Sunday, July 27, 2008

Bound Together, True Citizens of the World

McCain Family Photo
Cindy McCain in Vietnam 2008
USS Mercy Hospital Ship
Bound Together

A lot has recently been made of Senator Obama's reference to being a citizen of the world. My fellow blogger, CDR Salamander had a recent post. His post reveals a side of a candidate that regardless of political stripe, should make every American proud. I will post it in full.

The audacity of ignorance

Now the world will watch and remember what we do here – what we do with this moment. Will we extend our hand to the people in the forgotten corners of this world who yearn for lives marked by dignity and opportunity; by security and justice? Will we lift the child in Bangladesh from poverty, shelter the refugee in Chad, and banish the scourge of AIDS in our time?
Barack Obama
Campaign Speech in Berlin, GermanyJuly 24, 2008

Action:
(I)n 1991 Cindy McCain was visiting Mother Teresa's orphanage in Bangladesh when a dying infant was thrust into her hands. The orphanage could not provide the medical care needed to save her life, so Mrs. McCain brought the child home to America with her. She was met at the airport by her husband, who asked what all this was about.

Mrs. McCain replied that the child desperately needed surgery and years of rehabilitation. "I hope she can stay with us," she told her husband. Mr. McCain agreed.Today that child is their teenage daughter Bridget....

T)here was a second infant Mrs. McCain brought back. She ended up being adopted by a young McCain aide and his wife.

"We were called at midnight by Cindy," Wes Gullett remembers, and "five days later we met our new daughter Nicki at the L.A. airport wearing the only clothing Cindy could find on the trip back, a 7-Up T-shirt she bought in the Bangkok airport." Today, Nicki is a high school sophomore. Mr. Gullett told me, "I never saw a hospital bill" for her care.

Taking up on Cmdr Salamanders post, Mrs McCain has been recently subjected to dicing from some in the self appointed elitist media.

Joy Behar Hosts Larry King Live and Her Co-Hosts Call In (video), where she made comments how Mrs McCain was such a boooooring guest, when she was on The View, and Michelle Obama was soooooo...intelligent and interesting..and would make such a great First Lady..

Too bad she missed this about Cindy McCain,Cindy's trip to Vietnam. Mrs McCain was in Vietnam during a visit by the USNS Mercy-Hospital Ship , which during a port call in Na Trang.

Total Patients Seen: 11,576

Surgeries Performed Aboard: 234

Engineering projects were held at 5 different locations (3 local clinics; 1 rehab/education center; and 1 orphanage).Our Bio-Med technicians were able to repair and bring back into operation over $300,000 worth of medical equipment at various clinics.

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The crew of the USS Mercy are examples of Americans who are reaching out to their fellow humans and lending a hand to make a difference. They do it without fanfare and when their mission complete, return to home and their own families.

Thousands of other American citizens emulate the compassion that the McCain's privately demonstrate. Most are content to reach out to their fellow humans across the globe and share their love, compassion and support. The author of the blog that leads my list of Favorites is such a person, Thomas Barnett who in 2004 adopted a daughter from China. He chronicled the experience in a series of blog posts that endeared him to his readers. I will indulge you with a couple of them to better understand the type of person whom is willing to reach out to do what they can to make the world a better place.



Some may rail that we must take care of ourselves first, the heck with the rest of the world. That is a normal reaction within every family and tribe. But, everyone in this country is geometrically better off than those living in failed states and abject poverty, and we all have the opportunity to make ourselves better off with hard work and study. We are the host nation to millions who have come here for that chance. Our immigration problem is not because we are the worlds largest welfare state. It is because of the opportunity to succeed, and for one's children to live a better life. I applaud anyone who reaches out to help here, or abroad and shares themselves and their resources by their own free choice.

One of the other links on this blog is to a book, Bound Together: by Nayan Chanda. It is most helpful to understand how the human species came to the place we are today, with billions better off than just a few decades ago.

It traces the initial globalization of the human species, when in the late Ice Age, a tiny group of our ancestors walked out of Africa in search of better food and security. In fifty thousand years of wandering along ocean coasts and chasing game across Central Asia, they finally settled on all the continents. Along the way, they changed their pigmentation and facial features, and developed different languages and cultures as well. The period of divergence came to a close with the end of the Ice Age. Traders, preachers, soldiers, and adventurers from the emerging urban civilizations of the Levant, India, and China began connecting with one another, launching the process of globalization.

If anyone wants to better understand this fact. I direct you to the National Geographic Genographic project. Where one can trace their genes back through time and understand that we are all truly bound together. As humans continue to come together at intersections, the decision is either collide, or learn to cooperate and work together. Sounds simple but we have been doing just that, in a constant yin and yang, of war and trade. Understanding of who we are and that stripping off the bark will reveal the same person underneath, is essential to continuing our existence.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Reflections on Leadership

Major General Fox Conner
General George Marshall

General Dwight D Eisenhower

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates

This post comes from Small Wars Journal and their posting of the Summer 2008 issue of the US Army War College’s Parameters.

