On Tuesday, Larry Summers -- who has been under siege for two months for offending women -- became the first Harvard president to suffer a vote of no confidence. Still, Harvard's governing board resisted efforts to force him to resign. So how did Summers survive?
My answer is sex -- or the lack of it.
Had Summers been involved with one particular woman, instead of insulting all of us as a group, he'd be polishing his resume right now, sick that Paul Wolfowitz had scored George W. Bush's endorsement for the plum World Bank opening.
Sex is behind the quick and brutal heave-ho of Boeing Chief Executive Harry Stonecipher, who was summarily executed when a six-week affair with a female executive not directly in his line of command became known. Boeing is a case study in how you can get away with corruption -- which does grievous harm to the public -- much longer than you can get away with adultery -- which does grievous harm privately to a few.
The aerospace giant's top brass moved like molasses to act in 2002 when two executives now in jail were greasing the palms of a Pentagon employee in exchange for getting jet orders. But when a tattletale came to Boeing Chairman Lewis Platt with purloined e-mails from Stonecipher revealing the consensual affair, Platt leaped into action.
Someone could get rich devising a spam detector for e-mails composed in the throes of infatuation.
Stonecipher, 68, was foolish. But he wasn't bribing officials at the Pentagon. Yet Platt axed old Harry without so much as a fig leaf of "resigning to spend more time with his family."
Sex also explains why Eason Jordan, CNN's vice president and chief news executive, resigned under pressure so quickly. It wasn't for off-the-record and offhand remarks he made at a conference at Davos, Switzerland, about journalists being targeted by the military in Iraq. Surely he could have apologized for such stupidity (and did, by the way). He'd written much worse when he confessed in an article that CNN went soft on Saddam Hussein to keep its Baghdad bureau open. Jordan was already on thin ice for allegedly having an affair with Mariane Pearl, the widow of slain Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. Jordan subsequently left his wife and children. He compounded this performance by taking up publicly with Sharon Stone, who became a risible figure at Davos herself for passing a basket to collect loose change to combat poverty. That was one liaison too far.