Psychopaths, Purpose, and the Price of Vulnerability
Newton Cheng
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Psychopaths, Purpose, and the Price of Vulnerability — Newton Cheng Returns
Newton's back for his fourth appearance. Fresh off 17 years at Google, a keynote at the H2F Symposium, and a hospital room that reordered his priorities entirely. This one goes well past fitness.
What we get into:
What Newton saw at the H2F Symposium that Google never gave him — a room full of people who had dedicated their careers to a mission with no big financial payoff at the end, and actually meant it.
Corporations as machines — why purpose-driven language at large companies eventually stops holding water, and what the difference looks like when the mission isn't profit.
Strategic vulnerability — it's not open sharing, it's context-dependent and calculated. Vulnerability builds trust unless it reveals incompetence at a core responsibility. That distinction matters a lot in the military.
The senior NCO who posted his failed two-mile run on social media — Drew, Alex, and Newton work through whether that was useful vulnerability or a self-own.
The psychopathy of organizations — Newton's framework: psychopaths rise because they feel nothing, emotionally repressed leaders accumulate moral injury until they go toxic, and emotionally integrated leaders are the best case but the rarest outcome.
Lying to Ourselves — the 2015 paper on dishonesty in the Army profession, and new data showing that reported unit readiness is moderately negatively correlated with actual performance at combat training centers.
We're here to love and take care of each other, and that's it — Newton's first principle, arrived at in a hospital room after his daughter's leukemia diagnosis. She's doing well.
Mentioned in this episode:
Incorruptible — Eric Reese's new book on corporate governance and why even purpose-driven companies abandon their ideals
Lying to Ourselves: Dishonesty in the Army Profession — Leonard Wong, 2015
A Clearer Mirror: The Promise of Combat Training Center Data — sent in by Lieutenant Colonel Daw
The Art of Community — Charles Vogel, former podcast guest
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry — if you want to build a ship, don't drum up people to collect wood
Long and Strong — the Mops and Moes training program on TrainHeroic →
Views expressed are those of the speakers and do not represent any official organization.

