the same—yet less. Reynolds and Jackson return: Reynolds’ anxiety-riddled deadpan goofball Michael Bryce is still disgraced, having failed to protect an important client—it was Darius Kincaid (Jackson) himself who ostensibly caused the man’s death. On the advice of his therapist, Bryce has opted to take a holiday, hoping to make peace with his new, not-a-bodyguard self. (When his therapist, after several tries, finally suggests a vacation spot to his liking, his face turns radiant: “Capri—like the pants!”) But before he’s had time to settle by the water with a copy of The Secret, Darius’s con-artist wife, Sonia (Salma Hayek), shows up out of nowhere, guns—and cleavage—blazing. Darius needs Bryce’s help, and he’s sent her to fetch him. She won’t take no for an answer.
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hitmans-wifes-bodyguard-ryan-reynolds-samuel-l-jackson
David Appleby—LionsgateSamuel L. Jackson and Ryan Reynolds in The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard

This alone could be the preamble to an adequate brainless action comedy. But what follows is so dispiritingly bad that, rather than providing the salutary effects of recharging your tired brain, it saps your will to live. The villain this time around is a disgruntled Greek magnate named Aristotle Papadopolous—played by Antonio Banderas, in an array of brocade jackets that enliven the proceedings at least slightly—who’s angry at the rest of Europe and wants to show it who’s boss. The excessively cluttered plot also involves manipulative INTERPOL agents and Morgan Freeman, who shows up, allegedly hilariously, as Bryce’s star-bodyguard dad, now ostensibly retired to a villa in Tuscany.

Meanwhile, cars chase each other really fast through the meandering streets of Italian medieval towns, and many, many people get blammed with bullets. This is what you came here for, right? Add Reynold’s naiflike “who me?” mien and Jackson’s trademark pantomime of hostile impatience, and it should all add up to something that’s at least sufficient. There’s also Hayek, a firecracker presence, who’s usually great fun to watch: she has a spectacular sense of humor about herself, which is the sexiest thing in the universe.

Salma Hayek as Sonia Kincaid in The Hitman̢۪s Wife̢۪s Bodyguard
David Appleby—LionsgateSalma Hayek as Sonia Kincaid in The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard

But in The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard—written, if you call this writing, by Tom O’Connor, Brandon Murphy and Phillip Murphy, based on characters created by O’Connor—is hung up on an exhausting subplot involving Sonia and Darius’s desire to conceive a child. Darius feels shame and embarrassment—the fault, he’s convinced, lies with his own faulty testicle. Meanwhile Sonia chatters on, in fractured English, about the perceived inadequacy of her own vagina. If anyone could make this dismal stuff funny, it’s Hayek—but not even she can rescue it.

Sometimes a dumb action comedy can work perfectly well as a one-off, particularly if its writers and director can pull off the illusion that they didn’t have to work hard to earn our laughs. But The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard is all work and no payday. Even in the service of airheaded entertainment, no one should feel compelled to take a bullet for it. It’s OK to let a franchise die.



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Low-income homes 'should get ultra-fast gigabit broadband help'

The recommendation comes from a group set up by government to boost take-up of the service.

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Racial bias makes white Americans more likely to support wars in nonwhite foreign countries -- new study



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Putin surprisingly arrives on time for meeting with Biden



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World’s First Wooden Satellite Set To Launch – Can Plywood Survive in Space? - SciTechDaily

  1. World’s First Wooden Satellite Set To Launch – Can Plywood Survive in Space?  SciTechDaily
  2. Satellite made out of WOOD is being launched by the European Space Agency this year  Daily Mail
  3. All-wood satellite to send ‘experimental’ projects into space - if ‘atomic oxygen’ doesn’t burn it up  The Independent
  4. World's first wooden satellite to launch later this year  New Atlas
  5. Wooden Satellite Takes Selfie From Stratosphere, Captures Exploding Balloon  autoevolution
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GB News: Ofcom receives 373 complaints about Dan Wootton broadcast - The Independent

GB News: Ofcom receives 373 complaints about Dan Wootton broadcast  The IndependentView Full coverage on Google News

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Sick attackers break puppy's jaw and dump body in supermarket bag - Liverpool Echo

Sick attackers break puppy's jaw and dump body in supermarket bag  Liverpool Echo