One article is based on remarks delivered 21 April 2008 at the US Military Academy by Dr. Robert Gates Secretary of Defense. His words resound with an understanding of history and military strategy that have been lacking in the leadership in Washington for decades.


Last year I read Partners in Command, a book by Mark Perry. It is an account of the unique relationship between General Dwight D. Eisenhower and General George Marshall, and how they played a significant role in the American victory in World War II and laid the foundations for future success in the earliest years of the Cold War. Eisenhower and Marshall are, of course, icons, legends etched in granite. Their portraits hang in my office.
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One of the things I found compelling in Partners in Command is how they were both influenced by another senior Army officer who is not nearly as well-known and in fact, as a reader of history, I had never heard of. His name is General Fox Conner, a tutor and mentor to both Eisenhower and Marshall. Conner and Marshall first became friends when they served together on the staff of General “Black Jack” Pershing during World War I. In the 1920s, Eisenhower served as staff assistant under Brigadier General Conner in the Panama Canal Zone.

Three Axioms

From Conner, Marshall and Eisenhower learned much about leadership and the conduct of war. Conner had three principles of war for a democracy that he imparted to Eisenhower and Marshall. They were:

1. Never fight unless you have to.

2. Never fight alone.

3. And never fight for long.

All things being equal, these principles are pretty straightforward and strategically sound. We have heard variants of them in the decades since, captured perhaps most recently in the Powell Doctrine. Of course, all things are not equal, particularly considering the range and complexity of the threats facing America today, from the wars we are currently in to the conflicts we are most
likely to fight. So I would like to suggest how we should think about applying Fox Conner’s three axioms to the security challenges of the twenty-first century.

Gates looks to General George Marshall as an example of the qualities of leadership for military officers.

General Marshall has been recognized as a textbook model for the way military officers should handle disagreements with superiors and in particular with the civilians vested with control of the armed forces under our Constitution. In these situations, an officer’s duties are:

1. To provide blunt and candid advice always.

2. To keep disagreements private.

3. And to implement faithfully decisions that go against you.

Whoever becomes President in November would be an idiot, if he let Robert Gates go out with the present administration.

For more on General Fox Conner.


Sunday, July 20, 2008

"Give me a second. I gotta go kill these guys first."





A major hat tip to CDR Salamander. for this post.
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Even as the previous post reports, war is less intense than anytime in the past half century. But there are still places where it is necessary to confront men who want to do evil in an attempt to return to a world filled with short brutal violence.
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It was a small battle, but epic in it's intensity. A reinforced platoon of American paratroopers and Afghan soldiers manning an forward operating base in Afghanistan's Kunar province. This story is about the men of an outpost of nine men who bore the brunt of the attack by over 200 heavily armed Taliban.

"Give me a second. I gotta go kill these guys first." Last words heard from Cpl. Matthew Phillips of 2nd Platoon, Company C, 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team as he fought Taliban combatants in eastern Afghanistan’s Kunar province.

The first RPG and machine gun fire came at dawn, strategically striking the forward operating base’s mortar pit. The insurgents next sighted their RPGs on the tow truck inside the combat outpost, taking it out. That was around 4:30 a.m.
This was not a haphazard attack. The reportedly 200 insurgents fought from several positions. They aimed to overrun the new base. The U.S. soldiers knew it and fought like hell. They knew their lives were on the line.

This account of the small battle, last week that claimed the lives of 9 American Soldiers is riveting and should make all Americans proud beyond words. We can continue to squabble about Iraq, but Afghanistan is the place that the evil visited upon the United States sprang forth on September 11, 2001. We have a mission to complete and this is the source that everyone, Obama, McCain, the Europeans, even the Iranians agree, is a threat to all who desire connectivity and peace. I would wish that everyone who reads this post takes the time to read this account of bravery. The courage displayed by these soldiers moved me to tears as I remembered others who in a war of my youth were faced with such odds and stood their ground and gave their lives for their fellow soldiers.

Spc. Tyler Stafford paid them this tribute.

"It was some of the bravest stuff I’ve ever seen in my life, and I will never see it again because those guys," Stafford said, then paused. "Normal humans wouldn’t do that. You’re not supposed to do that — getting up and firing back when everything around you is popping and whizzing and trees, branches coming down and sandbags exploding and RPGs coming in over your head … It was a fistfight then, and those guys held ’ em off."

