Wednesday, February 17, 2010
A Project Launched
I have started by reading a biography of George Washington. Maybe not a unique starting position, but an obvious one. The biography I chose was "Washington: The Indispensable Man" by James Thomas Flexner. I'm only four chapters into it, but I have already learned so much about the man who became the "Father of our Country." I learned that he started out as a horrible commander. Washington had an innate understanding of critical nodes and junctures and that the current battle practices were inadequate and antiquated for battles raging in the New World. He resented the notion of the time that only those of blue-blooded origins, of which he had none, should serve in posts of command. In his regiment, promotion was awarded on merit! This is a practice that is sustained in our fighting forces today.
Although he understood he lacked the knowledge or experience to serve in the appointed posts, he failed to understand when he should keep his mouth shut and trust in those more experienced and knowledgeable in matters of strategy and war. One such event was the push to disengage the French from Fort Duquesne. Brigadier General John Forbes' strategy was to wait; to cut the French off from their supplies and their friends (the Indians). Washington riled against this strategy in the impetuousness of youth, thinking it too slow. However, he was amazed when, the regiment finally reached the fort, they pushed the French out without so much as a single shot fired.
Monday, October 13, 2008
How's THIS for irony?
American Paul Krugman Wins the Nobel Prize for Economics
Monday, October 13, 2008
STOCKHOLM, Sweden — American Paul Krugman won the Nobel economics prize on Monday for his analysis of trade patterns and location of economic activity.
Krugman, born in 1953, and a professor at Princeton University in New Jersey and a columnist for The New York Times, formulated a new theory to answer questions about free trade, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said.
"What are the effects of free trade and globalization? What are the driving forces behind worldwide urbanization? Paul Krugman has formulated a new theory to answer these questions," the academy said in its citation.
"He has thereby integrated the previously disparate research fields of international trade and economic geography," it said.
Krugman was the lone winner of the $1.4 million award, the latest in a string of American researchers to be honored.
The award, known as the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, is the last of the six Nobel prizes announced this year and is not one of the original Nobels. It was created in 1968 by the Swedish central bank in Nobel's memory.