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Innovation is stifled by red tape from "summary" of The Dilbert Principle by Scott Adams

Red tape is a bureaucratic invention that serves no purpose other than to create more red tape. It is a self-replicating entity, like a virus, but without the potential benefits of a virus. Red tape is born when someone in authority decides to regulate something that doesn't need to be regulated. And once it starts, it grows like a weed on steroids. It spreads quickly, choking off innovation in its path. Innovation is the lifeblood of progress. It is what drives us forward, pushes us to new heights, and challenges us to think differently. But red tape is like a wet blanket on the flames of innovation. It smothers creativity, stifles ingenuity, and hampers progress. Red tape is the enemy of innovation, and it must be fought at every turn. When red tape is allowed to flourish, it creates barriers that are almost impossible to overcome. It hinders communication, stifles collaboration, and prevents new ideas from taking root. It erects roadblocks where there should be none, creating unnecessary obstacles that slow progress to a crawl. Red tape is the enemy of efficiency, the nemesis of creativity, and the bane of progress. Innovation thrives in an environment of freedom and flexibility, where ideas can flow freely and barriers are few. But red tape creates a tangled web of rules and regulations that strangle innovation before it has a chance to take flight. It is a formidable foe, a relentless adversary, and a stubborn obstacle to progress. Red tape must be cut, slashed, and burned to make way for the bright light of innovation to shine through. In the battle between innovation and red tape, there can be only one winner. Innovation is the key to our future, the engine that drives us forward, and the spark that ignites our imagination. Red tape is the enemy of progress, the barrier to success, and the roadblock to innovation. It must be overcome, defeated, and vanquished if we are to thrive and prosper in the world of tomorrow.
    oter

    The Dilbert Principle

    Scott Adams

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