The war in Afghanistan has claimed lives of soldiers from 22 countries. It will claim many more before the job is complete. http://icasualties.org/oef/

The honor roll of these brave souls.
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Brostrom, Jonathan P.
1st Lieutenant
24
U.S. Army
2nd BN, 503d Infantry Reg (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team
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Garcia, Israel
Sergeant
24
U.S. Army
2nd BN, 503d Infantry Reg (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team
Long Beach
California
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Rainey, Pruitt A.
Corporal
22
U.S. Army
2nd BN, 503d Infantry Reg (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team
Haw River
North Carolina
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Bogar, Jason M.
Corporal
25
U.S. Army
2nd BN, 503d Infantry Reg (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team
Seattle
Washington
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Phillips, Matthew B.
Corporal
27
U.S. Army
2nd BN, 503d Infantry Reg (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team
Wanat (Kunar province Kunar)
Jasper
Georgia
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Ayers, Jonathan R.
Corporal
24
U.S. Army
2nd BN, 503d Infantry Reg (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team
Snellville
Georgia
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Hovater, Jason D.
Corporal
24
U.S. Army
2nd BN, 503d Infantry Reg (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team
Clinton
Tennessee
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Abad, Sergio S.
Private 1st Class
21
U.S. Army
2nd BN, 503d Infantry Reg (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team
Morganfield
Kentucky
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Zwilling, Gunnar W.
Corporal
20
U.S. Army
2nd BN, 503d Infantry Reg (Airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team







Globalization=Less War?

Concentration of Wealth Year-1-2015
Roman Battles

Drawn and Quartered


Nazi Holocaust


D-Day


USS Mercy on Mission of Hope

School children in Africa

Thomas Barnett's column this week, Globalizations means fewer wars, less death refers to a study by The "Human Security Brief 2007," compiled by Canada's Simon Fraser University. Barnett sees a direct link between this decline and global interdependence that comes with a growing worldwide middle class and the connectivity of trade and culture. Read it at, Scripps Howard.

This theme is something that Tom Barnett has written about for some time,Violence is decreasing per capita and is reinforced by the observations by Harvard psychologist, Steven Pinker. His TED presentation History of Violence TED Video examines the changes in human behavior that are supported by emperical historical evidence. Pinker begins by looking at history.

In sixteenth-century Paris, a popular form of entertainment was cat-burning, in which a cat was hoisted in a sling on a stage and slowly lowered into a fire. According to historian Norman Davies, "The spectators, including kings and queens, shrieked with laughter as the animals, howling with pain, were singed, roasted, and finally carbonized." Today, such sadism would be unthinkable in most of the world. This change in sensibilities is just one example of perhaps the most important and most underappreciated trend in the human saga: Violence has been in decline over long stretches of history, and today we are probably living in the most peaceful moment of our species' time on earth.

A bi-product of globalization is the instant media that brings conflict into everyone's private world, almost as soon as it happens. This reality serves two purposes, first it makes conflict personal, so that the perpetrators are exposed, and in the case of a nation-state, held to a much higher standard, much like we hold our local police. And non-state purps, are able to feign innocence and manipulate the media to gain sympathy for their cause. The global community reacts to authority figures the same everywhere, and is drawn to error on the side of the underdog, until the underdog is exposed for their treachery.

The second purpose is to make us all feel the need to control violence and become involved in solving the problems that confront the world. The positive effect of this is world wide pressure brought against China after Tibet, and the United States for the debacle in the aftermath of Gulf War II. Unfortunatly, it also has its counterproductive side as exampled by recent events off the coast of Africa like the piracy issues off the Horn of Africa detailed by Information Dissemination, and noted in these comments.
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With all of the piracy that targets ships from the Middle East to Europe, one would think this would be something the European Navies would take upon themselves and do, at a minimum to use it as an opportunity to develop better intelligence on pirate activity. Not so, did you look at our latest Order of Battle?

Each cycle of history has drawn us all closer together as a global community. Intermittent cycles of war have led to a stronger global network of connectivity and interdependence. Much is speculated about the decline of the West and the rise of the East. Will China's Economy Overtake That of The U.S. By 2035? But, Tom Barnett admonishes us to look beyond the present and understand:
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Two essential take-aways: 1) we do not live in a more dangerous world and globalization's stunning spread both reflects and feeds that happy reality; and 2) the wars we'll need to manage to protect globalization's advance are getting smaller with time.
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So be unafraid -- be very unafraid!
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There is little evidence to fall back on when determining whether this latest surge in coming together as a global community will last. Historian Niall Ferguson takes a pessimistic view by looking back at the twentieth century and seeing that the last great surge in globalization led to the War Of The World and the bloodiest half century in recorded history. His book an excellent read, stimulates thought on the origins of this bloody past century and poses the question that it could happen again.

We can also look back to two other times when like it or not, epochs of continuity led to introducing frameworks that improved the living conditions for an ever larger portion of humanity.

