"Lead, follow, or get out of the way"
About this Quote
A slogan like "Lead, follow, or get out of the way" treats politics less as polite debate than as a pressure test: when history is moving, hesitation becomes its own kind of sabotage. It’s an aggressively impatient line, built on a simple triad that leaves no dignified fourth option for the spectator, the fence-sitter, the armchair critic. Paine’s genius was often to take sprawling Enlightenment arguments and compress them into moral ultimatums ordinary people could wield. This one works because it weaponizes clarity.
The intent is recruitment and discipline at once. Paine isn’t flattering the reader with complexity; he’s conscripting them into motion. Lead if you can see the path. Follow if you can’t, but accept that collective action requires alignment. If you do neither, you’re not neutral - you’re an obstacle. The subtext is a rebuke to the respectable class of cautious men who preferred stability over justice, procedure over urgency. It frames obstruction not as a difference of opinion but as a physical impediment in the road.
In Paine’s revolutionary context, that rhetorical narrowing made sense. Independence wasn’t an abstract idea; it was a logistical gamble that demanded coordination, sacrifice, and timing. The line carries the cadence of wartime necessity, not salon argument: decisions have deadlines, and dithering costs lives. Its lasting cultural power is how easily it ports into workplaces, movements, and crises, offering a bracing ethic of agency - while also revealing its hard edge: it can turn dissent into “in the way,” and treat deliberation as weakness. That tension is the quote’s bite.
The intent is recruitment and discipline at once. Paine isn’t flattering the reader with complexity; he’s conscripting them into motion. Lead if you can see the path. Follow if you can’t, but accept that collective action requires alignment. If you do neither, you’re not neutral - you’re an obstacle. The subtext is a rebuke to the respectable class of cautious men who preferred stability over justice, procedure over urgency. It frames obstruction not as a difference of opinion but as a physical impediment in the road.
In Paine’s revolutionary context, that rhetorical narrowing made sense. Independence wasn’t an abstract idea; it was a logistical gamble that demanded coordination, sacrifice, and timing. The line carries the cadence of wartime necessity, not salon argument: decisions have deadlines, and dithering costs lives. Its lasting cultural power is how easily it ports into workplaces, movements, and crises, offering a bracing ethic of agency - while also revealing its hard edge: it can turn dissent into “in the way,” and treat deliberation as weakness. That tension is the quote’s bite.
Quote Details
| Topic | Leadership |
|---|---|
| Source | Later attribution: Or Get in the Way! (D. Charles Gossman, 2022) modern compilationISBN: 9781663240224 · ID: I3F6EAAAQBAJ
Evidence: ... Lead, follow, or get out of the way” originated with Founding Father Thomas Paine, so I guess that sentiment has been around for a long time. The old adage is usually quoted by some no- nonsense leader who intends to push through all ... Other candidates (1) Thomas Paine (Thomas Paine) compilation37.5% improve or we live in vain address and declaration at a select meeting of the f |
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