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NGrossman81's profile
Nicholas Grossman
Nicholas Grossman
Nicholas Grossman
@NGrossman81

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Nicholas Grossman

@NGrossman81

International Relations prof at U. Illinois. Senior Editor @ArcDigi. Author “Drones and Terrorism.” Politics, national security, and occasional nerdery.

amazon.com/Drones-Terrori…
Joined April 2015

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    1. Nicholas Grossman‏ @NGrossman81 Apr 13

      Comey admitting election predictions may have influenced his Hillary emails decisions--he doesn't really know--is exactly the sort of honest self-assessment we should want in leaders. Of course, this means it'll be misunderstood, taken out of context, and demagogued to hell. 1/x

      3 replies 30 retweets 86 likes
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    2. Nicholas Grossman‏ @NGrossman81 Apr 13

      You'll see many gotcha takes that--aha!--Comey's Hillary email decisions were primarily political, as if he deliberately made his choices based on election polls and would've deliberately made a different decision if the polls were different. But he didn't say that. 2/x

      1 reply 6 retweets 15 likes
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    3. Nicholas Grossman‏ @NGrossman81 Apr 13

      Many factors contribute to human decision making. Some are subconscious--circumstances, biases, groupthink, emotions, etc.--no matter how hard we try to be rational and objective. Anyone who says otherwise is lying, probably to themselves as well as you. 3/x

      1 reply 7 retweets 18 likes
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    4. Nicholas Grossman‏ @NGrossman81 Apr 13

      Memory is less than fully reliable. People usually get more certain about past decisions/observations over time. It's a trick the brain plays on itself--evolutionarily useful for creatures trying to survive in nature, but problematic for modern humans aiming for objectivity. 4/x

      1 reply 3 retweets 20 likes
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    5. Nicholas Grossman‏ @NGrossman81 Apr 13

      Comey's reexamining a past decision, interrogating himself. He wants to believe he acted objectively, following the law and nothing else. But could the widespread assumption that Hillary would be the next president have influenced his decisions? Maybe. That's being honest. 5/x

      2 replies 5 retweets 27 likes
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      Nicholas Grossman‏ @NGrossman81 Apr 13

      Leaders who recognize their own fallibility and interrogate past decisions will make better decisions in the future. But many Americans want unwavering certainty. Like a child with a parent, they're not sure what to do and find comfort believing that someone else does. 6/x

      8:40 AM - 13 Apr 2018 from Urbana, IL
      • 9 Retweets
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      • Karen Michael Esposito Cam Fentriss Cathy Schneider Shoeless Ellen D. C. Washington Sham Blanchard jmeijers Judi Anderson
      2 replies 9 retweets 23 likes
        1. Nicholas Grossman‏ @NGrossman81 Apr 13

          Constant uncertainty is a terrible trait in leaders. But unexamined certainty is bad too. No matter what else you think of Comey, it's good he asked himself "Why did I do that?" and admitted subconscious/non-objective factors may have played a role. Everyone should do that. (END)

          1 reply 8 retweets 21 likes
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        1. Cheryl‏ @chilibowlcheryl Apr 13
          Replying to @NGrossman81

          Good point. Hence religion and not relying on yourself being wrong sometimes, as long as you reflect and correct...the world would be better.

          0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
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