The British Empire came and went, leaving the legacy of western democracy in former colonies.

The Roman Empire for all it's excesses, left a legacy of a framework that was followed two millenniums later in the crafting of representative governments.

Two less that stellar examples, but examples none the less of keeping the best ideas, while discarding the chaff. This medium is not designed to introduce vast arguments on the merits of global hegemony. It serves as a tableau to encourage critical thinking and self research in the greatest library since the Library of Alexandria, the Internet.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Europe 2008, Paris Continued.


















In the last post about my recent trip to Europe we were in Paris a city filled with so many sights as to take more than one post to adequately describe my impressions. Travel around Paris as noted in every travel guide is by the efficient Metro, combination subway and intercity rail service and the city spanning RER light rail service. One morning, we traveled the Paris Métro, and the RER to Versaillies-Rive Gauche the town surrounding the Versailles Palace built by King Louis XIV. The carriages were crowed with people heading off to work. For the French, the average office hours begin from 8:30 to 9:30 AM, in contrast to workers in the US who start at least an hour earlier. The RER train rapidly emptied with each stop so that by the time we reached our destination, only tourists remained.

A short walk through a town, laid out much like Washington D.C., whose design was taken from Versailles, led to a broad grass boulevard that inclined toward the palace gates. The palace lies on a gentle hill and the grounds facing the town is devoid of gardens and presents a picture of regal efficiency.
A special note, one of the best bargains while in Paris is investing in a Paris Museum Pass Official website. It is only 30 Euros for a two day pass for access to 60 museums and attractions. A quick flash of the pass and we whisked by the long quay of tourist waiting for entrance.

The Chateau itself is laid out in a large U shape with projecting wings off to each side. The royal apartments, are opulent as expected for someone who believed in the concept of Absolute monarchy in France. As one tramps through the corridors and bedrooms of those who when alive, believed that they were the most important and powerful souls on the earth. Any whim and desire, was fulfilled, every lust and craving sustained. The end of their regime took place on October 6 1789 when a mob broke in, and by morning had seized Louis XVI and his queen Marie Antoinette of Austria. No evidence of this final calamity remains. The palace and the grounds are kept as a reminder of when France for a short time, was the most powerful nation in the Western World.
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Walking around the grounds gives a person the scope of its immensity, 250 acres of gardens, pools, fountains, groves of exotic plants and two smaller palaces. In an ironic way it was the largest public works project in Europe at the time, employing 30,000 workers in construction and housing 20,000, just to maintain the seat of government. One can not help thinking about the mindset of anyone who lived and worked in this environment. From King to nave, they were better off that most of their countrymen and believed themselves to be superior to almost everyone else in the world. That narcissistic view eventually led to their downfall and the spasm of hatred for privilege, the ended in the Guillotines basket for many.
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Traveling back to Paris we continued our visit to take in sights that are best seen at night. The Arc de Triomphe built as a tribute to Napoleon's army after the victory of the Battle of Austerlitz. The arc is at the center of twelve avenues that radiate out in perfect symmetry. The view from the roof, after climbing 284 steps up a narrow circular staircase, is spectacular as one looks down the tree lined avenues and soaks in all that is Paris. Later as the sun set, the arc took on a golden hue that drew thousands to it's base. A monument build to honor a battle that was an attempt to make all Europe part of France has turned into a thing of silent beauty that remains a national tombstone, to honor the loyalty of those whom served two centuries ago.
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Our visit to Paris left me with a feeling of awe for the achievements in architecture and the collections of individual expression that are housed in scores of museums. As I commented in the previous post, Paris is challenged with trying to assimilate thousands of new residents who for reasons of culture, resist change. The challenge for France is one that affects many countries in Europe and even North America. Amid the columns of the past, are streets, where the night belongs to those who stand in the shadows. Looking at the way France found a way to preserve it's heritage, I hope they find the fortitude to retain the magic that has drawn millions to her wide boulevards and culinary delights.
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Next stop, Munich, Germany

Friday, July 18, 2008

My Blogfather Sean Sends This Dispatch on The F-22

F-22
Eurofighter


One of the most instrumental people in encouraging me to blog, was Sean Meade, blog editor of Thomas Barnett's web site, and Interact, his own site. Sean also has a gig with Aviation Week, where he reports this week from the Farnborough airshow in Great Britian. Check the new F-22 out along with the new Eurofighter. I am privileged to share this dispatch from Farnborough.




Eurofighter flight video.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Political Satire Alive and Well in 2008






Enjoy the link, with a major hat tip to Mark at Zenpundit for posting this link from a fellow bloggers tip...

Political satire is alive and well on the Web, as the MSM tiptoes around offending some, in this day of political correctness....Enough said.


Enjoy seeing everyone get a jab....

