Is Your Boss a Psychopath
-
Upload
diligent-purpose -
Category
Documents
-
view
216 -
download
0
description
Transcript of Is Your Boss a Psychopath
Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT Home → Collections → Magazines
The CEO as psychopath Egocentric, ruthless and coldblooded people are plentiful in corporate boardrooms, psychologists say.
July 08, 2005 | Peter Carlson, Washington Post
WASHINGTON — Finally, a business magazine has asked a question on many folks' minds: "Is Your Boss a
Psychopath?"
The magazine is Fast Company and its answer to that question is: Yes, your boss might very well be a psychopath.
After all, many of America's legendary titans of industry exhibited symptoms of psychopathy -- folks such as Henry
Ford, Armand Hammer, even Walt Disney.
Psychopaths are people who are amoral, ruthless, pathologically selfish and utterly unburdened by qualms of
conscience. You find a lot of these folks in prisons. You can also find them in corporate boardrooms, the magazine
reports.
"I always said that if I wasn't studying psychopaths in prison, I'd do it at the stock exchange," Canadian psychologist
Robert Hare told Fast Company.
Hare, 71, is one of the world's foremost experts on psychopaths. He developed the "Psychopathy Checklist," which
has been used to diagnose psychopaths for 25 years, and the "P-Scan," which is widely used by police departments to
screen out psychopaths among recruits. Hare sees similarities between the psychopaths he has studied -- Mafia hit
men and sex offenders -- and the corporate crooks behind the Enron and WorldCom scandals.
"These are callous, coldblooded individuals," he says. "They don't care that you have thoughts and feelings. They
have no sense of guilt or remorse."
Hare's view is supported by two studies, including the research of British psychologists Belinda Board and Katarina
Fritzon, who administered personality tests to 39 high-level executives and found them to be egocentric, exploitative
and lacking in empathy -- in short, "successful psychopaths."
Whether this boss-as-psychopath theory is sound science is, of course, debatable. But the folks at Fast Company have
taken this serious idea and run with it, producing an entertaining eight-page package that includes a goofy quiz on
how to tell whether your boss is psycho and a cover portrait of C. Montgomery Burns, the beady-eyed evil capitalist
from "The Simpsons" whose credo is "What good is money if it can't inspire terror in your fellow man?"
Best of all are the deliciously nasty mini-portraits of "Bosses From Hell," a category that includes many of America's
most famous executives, past and present:
* Ford: "used shadowy henchmen to run 'secret police' who spied on employees ... cheated on his wife with his
teenage personal assistant and then had the younger woman marry his chauffeur as a cover."
* Hammer: "bribed his way through the oil business. Laundered money for Soviet spies.... Then promoted himself for
the Nobel Peace Prize."
* Disney: "a dictatorial boss who underpaid his workers ... made anti-Semitic smears ... cooperated with Sen. Joseph
McCarthy."
Advertisement
FIND MORE STORIES ABOUT
l Magazines
l Employers
l Behavior
l Behavior .
FEATURED ARTICLES
Dutch Harbor, Alaska: The police
blotter read 'round the...
F e b r u a r y 5 , 2 0 0 9
The Plot Thickens in Ferrari Crash
F e b r u a r y 2 8 , 2 0 0 6
D a y-care kids are more impulsive,
bigger risk-takers, study...
M a y 1 3 , 2 0 1 0
Style & Culture
* "Chainsaw" Al Dunlop: "His divorce was granted on grounds of 'extreme cruelty.' That's the characteristic that
endeared him to Wall Street, which applauded when he fired 11,000 workers at Scott Paper, then another 6,000 (half
the labor force) at Sunbeam."
No wonder Hare has created a test to screen potential chief executives for psychopathic behavior before they're
hired. "We screen police officers, teachers," he says. "Why not people who are going to handle billions of dollars?"
Well, Alan Deutschman, who wrote the Fast Company story, suggests one good reason why not: Companies would use
the test not to weed out psychopaths but to hire them.
Copyright 2010 Los Angeles Times Terms of Service|Privacy Policy|Index by Date|Index by Keyword