06 June 2026

The Invisible Leader: Ancient Wisdom on Why Great Leaders Let Others Take the Credit

The Invisible Leader: Ancient Wisdom on Why Great Leaders Let Others Take the Credit
 Greatness Is Not Being Remembered: How Mission-Centered Leaders Outlive Themselves

Human lives are finite. Missions can transcend generations.

"The greatest leaders are never those who make people remember them,
but those who enable people to continue the mission."

— Gabriel Teo 🌿心里话7分钟(26027)in Facebook

Lead people not through personal loyalty, but through commitment to a mission.

Human lives are finite, but a mission can transcend the limits of time.

 This idea resonates deeply with Chapter 17 of the Tao Te Ching:

The highest rulers are those whose existence the people barely notice.

Next come those who are loved and praised.

Next come those who are feared.

And lowest are those who are despised.

When trust is insufficient, there will be distrust.

The sage is careful with words.

When the work is accomplished and the task fulfilled, the people all say:

"We did it naturally ourselves."

This passage reveals a profound distinction in leadership: is leadership centered on the leader's ego, or on the mission itself?

 The Highest Leader: One Whom People Barely Notice

"The highest rulers are those whose existence the people barely notice."

This perfectly reflects the idea of a leader who does not seek to be remembered. Such a leader does not impose his will, demand attention, or cultivate a personal following. Instead, he builds systems, culture, and shared purpose that allow the mission to sustain itself.

People act not because "the leader told us to," but because the mission has become their own.

The Risk of Hero-Centered Leadership

"Next come those who are loved and praised."

Many capable leaders reach this level. They are admired, respected, and celebrated as heroes.

Yet there is a hidden danger: when people become attached to the leader rather than the mission, the mission becomes dependent on the leader's presence. Once the leader departs, momentum often fades.

The mission is weakened by personal dependence.

From Following a Person to Following a Mission

This is the crucial transition from being "loved and praised" to becoming the "highest" leader.

·         Following a person: The leader is present, so the direction remains. The leader changes, and the direction changes.

·         Following a mission: The leader is merely a temporary steward of a greater purpose. Anyone can take up the baton, provided they remain faithful to the mission.

This requires immense humility and self-restraint. The leader must see himself not as the center of the story, but as an instrument through which the mission advances.

As you observed:

Human life is finite. Mission is not.

Many great figures understood this truth:

·         Moses saw the Promised Land but did not enter it.

·         Socrates calmly accepted death rather than betray his principles.

·         Many visionary founders have willingly stepped aside when a successor could better advance the mission.

They understood that the mission must be greater than the individual.

The Highest Form of Empowerment

"The sage is careful with words. When the work is accomplished and the task fulfilled, the people all say: 'We did it naturally ourselves.'"

This is leadership at its highest level.

·         The leader does not constantly issue commands.

·         The leader does not elevate his opinions into unquestionable doctrine.

·         The leader does not seek recognition.

Instead, people achieve difficult things and genuinely feel:

"We accomplished this ourselves."

This is not ingratitude. It is the ultimate success of leadership: empowering people so completely that they forget they were empowered.

A Test of True Leadership

A useful measure of leadership is not what happens while the leader is present, but what happens after he leaves.

False leaders often:

·         Attach their name to everything.

·         Cultivate personality cults.

·         Leave organizations that struggle without them.

True leaders leave behind:

·         A living mission.

·         Capable successors.

·         A culture that continues to grow without their direct involvement.

The essential question is:

Am I cultivating loyalty to myself, or loyalty to the mission?

If the mission continues to flourish after the leader steps aside, then the leader has succeeded.

Conclusion

"Lead people not through attachment to a person, but through devotion to a mission" may be one of the finest modern commentaries on Chapter 17 of the Tao Te Ching.

The greatest leaders are not remembered because they placed themselves at the center of history. They are remembered because they built something that no longer depended on them.

Greatness is not being remembered.

Greatness is enabling the mission to outlive your tombstone and continue its journey into the future.


Additional:

Peter Drucker: The Leader as Builder of Institutions

Peter Drucker often argued that effective executives build organizations that can function without them.

One of his core ideas was:

The purpose of management is not to create dependence on a leader, but to create an organization capable of sustained performance.

Drucker admired leaders who built institutions rather than personal empires. The true test was whether the organization remained effective after the founder left.

This closely mirrors:

"Lead people through mission, not personality."

 Robert Greenleaf: Servant Leadership

Robert K. Greenleaf developed the concept of Servant Leadership.

His central question was:

Do those served grow as persons?

The leader's role is not to accumulate power but to help others become capable leaders themselves.

A servant leader succeeds when followers no longer need the leader.

Again, this resembles:

"When the work is done, the people say, 'We did it ourselves.'" 

The Best Example: George Washington

Among Western historical figures, George Washington may be the closest embodiment of the "invisible leader."

After leading the American Revolution, he voluntarily surrendered power.

After serving two presidential terms, he stepped down despite immense popularity.

