Isabel1130 wrote:Apparently Ben, you have never worked for the government.
I just retired from nearly 30 years with a U.S. TLA. I was lucky enough to be blessed with a complete lack of ambition so in all that time I never hesitated to stick my neck out, open my mouth when executives were being stupid, and actually get work done. Obviously, I never rose through the ranks...but I know what you mean. :-)
Isabel1130 wrote:...original thought and bold leadership are ruthlessly punished...You move up by not sticking your neck out. .... a very structured environment you get rules piled upon regulations, until the organization is effectively so strangled, that it must be disbanded (or they effectively kill the very thing they are trying to promote)...
It's funny you should put it that way.
One of the recurring themes in the thread thus far has been "Forget tradition. Change happens. Adapt or die." I note that this is very germane where the Olympic shooting sports are concerned. Pistol shooters no longer use .44 caliber revolvers. Rifle shooters no longer fire centerfire cartridges at targets hundreds of meters away. Targets that were once shaped like human figures morphed into coffin shapes and now are big, round circles.
Thus, it seems that nothing is sacred and no tradition is maintained forever.
Normally, I would assume this creates an opportunity for someone to replace the status quo, to design new shooting contests that meet all the requirements for Olympic spectacle and then replace the current courses of fire. But then you characterize the ISSF as a successfully entrenched bureaucracy that may not be able to radically adapt.
None of this bodes well for the future of the Olympic shooting sports.
For now, I'll assume that my understanding of the way things work is sufficiently incomplete that none of the bad outcomes I can envision will ever happen. That should provide me sufficient peace of mind for me to sleep tonite.