In response to this WSJ law blog post, I provided the following comment:
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Observations and ideas
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January 30, 2009 · 0 comments
In response to this WSJ law blog post, I provided the following comment:
{ 0 comments }
This is a collection of my thoughts and ideas about a variety of topics that are distinct from our corporate blog at TSC or my autism-related blog at ASDworld. I'll cover law, productivity, usability, and design as well as business topics that go beyond the focus at TSC. You'll also see a collection of my "orphaned ideas," which are ideas about products, services, and processes in the for-profit, non-profit, and public sectors.
I'm working as well on finding good ways to consolidate my comments on the other blogs here as well as capture related updates from other streams, such as Facebook and Twitter.
The underlying idea could probably not be more fuzzy. The reference to letting people join the King’s army is indicative of either silliness or subtlety. Soldiers in the middle ages simply died most of the time — wounds became fatal (infection) and those in charge cared little for peasants and criminals, using manpower as a resource to be expended rather than protected. So, to me, the authors are either implying that it’s no big deal if these people die or that the military cares so little when its own people die that it’s a good analogy. The world has shifted so dramatically in terms of the nature of military conflict that we can scarcely imagine it. 400,000 Americans died in WWII, some 50,000 in Vietnam, and still less than 5,000 in the Iraq war. We have continued using dollars to buy bullets rather than bulletstoppers. It’s offensive to draw a comparison to today’s professional officer corps and those who headed armies 700 years ago. I can’t bring myself to read the full article.