Here is something that The Watchotwer wrote where they quoted someone without naming them, only referencing the person by "As one lecturer said."
"In the world, there is a tendency to reject leadership. As one lecturer said: "The rising education level has improved the talent pool such that followers have become so critical that they are almost impossible to lead." But a spirit of independent thinking does not prevail in God's organization, and we have sound reasons for confidence in the men taking the lead among us." (The Watchtower, September 15, 1989, p. 23, §13)
The original source for the quote that The Watchtower used was an article published in the August 6, 1979 issue of Time magazine.
The articles title was "A Cry for Leadership," and the quotation itself may be read online at:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,948730-1,00.html
Here is what The Watchtower quoted in the contex of the surrounding paragraphs.
By one of the great ironies in American history, the rising level of education in the U.S. has at once improved the talent pool from which leaders are drawn and made followers so critical that they are often impossible to lead.Says Economist John Kenneth Galbraith: "When the House of Representatives consisted of machine Democrats from the North and semiliterate farmers from the South, and you came to a question of foreign policy, they yearned to be led. Now you have a House where everyone is a college graduate, and most have advanced degrees. And every one of them feels superior to whoever is President." The same is true of constituents. Says New York Labor Mediator Theodore Kheel: "Now everybody knows as much as their leaders. They aren't willing to believe in 'secret plans' for ending wars or solving problems." (Once again, the almost atavistic appeal of Ted Kennedy contradicts the trend. His followers are willing to trust Kennedy in an old-fashioned way, even though they might actually disagree with his programs, or be ignorant of them.)
At the same time, the general level of critical intelligence and intense watchfulness means that leaders cannot creatively manipulate circumstances as easily, either for good or ill, as they did in the past. A political operator of genius, like Lyndon Johnson, would sink into depressed impotence under such restraints—as at last Johnson did.