Scrum is designed to empower the business, not the developer
What do you mean by "empower the business"? I assume you don't believe that a non sentient legal entity can be empowered. In which case can I assume you are talking about empowering the humans within the business?
And what I deduce from this statement is that you feel that in your business, there are programmers, and there is everyone else, and further that Scrum empowers only everyone else. From your other posts, I deduce that They are not qualified, in your opinion, to determine what should be worked on to deliver value to the customer.
Scrum isn't going to magically fix this situation. This is a people problem. This is an organizational problem.
What do you mean by "empower the business"? I assume you don't believe that a non sentient legal entity can be empowered. In which case can I assume you are talking about empowering the humans within the business?
And what I deduce from this statement is that you feel that in your business, there are programmers, and there is everyone else, and further that Scrum empowers only everyone else. From your other posts, I deduce that They are not qualified, in your opinion, to determine what should be worked on to deliver value to the customer.
Scrum isn't going to magically fix this situation. This is a people problem. This is an organizational problem.