BrittanySummativeEssay(FinalCopy)TheLoop

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    Rise When They Fall: The Strategy of False LeadershipBy Brittany Woodhall

    For Mr. Kemp

    ENG 3UI

    Due 23rd July 2010

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    Many leaders over time were, and continue to be, known for their impact on a

    small community, country, or even the world; some of them for good reasons, others for

    poor decisions, which saw them gain many enemies. Like political heads of government,

    leaders of a specific community of people are informally elected to represent their cause

    in the best way that is seen fit. In the struggle to get noticed amongst other peoples

    concerns, some people resort to rising up by pushing others down. Buck Calder from the

    novel The Loop by Nicholas Evans fits this mindset, and his followers are all ranchers

    devoted to the extermination of wolves. Since these people are particularly aggressive,

    they are harder to control. To ease pressure, leaders such as Buck blame other groups to

    cover their own problems, and force other people with power to assist them. The result is

    that most of the credit is given to one popular figure, simply because followers do not

    have the courage to be the face of the cause; they do not want to be the one who could

    suffer for the entire group when they fail. One who rises from the detriment of others is

    not a strong, worthy leader.

    A common weakness these individuals share, is the use of scape-goats

    blaming other causes to cover up ones own weaknesses. With the government protecting

    the wolves that he wanted to kill in order to save his calves, Buck was thinking that,

    Everything seemed to be going wrong lately In fact, now that he came to think of it,

    everything had been fine and dandy until those goddamn wolves showed up. Well, it was

    time to get serious and get rid of them (Nicholas Evans, 253-254). Instead of taking

    charge of his life, Buck uses the coincidence of the arrival of the wolves as the cause of

    all his troubles. If he could provide an answer to another ranchers problems, and find a

    solution, he would gain an even better reputation, according to fellow ranchers. While he

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    gains support from ranchers regardless, he looses the support of those who care about

    wolves and obeying the laws. One cannot stay securely in power without gaining support,

    and the lack of responsibility will eventually become obvious, making supporters think

    twice about their leader.

    One of the things people may not notice right away is how much the leader is

    really doing while in power. As Buck Calder glorified to other ranchers about his solution

    to kill off all the wolves, it was only because of his father that he could even hire a hunter

    so prestigious to do the job. The wolfer he hired, Lovelace, remembered the mans

    father, Henry Calder. His own father used to call him King Henry and joke about how

    high and mighty he was (Evans, 257). Much of Bucks high status within the

    community of ranchers is earned from how highly respected his father was. Inheriting his

    fathers skills and good looks, Buck himself has proved very little to anyone. He could

    not kill a wolf illegally, because he did not have the knowledge to know how to hide it

    from the law. To hire someone who does know, he had to use his fathers reputation. The

    power one has is often through other peoples efforts, not by their own.

    Many ranchers that are affected by wolves killing their calves want the wolves

    gone as much as Buck, but are too afraid to go against the law. Also, some of those who

    are supposed to enforce the law do not have the courage to fight back. These people make

    a weak set of followers, who will not continue to support the leader when they fail. Dan,

    who is working for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect the wolves, was called to

    Bucks ranch after his pet dog got attacked by a wolf. After Buck made his policy against

    wolves clear, Dan was still seething from his encounter with Buck Calder. I told you he

    was a piece of work, Rimmer said Piece of something, anyway. Oh, hes okay.

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    Reckon his barks bigger than his bite. Hes one of these guys likes to test you, see how

    tough you are (Evans, 35). After a long war of words with Dan, Helen, who works as a

    biologist to protect the wolves, says to Luke, her co-worker and Bucks son,

    Dan wants to kill the rest of the wolves Or are we all supposed to call it, what

    was it? Oh yeah, lethal control. Dan sighed. They killed one of your fathers

    calves. So Dans going to let himself be bullied into doing exactly what your

    father wants: get rid of the wolves. No wolves, no wayall you have to do is

    shout loud enough. Sometimes you have to lose a battle to win the war.

    Thats bullshit, Dan. Youre just letting Calder push you around If you dont

    take a stand against people like him, youll never win the war (Evans, 385-386).