JibJab on Election 2008



Another Reason For the U.S. Navy to Build Corvettes





Several naval related blogs have been writing and analysing the need for the United States Navy to develop better platforms to preform their primary mission, protect the homeland. A story filed by Reuters News Service reports that Mexico captures submarine loaded with drugs this week. This is not the first time a submarine has been captured. It is a problem that has been occurring the past seven years, during the time when we were fully committed to the World Wide War on Terror. Naval forces from several Central American countries and the U.S. Coast Guard have been intercepting small submarines loaded with cocaine since the 2000. The smuggles have gotten more sophisticated and now have tried to mask engine sounds by playing recording of whales and dolphins to try and throw off the pursuers. The links below along with a youtube link showing the capture of a drug sub is just the tip of the iceberg of what has been happening while our focus has been on building for a great state war, by spending billions on questionable platforms. DDG-1000 Hits an Iceberg, Taking on Water.

Another cocaine-laden submarine sinks off Colombia International ...




To follow up on this line of thought is a link to a series of posts on by the informative naval blog Information Dissemination. The subject of naval strategy is even more important to the long term security of both the United States and the World and it deserves special attention and awareness.

I have for some time had a special affinity for the sea. Perhaps it came from my dad who conceived me shortly after serving almost four years in the Pacific during World War II. And further nurtured by a long voyage to Vietnam on the USS General John Pope. Threats like those poised by cocaine smugglers are only the tip of an iceberg that someday could include oil revenue fueled 4th generation counter-globalization factions. Piracy is already at epidemic levels often ignored or confronted only in prose, as many of the most stalwart nations of the twentieth century decide it is better to flee than fight. Two more posts by Information Dissemination explain how much the strategy on piracy is in dissaray.
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Another interesting example of political confusion fighting piracy is Germany, who announced this week they will not be sending a ship to replace FGS Emden (F210) when it leaves the region. Germany's laws prevent their Navy from taking any action against pirates, and believe it or not, the reason is because the German government cannot even find consensus on the issue of maritime piracy!
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And a story to make Lord Nelson spin in his coffin, or fall from his perch in Trafalgar Square.

The worm is turning, the Navy seems to be getting it right as it pulls back on billion dollar plus battle platforms and away from the industrial/military/congressional triad to try and build the navy we need, not the navy we had for the last great un-fought war. To those who think that we can not build a fleet of ships to meet these challenges. our World War experience of building a vast fleet of capital ships, supported by over three hundred destroyer escorts , who cleared and secured the sea lanes. The latest on this, is a post Littoral Dominance Requires a Broader System of Systems Battle Force Approach by Galrahn.



Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Tom Friedman Takes On The World


Author and columnist Thomas Friedman wrote this article Some Countries Are So Popular and So Spineless - in the New York Times today, July 16, 2008 . Friedman takes umbrage at the behavior of many countries that have rose colored glasses when it comes to repression in their own back yard. Friedman writes about America's role, and what the world would be like without it's leadership.

Friedman, is full of moral outrage and rightly so. But, much of his previous writing have fueled the fires of foreign opinion and contributed to the knee jerk reactions against American power that he now says the world would miss had we not exercised that power. Tom Friedman, is an important voice that has gotten much coverage due to his successful books, his voice on this matter may resonate with those who have thrown verbal and moral stones at America, and give them pause to consider what he warns a world without a strong America would be like.

Friedman begins by commenting on the recent popularity of America.

Much ink has been spilled lately decrying the decline in American popularity around the world under President Bush. Polls tell us how China is now more popular in Asia than America and how few Europeans say they identify with the United States. I am sure there is truth to these polls. We should have done better in Iraq. An America that presides over Abu Ghraib, torture and Guantánamo Bay deserves a thumbs-down.


But America is not and never has been just about those things, which is why I also find some of these poll results self-indulgent, knee-jerk and borderline silly. Friday’s vote at the U.N. on Zimbabwe reminded me why.

Friedmans final thoughts on the matter.

So, yes, we’re not so popular in Europe and Asia anymore. I guess they would prefer a world in which America was weaker, where leaders with the values of Vladimir Putin and Thabo Mbeki had a greater say, and where the desperate voices for change in Zimbabwe would, well, just shut up.



Recommended Reads of the Week

The blog posts below caught my eye and deserve special attention for their detailed analysis of the subjects they address.

The read of the week, goes to Mark Safranskiof Zenpundit who penned his first op-ed piece for Pajamas Media . Special congratulations to Mark for this new venue.

Congress Debates Muzzling Congressmen Online

And with a detailed and well crafted post Fabius Maximus, takes a look at oil supply, from another perspective.

Good news about oil, but for our grandkids - not us


The Steve DeAngelis, Enterra Solutions, serves up an optimistic post about making a difference.

