General - Required Reading for Presidential Candidates Or, Why January 20, 2009 Cannot Come Soon Enough

An ancient Greek proverb teaches us that "a society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in." Our great society did plant trees for our generation - in the form of literature.

 In our throwaway world and particularly in the modern lunacy that is the electoral process, the concept of societal measurement has become passe. Barack Obama zings Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton zings Barack Obama all while John Edwards practically needs to stand on his head to get his (often eloquent) messages across to anyone who will listen. On the other side of the aisle it's unclear who's on first, Mitt Romney with his perfect hair and corporate persona (see elsewhere in this blog about my real life civil (aviation) union with Mitt Romney), John McCain's surly yet rehearsed defense of America, Mike Huckabee's Bible thumping, Guiliani's been there/done that celebrity and don't forget Ron Paul, ok, forget Ron Paul.

 The message we hear is that there are petty disputes among the candidates, hair splitting issues dividing most of each party's candidates and an over reliance on the decision making capacity of a handful of people who have nothing better to do than to sit in coffee shops all day. These men and a woman are willing to sacrifice themselves for the greater good of the Amercian People, but in order to be heard or to rise above the din of the media, they must make mockerys of themselves and the process.      

Wouldn't it be nice to hear not only about change (and boy, do we need a change at the White House), but also about the leadership that everyday Americans can follow and be encouraged by? I think that presidential candidates should be given a required reading list, including (feel free to add to my list):

 Profiles in Courage or any anthology of John F. Kennedy's speeches. He and his handlers understood the challenges faced by the American people better than anyone of their day. They knew that America had lost its 50's naivete and needed to become more introspective. Introspection was the enemy of the anarchists of the day, what a wonderful world we would have if JFK, Martin Luther King, Jr., Robert Kennedy and the 58,209 dead young men and women in Vietnam had never left our shores.

All Quiet On The Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque. To see war this closely and then bring America into an interminable war would be incongruous. This short book speaks volumes about the tragedy and generational wasting that war brings without the glimmer of redemption. What's notable is that this book was originally written and distributed in Germany during the 1920's, but Adolph Hitler's messages of hate all but drowned out its message of redemption and hope from misery. Good thing the Nazis didn't burn every copy. There is a classic film by Lewis Milestone in 1930 that was the most graphically violent movie ever made up until that time, a later 1979 adaption with "John Boy" as our hero homogenized the story for modern viewers. Rumor has it that it is being remade again next year. The message never wavers - war is Hell.

 Sacco & Vanzetti (New England Remembers), by my neighbor, Eli Bortman. American leaders need to know the story of these two men. Their story tells the dangers of public opinion in the courtroom. The trial and the many years of appeals sound more like something from tabloid television than anything on tabloid television. The tragedy here is that we keep repeating ourselves. Injustice is no stranger to our modern world. A little awareness might help here too.

 The Ten Trusts: What We Must Do to Care for The Animals We Love by Jane Goodall. It's more than a pop piece about pet care, more telling about the special relationship that living things share on our planet. The White House should include a cat and a dog, maybe even a horse. I believe that not only does caring for animals calm the soul, but it reminds us that we are stewards of the Earth. Jane Goodall committed her life to learning more about the animal kingdom. There are lessons in her work for the leader of the free world. An afternoon with Michael Vick in the Georgia State Penitentiary might be instructional as well,  not only animal husbandry, but also in wasted opportunity by our youth.

 Tuesdays With Morrie by Mitch Albom. Knowing more about aging and death can only be a good thing as the aging Baby Boomers test the limits of the US Governments services such as Medicaid and Social Security.

Uncle Tom's Cabin Or, Life Among the Lowly by Harriet Beacher Stowe. As much as any book on the subject of slavery, this one emblazons the message that America has come a long way and has a long way to go in the area of multicultural relations.

The Kama Sutra. Seriously. America needs a President who loves and is personally comfortable and satisfied with their own life. History has taught us of so many misanthropic rulers who take their own personal dissatisfaction out in their decisions. Personally, I want a sexually satisfied President.

 An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith. If your presidential candidate can't tell you what this book says, even in a few words, do not vote for that candidate. This book forms the basis for modern economics, it might be almost 300 years old, but the basic tenet that economics is as much art as it is science leaps from the pages.

 I think I just made the syllabus for Professor Gosselin's new course "So You Want to Be President of the United States?" I can think of dozens more books, poems and speeches worth reading, but I'm realistic that our current crop of candidates only have so much time to read between cornball "town meetings" and talking to a fixture at a coffee shop in Nowheresville.

 

 

 

Save us Michael Bloomberg.

