Christopher Dummitt on the lack of viewpoint diversity in Canadian academia: MLI in Parliament
Christopher Dummitt on the lack of viewpoint diversity in Canadian academia: MLI in Parliament
Russia after the fall of Assad: Balkan Devlen, Alexander Lanoszka, and Richard Shimooka for Inside Policy Talks

Born in Vancouver, the Peter Principle explains why your boss is incompetent. Here’s why it still resonates [Video]

Categories
British Columbia News

Outside Vancouver’s Metro Theatre is a plaque commemorating a play that at least two people thought was terrible. 

It describes how writer Raymond Hull was complaining about the atrocious production he had been watching while standing in the theatre’s lobby during an intermission.

A tall stranger who was also in the lobby then tried to explain to him how such an awful play made it to the stage.  

The stranger, Laurence J. Peter, told Hull that every employee tends to rise to his level of incompetence. Workers, he argued, keep getting promoted until they are in over their heads.

The conversation in the lobby, which occurred sometime in the early-to-mid 1960s, sparked both men’s imaginations and ultimately gave birth to their 1969 best-seller The Peter Principle: Why Things Always Go Wrong

The Peter Principle skewered corporate culture decades before the comic strip Dilbert and the TV series The Office became pop culture hits. 

It sold millions of copies, and the term …

Free Speech: Behind the Iron Curtain and in Canada Today
Free Speech: Behind the Iron Curtain and in Canada Today
The impact of suspending parliament and leadership on hold: Ken Coates on Global News