Little Sacrifices that Big Differences


Next there has been significant developments in the United States Navy and their ship building program. These changes may bode well for the U.S. in the long run as we begin to build a navy to match the challenges we actually face in the coming decades. This is important because we are finally looking to build a fleet that can combat piracy and drug smuggling the recently has graduated to using submarines to transport drugs into the U.S. One might not think this is a big deal, but after drugs, can come a lot of other dirty stuff. We beat the German U-boats with a flotilla of small carriers and destroyer escorts, not capital ships.

DDG-1000 Hits an Iceberg, Taking on Water

Trends in Navy Shipbuilding

And finally to put a scary bedtime story at the end of this night of reads is This week's column By Thomas Barnett


Sunday, July 13, 2008

A Noble Roman Lights a Candle to Guide America's Path




After a recent post, Will China's Economy Overtake That of The U.S. By 2035? I received a comment from fellow blogger Fabius Maximus. This led to an exchange that called attention to my latest post A Look Back At Doom and Gloom.

Fabius responded and noted that our themes about America tend to overlap. Those posts really appealed to my historian roots. And with his permission, I am linking them, and encouraging my readers to introduce themselves to Fab's thoughtful insights.


Here is a little tease of what Fab has to say.

Innovation of new forms of society and technology. It is the key to our progress. It has allowed us to evolve from naked hunter-gatherers to the dominant species on this planet. This process is slow, normally taking hundreds or even thousands of years. But occasionally evolution leaps forward. **
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Many people look to the future with fear. We see this fear throughout the web. Right-wing sites describe the imminent end of America: overrun by foreigners, victim of cultural and financial collapse. Left-wing sites describe “die-off” scenarios due to Peak Oil, climate change, and ecological collapse - as the American dream dies from takeover by theocrats and fascists.
Most of this is nonsense, but not the prospect of massive changes in our world. But need we fear the future?
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The past should give us confidence when we look ahead. Consider Dodge City in 1877. Bat Masterson is sheriff, maintaining some semblance of law in the Wild West. Life in Dodge is materially only slightly better from that in an English village of a century before. But social and technological evolution has accelerated to a dizzying pace, and Bat cannot imagine what lies ahead.


As we start a New Year I find it useful to review my core beliefs. It is easy to lose sight of those amidst the clatter of daily events. Here is my list:
1. We are a people with a great past.
2. The challenges ahead are no greater than those behind us.
3. The American people can surmount these challenges if we work together.
4. We will be what we wish to be, if we but make the necessary effort.

I have made Fab a welcome addition to my blogroll, under History and Culture.


Saturday, July 12, 2008

A Look Back At Doom and Gloom

















A little history about where we've been and where we're going.

Studies of the settlement ecology of pre-industrial Europe have revealed some interesting data about grain and firewood, two essentials of daily life in settlements and urban centers. It has been suggested that a settlement of 10,000 people would need about 30 to 50 tons of firewood each day for cooking and heating needs. The same settlement would require about 10 tons of grain, based on one kilo of grain per person, per day. It does not take much imagination to visualize the amount of smoke, dung in the streets and how the combined odors from the aforementioned, would assault the senses of every citizen. In 1300, London was estimated to consume over 386 tons of wood each day. In Milan, 150,000 cartloads of wood each year were needed to fuel their 2276 bake houses and shops. Basis sanitation was non-existent, streets served as garbage dumps and sewers and death by disease stalked every living soul.


Time travel ahead to the 19th century.

To San Francisco or any major city in the industrial age. The primary method of moving goods within the city remained draft animals with their attendant fertile street deposits and flatulence. Wood stoves and coal fired furnaces fueled the energy needs. The assault on the senses and health, was the same as the earlier examples of 14th Century London and Milan. Sanitation was better, but still rudimentary compared to today's systems. Disease was slowly pushed back with new vaccines to cure small pox and rabies and knowledge about bacteria.

Fast forward to 1950's and 60's

I can recall my own experience in growing up with the fear of imminent nuclear holocaust imprinted on your mind every time we were instructed to "duck and cover" in a civil defense drill. Smog alerts were almost a daily summer occurrence in 1950's Los Angeles. Diseases like polio were such a threat that public swimming pools were closed at times. Within a few years, a vaccine was found for polio, improved fuels and engines and bans on burning trash improved air quality by vast measures. Nuclear holocaust was mostly diffused by the realization by all major holders of these weapons that the end result would leave everyone a loser. My point is that for every challenge to humanity we have found a way to overcome and move civilization forward, so that more and more humans can live their lives with a purpose more that mere survival.

The quotes I posted below, are from two men who share the common experience of growing up in the past decades where we were reminded daily of impending "End of the World." predictions. Their prospectives introduce a series of links that discuss the current hot issue of energy, global warming, and what course should be followed. I offer them as a way of stimulating thought and thinking about the issues.