Estate Planning - Rich Dad, Poor Dad - Ask Mitt Romney

Follow my estate planning advice and you can be as rich as Mitt Romney. The Boston Globe has been running a multi-part story about Mitt Romney over the past several days. Politics and Bain Capital aside, Mitt Romney is a successful man. Mitt Romney is a rich man. Mitt Romney is a humble man. I don't measure a man by his bank account or his heartfelt opinions; I measure him by how he lives his life.

I met Mitt Romney about eight years ago. Mitt and I maintained an odd sort of relationship over a couple of years. He and I would sit twenty feet apart each week for five hours at time. We never shared a word, but our eyes would meet almost every Friday evening with a "hey neighbor" nod of the head. I represented a company in Utah that is in the legal and real estate software business. From 1999 to 2001 I attended regular Friday morning meetings at the company's office in Provo, Utah. Each Friday night I would fly Delta back to Boston. Invariably I would see the same well dressed man traveling alone sitting in the waiting area. Often he would be reading business papers, but just as often he would be passively enjoying the throng of people filing through the airport. He was Mitt Romney, head of the Salt Lake City Olympic Committee, but I didn't put his face with his name for several months.

I noticed something very different about this well dressed and outwardly successful man right from the beginning. As we boarded the plane, each traveling alone, I would take my seat in the first class cabin (because I traveled so much Delta upgraded me on every flight) and Mitt Romney would take his aisle seat in the coach cabin. One time I glanced at the flight manifest that they tack up in the first class galley and saw that Mitt Romney's name was in the list with mine as a "medallion flyer", meaning that he had the same privilege to sit in the front of the bus. And he's tall, and he traveled frequently, but he sat with the people. This was a five hour plus flight at night. The plane was normally only half full and was one of those dull dark rambling flights bringing people from one place to another place without any fanfare. Mitt Romney was not being watched by the Boston Globe or New York Times, he was not even a politician - just a tired business traveler trying to be home for the weekend.

Back to the Boston Globe story and how this relates to estate planning, elder law and lawyers in Massachusetts generally. I have no affiliation with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mormons) - those that know me know that I would last about ten minutes with their prohibitions on coffee, foul language and alcohol - not to mention where I stand on virtually every social issue of importance in modern life. But I have developed a great respect for their single most important belief - that our families our bound to us forever and therefore of utmost importance. Mitt Romney and I see few issues the same way on the scorecard of politics that the media requires of candidates, but I still see Mitt Romney as a worthy man for leadership in America. That's not to say I'd vote for him, I probably won't, but if Mitt Romney got elected at least I would trust that he would act honorably.

The Boston Globe ran a 37 picture album of the Romney family today. From Mitt Romney's childhood through to his wife's birthday party this past spring his devotion to family is without peer. Mitt Romney reads to his grandchildren. Mitt Romney brings his kids to school on their first day. Mitt Romney cuddles with his newborn son. Mitt Romney holds his wife's hand. Mitt Romney came home on Friday nights to be with his family, steerage class. I recently heard a story about Michael Eisner, the former head at Disney, who apparently had a sign in his office that read "If you're not here Saturday, don't bother coming in Sunday." You won't see this sign in Mitt Romney's oval office. Sure, he'll be available for emergencies of state, but more likely Mitt Romney will be at church and playing Wiffle Ball with his sons on the lawn of the White House. Learn from Mitt Romney. Not the politics (we can have that discussion another time). Learn how the man has enjoyed unimaginable financial and personal success but still goes to his lake house in New Hampshire most weekends to pull water skiers and attend his grand daughters' tea parties. Mitt Romney's devotion to family is worth emulating. In my elder law practice more than anywhere else I see the opposite example.

I see parents that never made the time to read to their children, counsel them when they had problems or share their hobbies. What does this breed? Ask Harry Chapin (Cat's in the Cradle). These children impoverish the spirit of their parents by not helping when their parents need help the most. These children impoverish their children by living as their parents lived. It is not too late to mend your ways, especially if you still have young children in the house. Bring a kid golfing with you (Mitt Romney was his father's caddy). Skip your weekly poker game and bring your kids to the movies. Tell your boss that you can't make it to that late meeting because your son has a little league game. Eat your meals together as a family, at a table, without a television or iPod and talk about the events of the day. Go camping, in a tent, with nothing run by electricity. Mitt Romney did these things in spades with his busy father and as a busy father. If you treat your children as an extension of yourself and you bond your family together on the premise that you will be spiritually together for an eternity or at least while your hearts are beating (whatever your beliefs may be), you will be rich - richer than you can ever imagine. Ask Mitt Romney.