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Texas Democrat Pleads with Kamala Harris to Visit Border



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Taishan nuclear plant: China admits damage to fuel rods



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New Telegram audio transcripts show how Proud Boys panicked when members started getting arrested after the Capitol riot



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Retirees could get record state pension rise next April because of Covid - explained - The Mirror

  1. Retirees could get record state pension rise next April because of Covid - explained  The Mirror
  2. Triple lock could help state pension soar by record 8.4%  Daily Mail
  3. Sunak faces £4bn bill to keep ‘triple lock’ pension pledge  Financial Times
  4. Wage growth sets up £5bn record rise in state pension  Telegraph.co.uk
  5. Sunak faces £4bn bill to keep triple lock pensions pledge  The Times
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Wednesday, 16 June 2021

Covid Scotland: Nicola Sturgeon announces likely further delay of restriction relaxations until at least July - The Scotsman

Covid Scotland: Nicola Sturgeon announces likely further delay of restriction relaxations until at least July  The ScotsmanView Full coverage on Google News

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Quantum microscope uses entanglement to reveal biological structures – Physics World - physicsworld.com

Quantum microscope uses entanglement to reveal biological structures – Physics World  physicsworld.com

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California finally lifts its last big COVID restrictions. Did the state play it too safe?



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Autopsy: Mother overdosed, infant starved to death



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Many Post-Covid Patients Are Experiencing New Medical Problems, Study Finds


By Pam Belluck from NYT Health https://ift.tt/3xmEzgz

MacKenzie Scott Reveals Another $2.74 Billion in Giving


By Nicholas Kulish and David Gelles from NYT Business https://ift.tt/3wrVT3Z

Hungary vs Portugal LIVE: Euro 2020 team news, line-ups and latest build-up today - The Independent

  1. Hungary vs Portugal LIVE: Euro 2020 team news, line-ups and latest build-up today  The Independent
  2. Record-breaker Cristiano Ronaldo commands audience he deserves  The Guardian
  3. HUNGARY 3-3 PORTUGAL, EURO 2016 | VINTAGE EURO  UEFA
  4. How Hungary’s squad valued at just £47.5m compares to £1.2BILLION worth of superstars at France, Germany an...  The Sun
  5. Liverpool fans should watch Pedro Goncalves for Portugal v Hungary  Rousing The Kop - Liverpool FC News
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'If you can eat out, you can go to the office', says bank boss

Morgan Stanley's chief executive said New York-based employees should be ready to return to the workplace.

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There Is a Better Way to Use Power at Work. This Forgotten Business Guru Has the Secrets

In 2003, Harvard Business School published a list of the two hundred most influential leadership gurus and then asked these two hundred to identify the person who had the most impact on their thinking—the gurus’ guru. Famed management thinker Peter Drucker was number one. Yet toward the end of his life, Drucker wrote an essay revealing that he had his own guru too—the gurus’ guru’s guru, if you will. This person had been the most sought-after name on the business speaker circuit in the 1920s and, according to Drucker, “the brightest star in the management firmament.”

Her name was Mary Parker Follett. She had been recognized as the Peter Drucker of her time while she was alive. Yet only one decade after this ur-guru’s death in 1933, the memory of all her famous talks and writings had essentially vanished. This towering figure, lamented Drucker, had “become a ‘nonperson.’” It’s a tragedy. Because she had already revealed and articulated a set of ideas that can help us with many of our current challenges of leadership, like how to distribute power, navigate uncertainty, and make diversity a valuable asset.
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Mary Parker Follett was born outside Boston in 1868 at a time of faltering reconstruction for both the country and her family. From a young age Follett felt the tension between official authority—with its clear rules about everything from what to wear, how to speak, and whom to marry—and the world of her own heart and eager mind. She was expected to accept that her father, a Civil War veteran whose PTSD triggered severe alcoholism, should be cast out of polite society, but when he was sober he was the sole parent with whom she felt a soulful connection. She was expected to stay home and help her beleaguered and sometimes bedridden mother, but she was the smartest kid in town with ambition to burn. She was expected to plan her life around a future husband, but she was never even attracted to boys.

Instead, she got herself accepted to The Annex at Harvard, the precursor to Radcliffe College, where she became fascinated by leadership and power in America—not as abstract principles but how they actually worked in the real world in a democracy.