    Those who simply try to suppress others do not gain any real supporters. Although Dan

    has given in, as soon as he finds a weakness, or a strong point for the protection of

    wolves, he could turn many of Bucks followers into his enemies. People who follow

    Buck are only looking for a solution from having their calves continually hunted down by

    wolves, and if Dan can offer one that is more appealing to them, Buck will immediately

    lose all of his supporters. Appealing at first, Clyde, one of Bucks farmhands, was

    always so keenly tuned to Bucks mood, always a little too eager to please. Whatever

    Bucks opinion, it became Clydes as well and if Buck changed his mind, even if he

    argued that black wasnt black after all, but white, then Clyde would soon be laboring

    through paler and paler shades of grey until he got there too (Evans, 187). However,

    Buck later finds people such as Clyde to be nothing but irritating, and of no real support.

    Talking about the lack of kills the wolfer has made, Clyde comments, If you ask me,

    hes past it. Way too old. I didnt Buck snapped Clyde held up his hands. Okay,

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    okay. And dont okay, okay me either. Jesus! He slammed a fist on the steering

    wheel (Evans, 342). People who are not fully behind the leaders cause are not useful for

    strength in numbers. It only appears that there is a strong following, when in fact many

    are just desperate to find someone who will solve their problems. This is why it is foolish

    to be intimidated by a leader who pushes others down they cannot get support from

    people who think positively about them; who are willing to defend their views along with

    their leaders for the better of their own cause. The people they gather up instead are ones

    who feel pressured into following, or else they will be shoved down by the exact same

    person they are to follow. Even if one agrees with the leaders opinion, they are simply

    not brave enough to speak their mind; afraid of criticism. They rely on their leaders to do

    this, for it is the leader who will take most of the blame and criticism, since they

    represent the entire shared opinion of the community.

    What some leaders like Buck do not account for are the people who do not

    support them. These people may have been pushed down, but if they were strong enough

    to resist being intimidated, they can counter-attack with the passion to ruin the person

    who tore them down. After Helen refused to get involved with yet another of Bucks

    affairs, his weak attempt to gain her support to kill the wolves, she realized that,

    Suddenly, though her shock and outrage, something hed once said came back to her.

    She braked hard and skidded to a stop, then reversed back so that she was looking right

    down on him from the window. Wanting something can be better than getting it,

    remember? Think of it as a favor (Evans, 357). The phrase Buck once said to her, to try

    to degrade her hope for the survival of the wolves, was used against him, in his fight to

    get rid of the wolves. The real threat of their power is in their own actions and words,

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    whether it comes back in the form of revenge or guilt. Mr. Lovelace, the hunter hired to

    kill the wolves illegally, faced his most threatening, yet unexpected, enemy while he tried

    to go on with his job. Before his wife died, she asked him,

    Do you think, Joseph, their life is the same as ours? I mean, what its made of,

    that little flicker or spirit or whatever it is, inside them. Do you think its the same

    as what we have inside us? No dear of course not. How could it be? Her

    puzzling seemed to have drained her, for she closed her eyes and sank back on her

    pillow, with a faint, contented smile on her lips. Youre right, she sighed. How

    silly I am. How could it be? (Evans, 296).

    At the time, he simply denied her comment, and went along hunting and trapping for

    other people. But it was not until he saw a little boy frightened by his fathers inventions

    of traps, that he truly thought about what his wife was saying. After all the lives of the

    animals he took over many years, he decided that he deserved to die, and was disgusted

    with himself: Before he died, the wolfer wanted to say sorry, but there was no one to say

    it to. The only person whod understand was Winnie and she was dead. He wondered

    how long shed known about that little flicker, as shed called it, and why she hadnt

    told him before, though he knew in his heart hed never have listened (Evans, 372). Both

    Buck and Mr. Lovelace fell victim to their own cruelty, unknowingly tearing themselves

    down. A leader who cannot take even their own brutality is not a strong leader; it is their

    job to stand up and take charge, not cower and look to escape from criticism.

    People who are deemed leaders of a community who push others down to get

    attention do not possess real leadership skills. They do not inspire, but instil fear. These

    leaders cannot even stand up for themselves, and rightfully defend their ideas. Their

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    idea of convincing people is that their opinion is right because everyone else is wrong.

    Their followers are not truly supporting their leader; they only felt they have no other

    options. It is guaranteed that if another person is more inspiring to them, they will quickly

    betray the one who took them for granted, for a leader who will truly appreciate support.

    It is people like Buck Calder that do not solve problems fairly; instead, are only done to

    their rapid satisfaction, still never feeling satisfied with themselves.

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    Work Cited

    Evans, Nicholas. The Loop. New York: Delacorte Press, 1998. Print.