L
LCMS_No_More
Guest
Those are example of bad policies. The people who came up with those ideas are responsible. When people step outside their areas of competence, then you always end up with trouble.Bureaucrats introduced the “New Math” into schools with disasterous results. How did they correct that? What recourse do the children have who failed to get a good education as a result of that error?
Bureaucrats introduced “Reality Orientation” into nursing homes – if an old lady wanted her hair in pigtails, and a doll to cradle, she was supposed to be told in no uncertain terms that she was 95 years old, and would remain in the nursing home for the rest of her days. Of course, people treated that way quickly declined and died.
How were the victims of that horrible bureaucratic error compensated?
Of course, we could be talking about different things when we discuss bureaucracy. I’m talking about the provision of services on a large scale and the system by which those services are provided. In order to do the things you describe, it would have to either be someone high up in the hierarchy (bureaucracies tend to be hierarchical) who failed upward or someone stepping out of bounds.
Either way, most bureaucracies don’t operate that way and you don’t notice them until you need them.