Global whatever

Now we are lectured that climate change is threatening civilization and we must do this and that. Twenty years ago I remember it was the Aids epidemic that was just about to break out among the heterosexual population in the fashion it had devastated the San Francisco gay community. Thus we needed to quit envisioning the virus as largely specific to gays and IV-drug users, and instead mobilize to protect the entire population from a mass epidemic. A few voices in the wilderness who argued that the mechanisms of so-called normal heterosexual sex (while perhaps conducive in their unprotected modes to all sort of venereal diseases) were nevertheless often different from both the apparent frequency and nature of homosexual sex practices, and very different from the blood exchanges of shared-needles, were derided as either illiberal, homophobic, or unhinged.


The country seems to go through these ‘we are on the brink of extinction’ panics about every 20 years or so. We all remember the 1960s population bomb and how 3-billion-person India would be starved into oblivion by now, or Ronald Reagan’s desire for a nuclear winter (remember the made-for-TV movies about a Reagan-inspired nuclear holocaust), or again the take-over of Japan, Inc. as everything from Rockefellar Center to Pebble Beach was lost to the Yellow Peril. I remember my high-school science teacher lecturing about a global ice-age to come, and we humans going the way of the dinosaurs.

I don’t think our planet overheating in the near future is going to kill off billions, but I wonder whether the entire neglect of energy questions for last 20 years, especially the need to develop shale, tar sands, more clean coal, nuclear, and drilling oil to transition us to cleaner fuels, has nearly bankrupted American civilization. Our dependencies have siphoned off trillions from our productive economy in de facto cash grants to very unproductive exporters, who see as their birthright $140 a barrel oil that cost them $4-5 to pump—after someone else provided them the know-how and expertise to find, pump, and ship it.
We seem to panic about imaginary beasts, when real monsters quietly devour us.


Victor Davis Hanson, 2008


Thomas Barnett offers this tart commentary.


Watched "Forbidden Planet" (50th anniversary edition) tonight and then spooled through a host of trailers for films of that era (early fifties) and they were all about the end of the world by various tragedies, typically unleashed by (gasp!) NUUUUUUUUUCLEAR POWER!
Biblical prophecies fulfilled! Man's worst nightmares unleashed! The seeds of our own destruction ... what were we thinking?
Just goes to remind you that when we enter an era of new rule sets, like that ushered in--in many people's minds--by 9/11, we endure a long silly season of such prognostications.
To point out that fact is to be--of course--horrifically naive or, worse, tragically afflicted by man's hubris! And if you cite the fallacies of the fifties, then your opponents will retreat to other ages and you're quickly into hypotheticals of the most amazing, Fox-TV sort. But people have such a strong internal need for the "end times." You can't reason them out of it, and the secular versions are just as strong, always invoking man's arrogance instead of his usual venal sins.
I can't remember how many documentary films I sat through at Immaculate Conception that said way back when that we'd all succumb by now to disease, or bugs, or pollution, or the widely predicted ice age.
Then there was the ozone hole we could never fix, except we did.
The environment is the usual lead example today, with predictions of millions upon millions of deaths being possible, and so all sorts of dramatic changes are proposed at huge costs, when, of course, for pennies a year we could save the same numbers from all sorts of early childhood diseases or make all sorts of advances in combating this or that affliction right here and now.

Barnett continues.



The Chicago Boyz, weigh in with this tongue and cheek observation.

Power Myths and the Onion


Economist Martin Wolf of Financial Times offers his thoughts.



Steve DeAngelis, Enterra Solutions , adds more food for thought.

Enterprise Resilience Management Blog: Global Warming and Resilience

Enterprise Resilience Management Blog: Energy Resilience & Path ...

Hopefully the above posts and links will help to stimulate thinking about some of the challenges that we face. The future will have new challenges, but for now these are the ones we have been handed, I am totally confident that we will meet them and the end product will be a better environment for everyone.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Will China's Economy Overtake That of The U.S. By 2035?


















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The headline asks the question that some economists have already answered. China's economy will overtake that of the U.S. by 2035. The report was produced by economist Albert Keidel of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Keidel believes that China's growth will be sustained by domestic growth more than exports in the coming decades.

"China's economic performance clearly is no flash in the pan," Keidel writes.

"Its growth this decade has averaged more than 10 percent a year and is still going strong in the first half of 2008. Because its success in recent decades has not been export-led but driven by domestic demand, its rapid growth can continue well into the 21st century, unfettered by world market limitation."

Is this a undisputed fact? China faces great challenges in maintaining the pace of growth that Keidel notes. China faces all of the challenges that developed countries in Europe and North America face, plus a host of problems born of their population, and problems in sustaining a livable lifestyle for 1.2 billion people.

