Lead, Follow, or Get Out of the Way

Copyright: Sanjay Basu A Motto, A Mirror, and a Messy Truth The Blunt Poetry of Progress Some mottos whisper. Others chant. But this one kicks down the door with steel-toed boots and a clipboard in hand. “Lead, follow, or get out of the way.” It’s not subtle. It doesn’t ask politely. It’s a phrase that feels like it was scrawled on a battlefield map, stapled to a corporate mission statement, and tattooed on the biceps of your loudest coworker, all before breakfast. But behind its bulldozer charm lies a curious depth. It’s part rallying cry, part ultimatum, part moral compass, if your compass was forged in a pressure cooker. So where did this phrase come from? Why does it resonate so widely across politics, business, startups, and even military doctrine? And this part’s important — when does it inspire clarity, and when does it bulldoze nuance? Let’s roll up our sleeves. We’re about to follow this phrase all the way down the rabbit hole. You can lead, follow, or… well, you know th...