Vision in Society
"Without vision, a Nation perishes" states the Bible. In fact that adage applies to virtually all forms of human endeavor. Vision is somehow essential to success in everything we do. No human achievement, no matter how trivial or great, is achieved without the persons responsible pursuing a vision that they hold.
But vision on its own is worthless if it is not followed up by action and management of the processes that are essential to the vision's achievement. Some are simply swept along by pursuit of a vision that somehow catches the wave at a critical time and flings them forwards at headlong pace. Bill Gates and Microsoft were in that place, as was Nokia and the cell phone revolution that has swept the world.
But they are exceptions to the norm and for the rest of us, building a corporate empire or nation on the basis of a vision is just pure slog and hard work. Henry Ford was in that category and even though he caught the vision he was not the one who picked it up and turned it into a global automaker.
I am sure that Mr. Mugabe and his team in 1980 had a vision for this country. I recall having lunch with him shortly after he left detention in 1974 where he outlined his vision for the country. I dismissed him as a fanatical leftist with a Khmer Rouge view of the world. I now know better -he meant what he said but over the decades, this vision has become distorted and degraded.
Last week Mr. Mugabe called for a new vision for Africa. I think this is a great idea and long overdue - but how to undertake such a vast exercise? Certainly, for a start, the new Chairman of the African Union, Robert Gabriel Mugabe, on the basis of his personal record in such matters, is hardly a model for the future. Zimbabwe is in the bottom 3 or 4 countries in Africa in just about everything - governance, corruption, human rights, the rule of law, income per capita, life expectancy and quality of life.