Category Archives: Geopolitics

How To Be An Effective Leader?

By Thomas H. Greco Jr.

Professor Carroll Quigley was a historian and theorist who was renowned as a professor at the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, where he taught many famous and influential people including Nancy Pelosi and former President Bill Clinton, who often publicly praised him.[1] In his role at Georgetown, he focused largely upon preparing his students to be effective leaders. He argued that knowledge is not sufficient for an effective leader, but that understanding is the vital thing, saying further that it requires possession of techniques that fortunately, can be taught.

I write this post mainly for the benefit of aspiring citizen leaders and the “cultural creatives”[2] among us, but it is incumbent upon anyone preparing to play a leadership role in any sector of society and walk of life to delve into the details and apply those techniques in their work. So, what are those techniques? I asked Copilot to summarize the techniques that Quigley taught.

Here below is what Copilot answered. I urge leaders to be particularly diligent in applying Core Technique 8 in their work.

Copilot:
Carroll Quigley’s distinction between knowledge and understanding leads directly into a set of executive techniques he believed could be taught and cultivated. While he never published a single, formalized list, his lectures and writings—especially The Evolution of Civilizations—make the techniques quite clear. They form a coherent system for training leaders who can synthesize complexity, make sound judgments, and coordinate human effort.

Below is a structured synthesis of the techniques Quigley consistently emphasized.

Core Technique 1: Pattern Recognition Across Time

Quigley taught leaders to see recurring structures in history, institutions, and human behavior.

  • Identifying the stages of institutional development (instrument → institution → vested interest → reform).
  • Recognizing when systems drift from serving their original purpose.
  • Seeing long-term causal chains rather than isolated events.

This technique builds the leader’s ability to anticipate rather than merely react.


Core Technique 2: Structural and Functional Analysis

Understanding, for Quigley, meant grasping how systems actually work, not how they are described.

  • Mapping the real power structure behind formal arrangements.
  • Distinguishing between nominal authority and operative authority.
  • Analyzing the functions institutions perform, not the rhetoric surrounding them.

This technique trains leaders to diagnose problems at their root rather than treating symptoms.


Core Technique 3: Integrative Thinking

Quigley insisted that an executive must be able to combine knowledge from many domains into a coherent whole.

  • Synthesizing economics, sociology, psychology, technology, and history.
  • Holding multiple variables in mind simultaneously.
  • Seeing how changes in one domain propagate through others.

This technique is the foundation of strategic judgment.


Core Technique 4: Decision-Making Under Uncertainty

Executives, he said, must make decisions even when knowledge is incomplete.

  • Evaluating trade-offs rather than waiting for perfect information.
  • Prioritizing based on long-term consequences.
  • Using heuristics grounded in historical understanding.

This technique prevents paralysis and cultivates responsible action.


Core Technique 5: Coordinating Human Effort

Quigley emphasized that leaders succeed not by knowing more facts but by mobilizing the knowledge of others.

  • Delegating effectively.
  • Creating channels for information flow.
  • Building trust and shared purpose.

This technique turns understanding into organizational capability.


Core Technique 6: Critical Evaluation of Assumptions

Quigley trained students to question the hidden premises behind policies, ideologies, and institutional narratives.

  • Identifying unexamined assumptions.
  • Testing them against historical evidence.
  • Replacing them with more accurate models.

This technique protects leaders from dogmatism and groupthink.


Core Technique 7: Civilizational Perspective

Perhaps his most distinctive contribution: leaders must understand the civilizational context of their decisions.

  • Seeing how technologies, weapons systems, and economic structures shape political possibilities.
  • Understanding the rise and decline of civilizations.
  • Recognizing when a society is in a phase of expansion, conflict, or institutional decay.

This technique gives leaders a sense of proportion and responsibility.


Core Technique 8: Moral and Institutional Responsibility

Quigley believed leadership required a moral dimension grounded in service to the community.

  • Understanding the purpose of institutions.
  • Acting to preserve the social fabric.
  • Resisting the drift toward vested interests and exploitation.

This technique anchors power in ethical stewardship.


Bringing It Together

Quigley’s “techniques of understanding” form a unified discipline:

  • See patterns
  • Analyze structures
  • Integrate knowledge
  • Decide under uncertainty
  • Coordinate people
  • Question assumptions
  • Think civilizationally
  • Act responsibly

They are the techniques of a statesman, not a clerk.


[1] https://www.conservapedia.com/Carroll_Quigley. Accessed March 4, 2026

[2] https://universespirit.org/cultural-creatives-what-are-cultural-creatives-and-what-is-this-universe-spirit-online-community-about#What_are_Cultural_Creatives. Accessed March 4, 2026

What’s holding back the Paradigm Shift?

