• Animats 10 hours ago

    "Some thoughts on the presidency" [1]

    (The site's index dates this to 1952, but it mentions "the events of 1974.")

    [1] https://rickover-corpus.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/Some+Thou...

    • emmelaich 8 hours ago

      Yes, it mentions the energy crisis so dates it to late 70s at least. Also President Reagan, so after 1981. Probably well after.

      • andrewl 8 hours ago

        I'm two pages in, and it is excellent.

        • ndileas 33 minutes ago

          There's a lot of timeless, good analysis. But there's also somewhat dated concerns (like the energy crisis stuff) where it's clear that he's responding to the issue du jour.

          • emmelaich 8 hours ago

            Quotables in in every paragraph!

          • uncletaco 9 hours ago

            The Nixon memo is dated for 1980 from after Nixon was president.

          • thomassmith65 7 hours ago

              Unless the one person truly responsible can be identified when something goes wrong, then no one has been really responsible
            
            Ah, it's Apple's DRI (Directly Responsible Individual) designation!
            • stmw 6 hours ago

              It is always interesting how such principles are much older than our current examples!

            • andrewl 8 hours ago

              I've read a few articles about him, but I never heard him speak. I just pulled this up, and I find it fascinating:

              https://taproot.com/rickover-60-minutes-interview/

              • acidburnNSA 4 hours ago

                Truly amazing resource. Thanks to the folks funding this, and doing the scans.

                • kreelman 9 hours ago

                  Ah, the "Kindly Old Gentleman"...

                  Though a very difficult man to get on with... He did champion the correct building of the first nuclear subs.

                  • CamperBob2 9 hours ago

                    Yep, a complex, flawed character.

                    Unquestionably the right person for that particular job, though. He was Mr. "Failure is Not an Option" years before Gene Kranz.