A good title!
235 years ago today my 5 times Great-grandfather and his sons stood in the militia line of Natty Green's Southern Army to fire at the king's army. I walked the ground for myself in April 2013. You can take a walk via this C-SPAN video. There was an anniversary reenactment last Saturday and historical events. Cool. The United Sates Army Center for History has a good account of the battle.
The battle is key, because the cost of the fight leads Lord Cornwallis to move North. Eventually placing his army on a peninsula at a place named Yorktown.
"I never saw such fighting since God made me. The Americans fought like demons"
-- Lt. General Charles, Earl Cornwallis.
After the war some of the sons received the land bounty for service from the State of North Carolina and moved Westward and settled a place called Tennessee.
Consolidate and Reorganize
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Long, Obstinate, and Bloody.
Location:
Hillsboro, OR, USA
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
'Hey, the flag's up on the mountain.'
71 years ago today Joe Rosenthal snapped that famous photo and didn't know for sure what he had. 5th Division movie cameraman Sgt. Bill Genaust captured it on film. This was the second flag raising, the first was a smaller flag replaced by this larger one later in the day.
Location:
Hillsboro, OR, USA
Friday, February 19, 2016
71 years ago today. . .
The Marines landed on Iwo Jima 19FEB45.
World War Two is called "The Last Just War." It has been famously said to have been fought by "The Greatest Generation." If these are both true, then we must intentionally look back and reflect on the men who fought, bled and died for the freedom of the world. Our entire world is a product of that victory.
It is important as a nation, as a society that we remember those moments in our history. The what we did, where it happened, why we did it and how we did it. Iwo Jima is iconic in our memories of the Pacific War. It is not a battle of maneuver and finesse, it is a battle of attrition. A slugfest against a prepared enemy determined to kill as many Americans as possible to influence America public opinion. Later enemies used similar methods to victory against us. The flag raising on Suribachi captured on film by Joe Rosenthal, published so widely and used as a rallying point for a War not yet over and a cost not yet paid in blood and treasure.
World War Two is called "The Last Just War." It has been famously said to have been fought by "The Greatest Generation." If these are both true, then we must intentionally look back and reflect on the men who fought, bled and died for the freedom of the world. Our entire world is a product of that victory.
Any Questions? |
It is important as a nation, as a society that we remember those moments in our history. The what we did, where it happened, why we did it and how we did it. Iwo Jima is iconic in our memories of the Pacific War. It is not a battle of maneuver and finesse, it is a battle of attrition. A slugfest against a prepared enemy determined to kill as many Americans as possible to influence America public opinion. Later enemies used similar methods to victory against us. The flag raising on Suribachi captured on film by Joe Rosenthal, published so widely and used as a rallying point for a War not yet over and a cost not yet paid in blood and treasure.
Location:
Hillsboro, OR, USA
Monday, February 15, 2016
Happy Birthday Mr. President.
It's Presidents Day, or should we say President's Day? It depends on where you are. The federal holiday was originally established to commemorate the birthday of George Washington, but like all these days it has been diluted from its origin and migrated to fit a different need. George Washington was born February 22nd.
It is George Washington who established the precedent that he be referred to as "Mr. President", foregoing anything that smacked of royalty. He was the original action hero. The Journal of the American Revolution has a wonderful post about the General up this morning The Carefree and Kindhearted General Washington.
Happy birthday to George Washington, soldier, statesman, leader and father of our country.
Poster circa 1890. |
Happy birthday to George Washington, soldier, statesman, leader and father of our country.
Labels:
History,
Leadership,
Society
Location:
Hillsboro, OR, USA
Monday, December 7, 2015
Monday Monday
Monday Monday. The National Weather Service has forecast a "Hyrdologic" Event for today. Meaning it is a rainy Monday morning here in the Tualatin River Valley.
We should start with history. . .December 7th, 1941, a day which will live in infamy. . .Nothing on Oregonlive.com front page. Timbers-Timbers-Timbers! It is some sports team. Remember Pearl Harbor was the cry. Almost gone are the generation that fought that war to keep the world free from socialist totalitarians and their minions. America is a different country from the one they came home to, worked hard and built up. Different. Some would say unrecognizable to that generation. Better, worse? I will simply say different.
I have heard last week the DoD opened all MOS to women. Terminal Lance has a greeting for you, welcome to the suck ladies.
We should start with history. . .December 7th, 1941, a day which will live in infamy. . .Nothing on Oregonlive.com front page. Timbers-Timbers-Timbers! It is some sports team. Remember Pearl Harbor was the cry. Almost gone are the generation that fought that war to keep the world free from socialist totalitarians and their minions. America is a different country from the one they came home to, worked hard and built up. Different. Some would say unrecognizable to that generation. Better, worse? I will simply say different.
I have heard last week the DoD opened all MOS to women. Terminal Lance has a greeting for you, welcome to the suck ladies.
Labels:
History,
Leadership,
Military,
Society,
Veterans
Location:
Hillsboro, OR, USA
Friday, December 4, 2015
See Something, Say Something. . .
"What can I do" is the question people might ask. I say might, because many go through life in a state of normalcy bias, without seeing much of what is seen or unseen. But the question remains. See Something, Say Something simply did not apply in this San Bernardino action. Why? Societal castration? Perhaps, more likely cognitive dissonance resulting from normalcy bias.
From our friends at WikiPedia:
"People with a normalcy bias have difficulties reacting to something they have not experienced before. People also tend to interpret warnings in the most optimistic way possible, seizing on any ambiguities to infer a less serious situation."
Leon Festinger's theory of cognitive dissonance focuses on how humans strive for internal consistency. An individual who experiences inconsistency (dissonance) tends to become psychologically uncomfortable, and is motivated to try to reduce this dissonance—as well as actively avoid situations and information likely to increase it
See Something, and then subconsciously say no I didn't see that. In that state there is nothing that person can do. Is there?
From our friends at WikiPedia:
"People with a normalcy bias have difficulties reacting to something they have not experienced before. People also tend to interpret warnings in the most optimistic way possible, seizing on any ambiguities to infer a less serious situation."
Leon Festinger's theory of cognitive dissonance focuses on how humans strive for internal consistency. An individual who experiences inconsistency (dissonance) tends to become psychologically uncomfortable, and is motivated to try to reduce this dissonance—as well as actively avoid situations and information likely to increase it
See Something, and then subconsciously say no I didn't see that. In that state there is nothing that person can do. Is there?
Labels:
History,
Human Nature,
Society
Location:
Hillsboro, OR, USA
Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Jihad is agile
Yes it is, and that is why it is succeeding. A lovely thought isn't it? John Robb wrote about it earlier in the year with a post titled "The Open Jihad" over at Global Guerrillas. I know, I know, it is a linking, but this is important information o learn, know and act upon.
Does any of this sound familiar?.
Does any of this sound familiar?.
- tinkering with tactics, strategies, and technologies that can be used to advance the team;s goal.
- testing the efficacy of these innovations by using them in production.
- copying the innovations that work.
Read John Robb's post, then compare the methods described to your development process.
Labels:
Agile,
Human Nature,
Politics,
Society
Location:
Hillsboro, OR, USA
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