Virtually everyone senses that there is something drastically wrong with the state of our world. Many rail against the governments, institutions, and people that they hold responsible for the various aspects they recognize as unfair, unsustainable, destructive, and utterly inhuman. But what are the root causes of this situation and what can we do to change it? This video overview provides answers that are based on a few seemingly unrelated sources which actually blend together to provide a clear picture and course of action.

The Money Problem–A Fix

Everytime I add new sources to Gemini it generates evrn better brief video explanations. This latest one is excellent.

The End of Money Explained

Yesterday I posted a remarkable six minute video that does an excellent job of explaining what I propose in Chapter 19—The Role of Governments in Solving the Money Problem, of my revised edition of my book, The End of Money and the Future of Civilization. The video below, which was also generated by NotebookLM, is based on additional material from my book and focuses on the nature of the money problem and how it has developed over more than 300 years. I am now working on the next video which will concentrate on explaining the solutions and alternative exchange devices and systems that I have long been prescribing. Watch for it.

This is perhaps the most important speech of the decade on international relations and our prospective future.

Either we all win or we all lose!

Covid-19 revisited

Were PCR test results sufficient justification for the lockdowns and the other policy mandates during the Covid era?

The results of this research study challenge the assumption that PCR positivity equals infection. It shows that 86% of Covid ‘Positives’ Weren’t Real.

Here’s an excerpt from the actual German research report:

“The value of 0.14 found for the fitted scaling parameter means that only 14% of those who were tested PCR-positively actually became infected with SARS-CoV-2. This parameter fit further implies that a quarter of the German population already carried IgG antibodies from natural infections in their blood at the turn of the year from 2020 to 2021.”

Bubbles Get Ever Bigger and Busts Become Ever More Destructive

Brett Scott has recently posted a new article, The Whale of Mass Destruction: How a fundamental weakness in Bitcoin might (technically) crash our economy, in which he provides an excellent analysis and clear explanation of the valuation processes in the financial markets in general, and the forces that shape price movements of Bitcoin (and other similar virtual commodities), in particular.

In the world of finance, a whale is an entity that has the power to move large amounts of capital or to exert an inordinate influence on markets. Among these are venture capital funds, central banks, and governments.

If you want to understand the essential nature of Bitcoin, the factors that drive its market price, and the implications of the current government plans to establish a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve fund, that article is a “must read.” The lessons you will learn extend far beyond Bitcoin and into the realm of global money, finance, and economics.

I will add that the expected government manipulation of the Bitcoin market by means of massive purchases is analogous to the massive purchases of US government bonds and notes by central banks, commercial banks, and others who still have faith in them despite their lack of any solid backing in the real world. Just as Bitcoin will never be “redeemed” for anything of real value, the massive accumulation of US government debt will never be repaid. That itself is a bubble that will eventually burst in spectacular fashion. God help us!

Can the BRICS escape the orbit of the Western Empire?

If the BRICS ever hope to escape the orbit and dominance of the Western Empire they will need to organize an international clearing Union under their own control, along the lines of the Bancor proposal of John Maynard Keynes which he put forth in 1944 at the Bretton Woods conference. If that proposal had been adopted it might have saved the world 80 years of grief and violent conflict.

Further pertinent information from Alistaire Crooke

The global elite has rallied together to end democracy.

The following link is to a transcript of remarks delivered by N.S. Lyons to the 2025 Civitas Canada Conference, Ottawa, May 3, 2025.

“Managerial Bureaucracy’s Threat to Democracy and Humanity”

Are conspiracies the exception or the rule?

This post by Dr. Peter Breggin may help you to decide.
Caught Up in a Conspiracy—My Personal Experience
In 1994, I was hired and confirmed by a federal judge to be the sole scientific researcher to examine the secret files of Eli Lilly on behalf of a consortium of attorneys representing about 150 lawsuits against the company for allegedly hiding the harmful effects of Prozac. … [more].

After describing that shameful case of fraud and cover-up, Breggin extends his conclusions about conspiracies to international affairs saying what I also have long ago concluded and written about, “All empires are inherently evil and are inevitably started and controlled by the worst human beings among us. And so, we must fear and resist all attempts to build empires!”

As long as empires remain in competition with one another for political and economic dominance there will be no peace in the world. The necessary solution that I have long propounded is to deprive politicians of the power to create money and pseudo-money at their whim; that is their primary tool for further enhance their power and to pay for their inevitabe wars. I have fully articulated my arguments about that in my revised and expanded edition of my book, The End of Money and the Future of Civilization, especially the chapter titled, The Separation of Money and State.