Follett had grown up just miles from the birthplace of the Revolution yet had never felt very free. She knew that even in a supposed democracy, there was no shortage of formal and informal power being lorded over others. So, when it was time to write her senior thesis, she set her sights on the nature of power in Washington, D.C.

She studied the thirty-nine men who had held the job of Speaker of the House of Representatives and concluded that the most effective leaders mastered what she called the “unwritten practice,” and what I identify as the art of interdependence. Our instinct is to call that “power sharing”, but that’s not exactly right. It was power creating, which arose from making something—a bill, an act, an appointment—using the energy and perspective of many. The same idea is enshrined in our national motto, “e pluribus unum.”

Her professors at the Annex were astounded at the achievement and helped her publish the book, unpretentiously titled The Speaker of the House of Representatives. Today, we might call it a landmark leadership book and it made a big splash with reviews from the big newspapers and a rave from an up-and-coming New York politician named Theodore Roosevelt. If Follett had been a man, the reception of her book would have amounted to a career-making launchpad, earning her a professorship at a place like Harvard. But that path was not open to women. And so, with the encouragement of her life partner Isobel, instead of telling about these ideas she decided she would show them.

Read More: After the Pandemic We Have a Chance to Rethink the Workplace

Follett joined the reformist crowd of upper-middle-class women in Boston, but she began to see that her progressive peers had a blind spot. Their own strict conventions narrowed their perspective. The reformers’ stated goal was to integrate immigrant families into American life, and their programs had indeed proved effective with newly arriving women and children but had persistently failed to attract a key constituency: fathers. Follett sensed that something about the tone of the reformers didn’t make the fathers feel welcome.

She wanted a place where women, men, and children all felt equally accepted. That’s when she recognized there already was such a place—the public school. She wondered: What if schools kept their doors open in the evenings too? What if there were a place in every community that could expand the feeling of belonging? The idea made many nervous, from school boards worried about losing control of their buildings to political bosses worried about losing control of their turf. Follett embraced this tension and conflict. She didn’t let one group dominate or be dominated—she kept them all at the table.

Soon, she was instrumental in spreading the changes from one school in Roxbury to many throughout Boston and then all over the country. In her lifetime more than 240 cities adopted what was called the community center movement (New York City alone had five hundred), providing four million Americans in varying group sizes and configurations with spaces to make power together.

Meanwhile, her successes got her appointed to Boston’s newly created minimum wage board, which dealt with increasingly bitter labor disputes. This work brought her around a table with business owners and their workers and gave Follett her first glimpse into what we would call “corporate culture.” This was a chance to explore what had become her passion—how small, diverse groups of people with a dizzying array of different and diverging hopes and fears can try to work together to make something more impactful than they could alone.

It was in this unlikely place that Follett made the realization that launched her to worldwide fame as a leadership guru. For years, she suspected there was a better way of using power to get more done. She had studied it in history, she had practiced it for 25 years on front lines of social work. And now she knew it and would have to write about it again. She could see that energy and power could be created and kindled or smothered and killed wherever and whenever people gathered. Her eyes had become wide open to the ravages of the mindset that forced people to conform to set roles or else cast them out if they didn’t fit in.

And while all this sounds very big, she believed the most important, far-reaching changes began at a small scale, among small groups of people. It all hinged on how we interacted in small groups. How you could create spaces where each person could at once stand out and fit in? How you could create unity without mandating uniformity?

She had attended thousands of committee meetings in every realm of civic life. She had a Ph.D in meetings. Like all of us, she knew how dreadful they could be. But that’s because, she concluded, we were doing it wrong. Meetings, she realized, are where our most meaningful work ought to happen. Not just planning for growth, not just planning for change, but growing and changing right then and there.

She developed very clear principles for how things ought to go. Follett believed that meetings have four possible outcomes but only one is good:

Bad outcome #1: Acquiescence. Just give in and let the pushiest or highest-ranking person have their way. This means you have not done your duty to bring your whole self and your wishes, worries, and experiences to the group.

Bad outcome #2: Victory. You “win.” But in the process, everyone else loses their ability to contribute and make a group investment.

Bad outcome #3: Compromise. Most of us think compromise is a good outcome, but Follett wrote that compromising is just the practice of hammering out partial acquiescence from all participants. No growth or group investment takes place because no one leaves satisfied.

