trustworthy, or do you trust them with your money, do you trust them with your life? do you trust them with your job? so this sense of trust fwo do you trust them with your job? so this sense of trust fthin trustworthiness, fairness, respect, honestly, absolutely crucial. admiral, it seems like today, we re running deficits in leadership this book is desperately needed. explain to me this chapter, shepherds should smell like the sheep. help me with that. this is actually one of the few quotes that isn t a military quote. it s from pope francis he said a shepherd should smell like his sheep if you are a leader, you need to be out with the men and women that you are leading you need to be on the factory line you need to be in their cubicles you need to be in the fox hole, so to speak. you need to smell like the people that you re leading, or you will have a tough time making the right decisions on their behalf so get out of your office. get around to the men and women that you work
shepherd should smell like his sheep. once again this applies to people in business. this is a quote from pope francis but the implication is if you are a leader then you need to be with the rank and file. you need to be down there on the factory line, understanding what the men and women that work for you are having to go through. you need to smell like your sheep. steve: can you stand before the long green table? so, in world war ii, the long green table, started in world war ii was, you know, just a long conference table but had green felt on it. and the thinking here is are you able to make a case to the men and women that are sitting at the long green table that the actions you are about to take would pass the reasonable sanity check? so, if you can t stand before them and make a case for what you are trying to do. then maybe you need to rethink what actions and decisions you are about to make. steve: right. i love the book because you tell so many of the stories of your
let s talk about earning a living. yeah. have you ever done it? no, but i could. ha! lucille ball with the chocolates, always funny. if one piece of candy gets past you and into the packing room unwrapped, you re fired. all the writers needed to say was lucy and a conveyor belt, you re good. some of the most memorable episodes of i love lucy are when she gets a job outside of the home, but it always unravels. you re doing splendidly. speed it up! when sitcoms started, they were family sitcoms. and for years, that s all there was. and then we move into the 1960s, we start to see more people working in an office than on a factory line. for the first time in the history of our nation, a majority of all workers are in white collar jobs. and you were spending time getting to know your colleagues. you ready? i m ready. i got those
didn t have collage degrees. now they re overdim diplomaed, right? you don t see this on a factory line or construction site. you see it with people that all they do is go to class and complain and report their professors. wapo got suckered by people that get attention on social media. a journalist is looking for objects to bring attention to it. all of these hires are people used to having people click, click, click. so now they re eating each other alive. the reason why is you can t field a unified team with everyone that wants to be the center of attention. that s why we work so well here. we share. we never go on twitter. i don t say i say everything to people s faces. jeanine: to our face. jesse: seems like at fox we like each other here and not so much over there. dana: a couple of things.
united states of waging an economic war against putin. john, what are you hearing about this? kate, that is a reflection of what the motorist in that clip you played was reflecting. yes, the united states is having some pain win flatioth inflatio rising gas prices. but it s really hurting russian individuals right now. you have interest rates doubled to 20% as a result of these sanctions. capital controls, people can t take dollars they ve been storing in russian banks out. you have a hometown domestic russian automaker shutting down production because it can t get replacement parts to keep its factory line going. tremendous hardship for russians, and the departure of some of these iconic american companies suspending operations, mcdonald s, for example, that simply is a high-profile demonstration to ordinary russians of how things have changed. that s a pretty critical element of this, because you ve got russian controls on media