"Viewed schematically, the activities of governments involve first the politician, who buys votes for the party in power; then the impractical theorist in the civil service — usually a professor in disguise — who conceives grandiose and unworkable plans; finally, these are executed and administered by the hidebound bureaucrat. The characteristic vices of these three species of homo politicus differ, , but they share a common feature: the absence of those personal virtues possessed by businessmen. Their heads are neither clear, hard, nor level; none of them is really honest; all of them lack practical imagination and the desire to get things done.Their heads are neither clear, hard, nor level; none of them is really."
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Businesspeople from the United StatesBusiness theorists from the United StatesSocial scientists from the United States
Original Language: English
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p. 192-3 ; cited in: David C. McClelland (1961), The Archiving Society, p. 293
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Francis_X._Sutton
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Francis X. Sutton
Francis Xavier Sutton (July 7, 1917 - Dec. 18, 2012) was an American social scientist, official of the , and business theorist. Sutton received his BA at Temple in 1938, his MA at Princeton in 1940, and his PhD in sociology at Harvard in 1950.
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