Only good outcome: Co-creation. It happens when all members of a group make a new thing together. This new thing is truly yours as an individual and also truly the product of the group. You are in it. It is of you and in you. And your individuality is not diminished as a result. It is enhanced.

There’s a helpful phrase that has taken hold in corporate HR departments in the past decade: diversity is a fact; inclusion is a choice. The point is that diversity is all around us and always has been, and acknowledging diversity is a first step but not enough. Inclusion is an action—what we choose to do with the diversity. We need to actively include that diversity into our companies, our teams, our meetings, and so forth. Mary Follett would tell us we shouldn’t stop there, though. That’s not nearly enough. Yes, inclusion gets the right people to the table. But that’s when the hard work should begin. What we need to do is spark the energy and connection between people to make something that is bigger than any individual. She might amend the phrase as follows: Diversity is a fact; inclusion is a choice; co-creation is the work.; and interdependence is the promise.

“Interdependence” can sound like a soft, group-hug, collectivist thing. But Follett observed that it was nothing like that. It was hard work requiring specific habits. But today we’ve lost our feel for them. We find ourselves toggling between dependence—bristling under the hierarchy of top-down organizational structures—and independence—solitary agents pining for connection yet paranoid of others’ power.

Read More: Leadership Lessons from Top CEOs

Follett saw it coming in the early 20th-century as the financial success of industrialization was making us organize like the machines we were using so productively. The dominant trend in the brand-new field of business scholarship was something called “scientific management.” Its founder, Frederick Taylor, encouraged organizations to “de-personalize” and to measure every minor body movement of workers in a factory. His ideas took hold, requiring ever more managers to watch the workers and the number of supervisors grew at more than double the rate of wage earners. The result, Follett said, was that workers felt “at the bottom level of a highly stratified organization.”

Follett, whose ideas were beginning to gain steam, called for re-personalization—to bring the right kind of struggle into each encounter. In what became her standard presentation, she encouraged leaders to allow all members of the team to share their views and study the problem at hand from many angles, with each person bringing their knowledge to the table. This was what she called “power-with,” not “power-over.”

She felt these habits of interdependence were much more important than any org chart. She articulated them in many ways, but they boiled down to this:

Expect to need others. Enter with the intention to make differences and diversity fruitful in order to make something together

Expect to be needed. Bring your whole self to the meeting. Ask and answer hard questions to the best of your ability and pursue them wherever they may lead in an atmosphere of trust

Expect to be changed. Yes, you need to (as we say today) bring “your truth” to the encounter. But Follett insists you have a reciprocal obligation to allow that truth to be affected by others. You should expect to leave a meeting not quite the same person as when you entered.

Her “power-with” lecture became a trans-Atlantic hit and she was asked to speak all over the country and in Europe. Then, at the height of her fame, came the stock market crash of 1929. Businesses were no longer hoping to improve; they hoped just to survive. Follett was struggling just to survive too. She had recently lost her partner Isobel to cancer. Then, on December 19, 1933, she succumbed to cancer herself at age sixty-five.

There was no mention of her decades later when Harvard Business School published their gurus’ gurus list with Drucker at the top. In fact, according to Drucker, nearly all memory of her famous talks and writings was also dead within a decade. A Depression, a war, a cold war made America a more centralized and mechanized place. To point out just how much perceptions of power had changed since Follett’s death—from the excitement of creating boundless new “power-with” opportunities to the grim, zero-sum hoarding and lording of a finite amount of power—Drucker noted that the top-selling book just three years after she died was Politics: Who Gets What, When, How.

Our view on power hasn’t changed all that much in 90 years. But Mary Follett and others with her gift of perception tell us that power, when hoarded to oneself or lorded over others, is like an old battery and will stagnate, degrade and corrode. But power that flows out will generate more power, which will, in turn, flow back again. It doesn’t start with a grand plan. It doesn’t start with the boss. And it doesn’t start with an HR seminar. It starts with a changed perspective and a new habit to practice right now.

Expect to be needed. Expect to need others. Expect to be changed.

From THE POWER OF GIVING AWAY POWER by Matthew Barzun, published by Optimism Press, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC. Copyright © 2021 by Matthew W. Barzun.



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