The Good Fight
Corporate America can't stop the entrepreneurial revolution. Come on, people! Who's with us?
It took us less than 225 years to go from revolutionaries to
corporate thinkers. As a nation, we may proudly don a badge of
innovation, but in reality, we wear the uniform of a superpower,
saluting the corporate dollar. Sad to say, the United States now
personifies exactly what it fought against in the Revolutionary
War: inflexibility, bureaucracy, arrogance and bloat.
It's time for entrepreneurs to come to the aid of their
country. We must prepare not just for recession, but for
revolution. Our revolution is not against the corporate world per
se, but against a corporate mind-set. In other words, it's time
to get entrepreneurial.
This call to common sense may not have happened if September 11
had not shaken us to the core. The ensuing confusion led inevitably
to re-evaluations, some of which seemed to steer us like startled
sheep even further into a corporate daze. A Los Angeles
Times article in late September stated, "The 'new
economy,' already tattered before the assaults, is dying. In
its place will emerge a shadow war economy."
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They aren't the first skeptics to put the term New Economy
in quotation marks. But a shadow war economy? The ominous term
becomes downright scary as the Times describes it: "The
private sector, whose entrepreneurial enthusiasms defined the
passing age, will become more corporate and more controlled. And
the new economy—the deregulated, wired, just-in-time,
globalized new economy of the '90s—will be
gone."
This is the attitude we're compelled to fight. It's an
attitude that has led to offenses on two fronts: a public bias
toward Fortune 500 corporations and a private discouragement among
some entrepreneurs starting or continuing with their businesses.
This is no time for defeat, or for hunkering down. In Common
Sense, Thomas Paine called the verge of the American Revolution
"the seed time": "'Tis the concern not of a day,
a year, or an age; posterity are virtually involved in the contest,
and will be more or less affected, even to the end of time, by the
proceedings now."
When since Common Sense's publication has this
statement rung so true, both for our national and our personal
economies? Let's consider nothing more than simple facts, plain
arguments and common sense to determine why the role of
entrepreneurs is more important than ever.
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