Episode 11
How Leaders Accidentally Teach People to Lie
Why most “honest cultures” reward silence instead
Very few leaders want dishonesty.
They say they value transparency.
They ask for candor.
They encourage “speaking up.”
And yet—
in many organizations, truth arrives late, filtered, or sanitized.
Not because people are unethical.
But because they are paying attention.
People don’t lie because they’re immoral.
They lie because the system trained them to.
The First Lie Is Usually Politeness
Most workplace dishonesty doesn’t start with deception.
It starts with courtesy.
- “Looks fine.”
- “No major issues.”
- “We’re aligned.”
These are not lies in intent.
They are risk calculations.
People learn quickly which truths cost them energy,
reputation,
or safety.
They stop sharing the full picture—
not to mislead,
but to survive.
What Leaders Miss About “Open Culture”
Leaders often equate openness with permission.
“My door is always open.”
“You can tell me anything.”
“I value feedback.”
But permission is not protection.
People don’t speak based on what you say.
They speak based on what happens after someone speaks.
The Real Curriculum Is Reaction
Every leader teaches a curriculum, whether they intend to or not.
It’s taught through:
- facial expressions
- tone shifts
- follow-up behavior
- who gets labeled “difficult”
- who stops being invited to meetings
One raised eyebrow can undo ten town halls.
One defensive explanation can cancel a year of “safe space” messaging.
The Two Most Common Punishments for Truth
- Emotional Tax
The truth-teller has to manage your disappointment, irritation, or anxiety. - Reputational Drift
They become “negative,” “not a team player,” or “hard to work with.”
The message spreads fast:
Honesty is allowed—but not without cost.
So people adapt.
Why Silence Looks Like Alignment
Leaders often misread quiet rooms as healthy ones.
No conflict.
No pushback.
Fast consensus.
In reality, silence often means:
- risk is uneven
- power is present
- honesty is being deferred
The most dangerous cultures aren’t loud.
They’re polite.
Ancient Parallel: Speaking Truth Without Creating Fear
In the Gita, Krishna does not force Arjuna to agree.
He does not shame doubt.
He creates enough psychological safety for confusion to surface.
Truth appears not because it is demanded—
but because it is received.
This distinction matters.
Psychological Safety Is Not Comfort
Most leaders misunderstand psychological safety.
It is not:
- constant reassurance
- agreement
- absence of tension
It is the confidence that truth will not trigger punishment.
Sometimes truth is uncomfortable.
Safety is about aftermath, not comfort.
What Actually Builds Honest Systems
Honesty grows when leaders:
- reward early bad news
- respond to critique without explanation first
- separate message from messenger
- visibly protect dissenters
- correct themselves publicly
These are not slogans.
They are behaviors.
And they are costly.
That’s why they’re rare.
A Simple Test
Ask yourself:
- When was the last time someone strongly disagreed with me?
- What happened to them afterward?
- Did I change—or did I defend?
Your system already knows the answers.
So do your people.
Closing Thought
People don’t lie because they lack integrity.
They lie because honesty feels unsafe.
If truth arrives late in your system,
don’t demand more courage.
Redesign the cost of honesty.