Many leaders throughout history sought to make themselves indispensable.

Washington sought to make the republic stronger than himself.

His message was essentially:

The nation must survive without me.

That is pure mission-centered leadership.

The Deepest Parallel

Perhaps the closest Western statement to Laozi's Chapter 17 comes not from management literature but from leadership scholar Laozi and Greenleaf's servant leadership tradition:

The best leader is not the one people obey.

The best leader is the one who creates people capable of leading themselves.

Or in modern management language:

A great manager builds followers.

A great leader builds leaders.

A truly great leader builds a mission that no longer depends on any leader at all.



======================

“因为最伟大的领袖,从来不是那些让人记住自己的人,

而是那些让人继续完成使命的人“。

Gabriel Teo 🌿心里话7分钟(26027


让人不 因人而是因使命来带领。人生命有限。但使命可超越时限。

《道德经》第十七章. 太上,不知有之; 其次,亲之、誉之; 其次,畏之; 其次,侮之。 信不足焉,有不信焉,悠兮其贵言。 功成事遂,百姓皆谓"我自然"

 

 DeepSeek:

您引用的这段话,与《道德经》第十七章的精神高度契合,也触及了领导力中一个极深刻的分野:是以为中心,还是以(使命)为中心。

我们逐层来看其中的智慧:

1. “太上,不知有之”——最伟大的领袖,人们几乎感觉不到他的存在

这正是您说的不是让人记住自己。领袖不把自己的意志强加于人,不刷存在感,而是构建一个让使命能自行运转的系统、文化或共识。百姓(团队成员)在做事时,觉得我本来就是这样做的,而不是我遵照领袖的命令

2. “其次,亲之誉之”——次一等,被人民亲近、称赞

这是很多优秀领袖能达到的境界。人们爱戴他、感激他,认为他是英雄。但这里隐含一个风险:当人们聚焦于领袖个人时,一旦领袖离开,动力可能断裂。使命反而可能因为对个人的依赖而被削弱。

3. 您的核心洞见:让人不因人而是因使命来带领

这正好对应了从亲之誉之太上的跃迁。

  • 因人而跟从:领袖在,方向在;领袖变,方向变。
  • 因使命而跟从:领袖只是使命的暂时托管者。任何人都可以成为接力者,只要他服务于同一使命。

这要求领袖有一种巨大的克制:把自己工具化——不是我成就了使命,而是使命通过我得以展开。正如您所说,人生命有限,但使命可超越时限。摩西看到应许之地却不过去;苏格拉底从容饮下毒酒;很多伟大企业的创始人主动让位给更能推动使命的继任者——他们都明白:使命大于自己。

4. “悠兮其贵言。功成事遂,百姓皆谓我自然

这段完美呼应您的观点:

  • 贵言:不轻易发号施令,不把自己的意见神圣化。
  • 我自然:人们完成艰难功业后,觉得这是我们自己做到的。这不是忘恩负义,而是领导力的最高境界——赋能到让人忘了被赋能

总结思考:

  • 识别假领袖:那些处处留下自己名字、制造个人崇拜、离了他就运转失灵的人,恰恰停留在亲誉甚至畏之的层面。
  • 真领袖的考验:当你离开(或退居幕后)之后,使命是否仍在生长?人们是否依然自发地行动?
  • 对自身的提醒:如果我们在某个位置上带领他人,可以常问——我是在培养别人对我的依赖,还是培养别人对使命的忠诚?

您提炼的让人不因人而是因使命来带领,几乎可以作为《道德经》第十七章的现代注解。它能用来判断一个组织是否健康,也能用来矫正自己的领导动机:伟大不是被记住,而是让使命越过自己的墓碑,继续走向更远的未来。


 



05 June 2026

Ethnicity Is Not Nationality. And Singapore Helped Build China's Economy.

Ethnicity Is Not Nationality. And Singapore Helped Build China's Economy.

Two separate arguments are getting muddled in the online commentary directed at Singapore from certain Chinese netizens. They deserve to be addressed separately — because they are separate. One is a question of political philosophy. The other is a question of historical fact. Both cut against the critics.




Part One: Your Ancestry Does Not Determine Your Loyalty

The premise behind much of this commentary is that Singaporeans of Chinese descent owe some form of political allegiance to the People's Republic of China. This is a category error — a confusion of race with citizenship that Singapore has rejected since its founding.

Nationality is a legal and political fact. Ethnicity is not.

A Singaporean whose grandparents migrated from Fujian is Singaporean. Full stop. By the same logic, an American of Irish descent owes no political loyalty to Dublin. A Brazilian of Japanese descent owes none to Tokyo. A British citizen of Indian heritage owes none to New Delhi. Nobody makes these arguments, because they are transparently absurd.

What makes the argument directed at Singapore additionally strange is that Singapore is not a Chinese city-state. It is a multi-racial, multi-religious, sovereign nation in which Malay, Indian, Eurasian, and other communities are constitutive — not incidental — parts of the national fabric. Singapore's political identity was built explicitly against the idea that ethnicity should be the organising principle of a state. That was one of Lee Kuan Yew's foundational commitments, and it remains a cornerstone of Singapore's national identity today.

