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The Politically Incorrect MBA
Accuracy in Academia ^ | June 6, 2006 | Malcolm A. Kline

Posted on 06/06/2006 10:13:13 AM PDT by JSedreporter

Big business ain’t what it used to be, if it ever was. “The achievement of the Clinton and the DLC generation was, in fact, to think about first principles, to think about the relationships between state and civil society, to think about the ability of the market to achieve traditional, liberal ends,” The New Republic’s Peter Beinert said at Harvard last year.

And they are succeeding. “Success in the business sector today requires engagement with governments, academic institutions, and others,” Edward E. Potter, an executive with Coca-Cola wrote in a letter to the Chronicle of Higher Education. “This engagement provides the fabric for progress in labor rights, environmental stewardship, and community development.”

“The United Nations’ International labor Organization has always appreciated the important interplay among sectors.” Potter is director of Global Labor Relations and Workplace Accountability at the company’s Atlanta headquarters.

As Don Irvine, chairman of Accuracy in Media, Accuracy in Academia’s parent group, discovered, this ethos prevails at shareholder meetings. He went to the Philadelphia conclave of General Electric as part of a delegation with the Free Enterprise Action Fund, which was formed to depoliticize investment. But this form of activist investment they are up against can take form before executives get their first washroom keys.

“A pair of bald eagles glide in lazy circles overhead as a group of M. B. A. students haul their duffel bags along a wooded path toward one of the nation’s most unusual business schools,” Katherine S. Mangan writes in The Chronicle of Higher Education. “For one weekend a month, these students leave their jobs as computer engineers, clean-water advocates, restaurateurs, and government administrators to learn how to build profitable, socially responsible businesses.”

“The trek starts early in the morning, from as far away as New York and Colorado, and winds up with a 30-minute ferry ride from downtown Seattle to a retreat on 255 acres of forest and wetlands.”

So far, most business schools stay away from this full-scale Kumbaya treatment. At that, though, the Bainbridge Graduate Institute described above is having a far-reaching impact.

“Graduates of the institute have parlayed their skills into new jobs,” Mangan reports. “Alumni include REI’s first program manager for corporate social responsibility, a community food-bank administrator who brings organic food from farms to cafeterias, and an architect working on environmental-remediation projects in American Indian communities."

“As the weekend draws to a close, students gather for the ‘closing circle’ where, led by the school’s dean, Jill Bamburg, they sing ‘Bread and Roses’—a song popular in labor and folk circles.

Malcolm A. Kline is the executive director of Accuracy in Academia.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Washington
KEYWORDS: academia; aim; business; capitalism; environmentalism; globalism; gradschool; howtolosemoney; kumbaya; mbaprograms

1 posted on 06/06/2006 10:13:17 AM PDT by JSedreporter
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To: JSedreporter
"The achievement of the Clinton and the DLC generation was, in fact, to think about first principles . . . "

The Clinton generation? What generation is that? And what does DLC stand for?
2 posted on 06/06/2006 10:19:43 AM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: JSedreporter

Sounds like a "Fire in the Belly" retreat only lacking the 'sweat tents'.


3 posted on 06/06/2006 10:21:46 AM PDT by SamAdams_Lite
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To: JSedreporter

"Alumni include REI’s first program manager for corporate social responsibility"

Well, you would expect REI [Recreational Equipment International, a purveyor of outdoor equipment based in Washington State] to go for this sort of forest retreat near Seattle. The interesting thing is that if you compare REI's wares today, compared to thirty years ago, it caters far more to the yuppie "soccer-mom" SUV crowd than it used to.

REI is selling "the aura of outdoorsiness" as much as they are selling outdoor equipment.

Brands like North Face, which in the early 70s were cutting-edge, are now sported by people who are rarely further than 5 miles from the nearest Starbucks, whose SUV's never leave the pavement.


4 posted on 06/06/2006 10:22:53 AM PDT by Flash Bazbeaux
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Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: Flash Bazbeaux

I was in REI a couple of weeks ago and I noticed that - indeed - fashion was making inroads into the camping and hiking and climbing merchandise. They are selling a lot of stuff that is marginally - if at all - appropriate for real back-country wear.


6 posted on 06/06/2006 10:31:55 AM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: Steve_Seattle

Democratic Leadership Council...an invention of the Clintons


7 posted on 06/06/2006 10:35:00 AM PDT by RexBeach ("There is no substitute for victory." -Douglas MacArthur)
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To: Steve_Seattle

As long as the nearest Cabela's still has a hitching post and paddock for customers to tie up their horses while they shop, I'll be a regular customer there!


8 posted on 06/06/2006 11:01:28 AM PDT by Alberta's Child (Can money pay for all the days I lived awake but half asleep?)
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To: Steve_Seattle; Flash Bazbeaux

yeah... I remember too, back when Eddie Bauer was pretty much the top expedition outfitter. If you were going to Alaska, or climbing Everest... that's where you went to gear up. The downtown store had a full standing mount Grizzly bear at the front door. They had dog sleds in the catalog.

[sigh] Now it's just another clothing store.


9 posted on 06/06/2006 11:08:54 AM PDT by Ramius (Buy blades for war fighters: freeper.the-hobbit-hole.net --> 1400 knives and counting!)
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To: JSedreporter

LOL...I represent several large developers in the DC area...not a lot of democrats in the board room.


10 posted on 06/06/2006 11:51:21 AM PDT by Tulane
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