Keidel continues by reporting that he believes that China's economic power will eclipse the United States totally by 2050, by having a GPD of 82 trillion dollars versus 44 trillion for the United States. He further claims that China will dominate the world in every aspect that the United States enjoyed the past half century.

He writes.

"Leadership of international institutions will gravitate toward China. This movement could include the equivalents at that time of the United Nations, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, regional international development banks, and more specialized bodies. Various headquarters could shift to Beijing and Shanghai."

Keidel admits that China's communist system of government and social unrest is the biggest hurdle to achieving this goal. That statement represents the twin elephants in the room. How China integrates a bulging population into middle class, and then peacefully opens their government to a more representative society is the great question of the age.

The clarion call is being sounded by several Americans that in order to maintain our leadership, the United States needs to re-invirgorate and rediscover the things that made our nation the role model and desired destination for almost everyone who seeks a better life.

There was an important post today on the Steve DeAngelis, Enterra Solutions blog. It title hints a return to an important facet that for the past thirty years has been fading as an American icon, our manufacturing base. The post, Reviving U.S. Manufacturing addresses the critical need for America to get over the malise of self loathing and naval gazing, and get into the business of self development.

In a recent post entitled "Development-in-a-Box™ at Home in America," I focused on an op-ed piece by Thomas Friedman. In that piece, he chided U.S. politicians for not embracing policies that fostered the "next great global industry — renewable energy and clean power." Their lack of vision and action, he lamented, meant that America was not taking advantage of an opportunity clearly ready to be exploited. In another New York Times' op-ed piece, former Democratic senator and presidential candidate Gary Hart called on his party's candidate, Barack Obama, to use the campaign to outline a new chapter for American politics ["America’s Next Chapter," 25 June 2008]. Hart argues that new political chapters are, historically, written about every three decades and that the time is ripe for a new one.

DeAngelis turns to a question asked in a Business Week article.

Can the U.S. recapture its manufacturing base? Pete Engardio, writing in BusinessWeek, asks just such a question ["Can the U.S. Bring Jobs Back from China?" 30 June 2008 print edition]. His answer is "maybe." But he warns, "American industry may not be ready to seize the opportunity" even when it presents itself. He begins his article with the story of a New England battery developer who couldn't find a U.S. company to produce her batteries.

Steve worries that.

In the post I mentioned at the beginning of this blog, I indicated that I had observed the same thing about U.S. businesses and workers. They seem to have lost their competitive edge, especially when dealing with emerging economies. I argued that America needs to reinvigorate the culture of hard work and ambition that made it great in the first place.

DeAngelis ends writing about what Engardio found in his article that needs to be done to get America back on track as a manufacturing economy.


He believes that government agencies can also play a role by providing seed capital to promising startups and by building industrial parks with low-cost facilities and services that rival those found in China. Friedman called that "nation-building at home" and I referred to it as Development-in-a-Box™ at home. Whatever you call it, America needs to build world-class facilities to support emerging economic sectors as well as reinvigorate the pioneer spirit that made American workers the most productive in the world.

Another person who has been in the forefront of leading the way to a return of America's traditional role as the most innovative country in history is John Kao. a recent The New York Times profiles John Kao looks at his message and what makes Kao tick. His book Innovation Nation: How America Is Losing Its Innovation Edge, Why It Matters, and What We Can Do to Get It is a primer on what America can do to regain it's leadership.

. The above posts are offered to stimulate the dialog and encourage Americans to dream about a future worth creating for their children and their grandchildren. For the members of the Boomer generation, our time is waning, we can use that time to become visionary and guide the next generations to renew the American Dream and understand that for much of our history we used our economic power for good and influence around the globe, while building our nation and enriching our people.

Update: hat/tip to Fabius Maximus for linking Keidel's report.
China’s Economic Rise - Fact and Fiction“,

And comments from China based blog, All Roads Lead to China, questions several assumptions made by, Anthony Kiedel Report: China’s Economic Rise - Fact or Fiction.
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Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Broken Arrow for Kaboom Readers!









CPTG







In Vietnam, the radio code, Broken Arrow, meant all Air, artillery, and available resources be brought to bear to save a unit that was at risk of being overrun. It is appropriate here to call readers attention to the link below.

Last week, I posted that LT G, founder of Kaboom War Journal was ordered to cease and delete his blog. His fiancee City Girl, took over the domain name, and has continued to relay information about LT, now CPT G and his Gravediggers.

The latest post is a reminder that war and the attendant risks are ever present. She sends out this request by, Calling All Kaboom Readers... to add their prayers and support for one of the Gravediggers, PV2 Hotwheels, aka Matthew Wheeler who was burned over 60% of his body in a fueling accident in on June 22, 2008.

For those who have never read CPT G's blog, it is archived under Kaboom Archives .