Nazis exerted on the course of management thinking. In the foreword to his book, he explicitly warns against regarding contemporary management thought as a mere legacy of the Nazi regime. Nevertheless, we believe the author could, and in view of the sensitivity of the topic also should, have done more to prevent such misinterpretations.Still, the similarities between Nazi and contemporary management tenets are sobering, regardless of how much influence the Nazis actually had on postwar management thinking. Chapoutot's book demonstrates in the starkest way that "people-centered" management techniques, which we often think of as empowering and mitigating employees' propensity to engage in harmful activities, are not morally desirable per se. Rather, these techniques can be used to serve any kind of endeavor, including the most murderous ones. Free to Obey is a thought-provoking read that provides a historical perspective on current debates about the value of "freedom at work." In addition to alerting us to the difficult relationship between freedom and control in management (de Vaujany, Leclercq-Vandelannoitte, Munro, Nama, & Holt, 2021), the book vividly reminds us of people's tendency to entrust their freedom to over-signified "leaders" seen as embodying larger collectives (Deslandes, 2018), and invites us to think critically about the actual worth of leadership techniques that place "freedom" at their center (Picard & Islam, 2020).