When Singapore's leaders act in Singapore's national interest — including when that interest diverges from Beijing's preferences — they are doing their jobs. Expecting otherwise is not a claim about shared heritage. It is a demand for subservience dressed up as cultural kinship.

Singapore is not a "third China." It never was, and it was never intended to be.


Part Two: Singapore Was a Significant Contributor to China's Economic Rise

Having established what Singapore is not, it is worth establishing what Singapore actually did — because the historical record is substantial, and it runs in the opposite direction to the "Singapore owes China" narrative.

It should be said upfront: Singapore was one of several external reference points for China's reform era, not its singular driver. Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, the World Bank, and others all played roles. But Singapore's contribution was specific, structured, and documented — and it deserves to be understood on its own terms.

The 1978 Visit and Its Significance

When Deng Xiaoping visited Singapore in November 1978, he was searching for viable paths forward for a country emerging from decades of economic isolation. What he encountered reinforced an emerging belief within China's reformist leadership: that economic modernisation and political control need not be mutually exclusive.

At the time, a significant anxiety within the Chinese Communist Party held that opening the economy would inevitably mean losing political authority — that market capitalism and Western liberal democracy came as a package. Singapore offered a counterexample. Here was a state that had built world-class infrastructure, attracted multinational corporations, and delivered sustained prosperity, while maintaining single-party governance and strong social order.

Around the same period, Deng referenced Singapore's public housing model in discussions with colleagues, and the Third Plenum of the 11th Central Committee launched China's Reform and Opening-Up policy in December 1978. Singapore was one reference point in a broader intellectual and political process that Deng was already driving.

In 1992, on his Southern Tour, Deng put his admiration on the record:

"Society in Singapore is quite orderly. They managed things very strictly. We ought to use their experience as a model, and we ought to manage things even better than they do."

Industrial Parks: Transferring the Model

Singapore's contribution extended beyond ideas. It helped build administrative and industrial infrastructure inside China through a series of formal bilateral projects.

The China-Singapore Suzhou Industrial Park (SIP), inaugurated in 1994 under a government-to-government agreement, was designed to transfer Singapore's planning and governance expertise into Chinese practice — urban design, transparent corporate administration, integrated infrastructure, and streamlined processes for foreign investors. The early years were not smooth; diverging expectations on land use and commercial direction led Singapore to reduce its ownership stake in 2001. But SIP adapted and grew. Today it hosts over 150 Fortune Global 500 projects and consistently ranks among China's premier high-tech zones.

Earlier, a Singapore-led consortium had tested the model commercially in the Wuxi-Singapore Industrial Park, providing a smaller-scale proof before the more ambitious Suzhou project.

Subsequent initiatives reflected China's changing priorities. The Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-City (2008) addressed the environmental pressures of rapid industrialisation. The China-Singapore (Chongqing) Connectivity Initiative (2015) focused on logistics and modern services for China's interior, serving as a node in the New International Land-Sea Trade Corridor.

Training Officials: The Mayors' Classes

From 1992, Nanyang Technological University ran executive training programmes for Chinese officials — programmes that became known as the "Mayors' Classes." Graduates returned to serve as mayors, governors, and senior cadres, having studied frameworks drawn from Singapore's experience in public administration, anti-corruption mechanisms, and urban planning. The National University of Singapore ran parallel programmes through the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy. NTU alone has trained over 10,000 Chinese officials through these programmes.

The impact varied by individual and province, and it would be an overreach to draw a direct line from classroom to policy. But the scale of exposure was real, and the choice of Singapore over Western institutions was deliberate — Singapore offered a governance reference point without the embedded political assumptions of European or American systems.

Singapore as a Financial Hub

As China's economy matured, Singapore became a major financial and investment hub connecting China to global capital markets. It has been China's largest single-country foreign investor for over a decade. It operates as one of the world's significant offshore Renminbi clearing centres, supporting China's currency internationalisation efforts. Through the Belt and Road Initiative, it serves as an important platform for Chinese enterprises seeking legal, financial, and risk-management infrastructure for expansion into Southeast Asia and beyond.

Hong Kong has historically played a larger role as China's financial gateway, and offshore jurisdictions move substantial volumes of capital. Singapore's role is best understood as complementary — important, specialised, and growing.


The Record Speaks for Itself

Taken together, this is not the profile of a country that owes China anything. It is the profile of a small, highly capable state that provided a larger neighbour with structured cooperation, governance expertise, capital, and comparative validation at a critical moment in that neighbour's development.

Singapore's insistence on acting in its own national interest is not ingratitude. It is, and has always been, what made Singapore a credible partner worth learning from in the first place.


Sources: The Diplomat, New Mandala, NTU Nanyang Centre for Public Administration, National Library Board Singapore, ISEAS Fulcrum.