Feral Jundi

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Cool Stuff: Eagle Scout And Secretary Of Defense Gates Speaks At A Jamboree

     This is cool.  I remember going to AP Hill when I was a young Boy Scout for a Jamboree and it was quite the experience.  But we definitely did not have a guy like Secretary Gates speaking at our Jamboree.

    So with that said, here is the speech he gave at this year’s Jamboree. It is a fantastic speech and I agree with everything he said. All I have to say is that if you have boys in your family and you are looking for a way to prepare them for life and for being excellent citizens/leaders, I highly recommend the Scouting Program. –Matt

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Boy Scout Jamboree

As Delivered by Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates,

Fort A.P. Hill, Virginia,

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Good morning jamboree!  Do you all want to sit down?  Thank you Anthony, for that kind introduction.

It is an honor to be with you here today and to have the chance to share a few thoughts about scouting with you.  I know how much you enjoy sitting in the sun, so I won’t take too long.

First, as you know, at this moment, there are hundreds of thousands of men and women in our military all over the world – but especially in Iraq and Afghanistan – who are putting their lives on the line to defend you, your families and our freedom.  They have put their dreams aside to protect your dreams. Many of them are members of your families.  So, would every Scout who has a mom or a dad or a brother or a sister or an uncle or an aunt in the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps or Coast Guard please stand?  That’s what I figured.  Please tell your family member from me thank you for their sacrifice – and thank you and your families for supporting them.  You can sit down again.

As the introduction made clear, scouting has been a big part of my life and my family’s life.  Of course my family’s life – and our kid’s lives – have been a bit unusual, in no small part because I have had armed body guards for so much of my professional career.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Military News: Most U.S. Youths Unfit to Serve, Data Shows

   Thanks to Doug for passing this one on.  This is appalling, yet not too surprising.  Maybe Codepink or Al Qaeda should change their strategy, and start Operation Twinky?  Operatives could put delicious cream filled Twinkies and Ho Ho’s in everyone’s mail box, and really fatten up America.

     To fat to fight?….(shaking my head)

   On a serious note, our national security strategy has been severely lacking in preparing this country’s youth for service during a time of national crisis.  We should be directly targeting this group of 17-24 year olds, and figuring out ways of getting them off their ass.  Because it is this group that will be drafted in a time of emergency, and at the very least they should be of the fitness level required to meet that kind of emergency.

   Not to mention the life time of healthcare costs for these individuals.  It benefits all of us, and in so many ways, to promote good health and fitness within our nation’s youth.  Yet again, that would take leadership to push this through, along with innovation.

   I also think the government should do more to support youth groups that promote patriotism, fitness, community service and self sufficiency. Groups like the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, and numerous other organizations that focus on today’s youth are exactly the type of organizations that prepare young men and women for the rigors of life and for being citizens of their country.

   On that note, I will not sugar coat my thoughts on the real benefit of groups like the Boy Scouts.  I have meet numerous contractors and military folks who were Boy Scouts.  The Boy Scouts lays the foundation for service to country, and they also give you the mental tools necessary for survival.  The camping, first aid, tracking, fieldcraft, leadership, navigation, and numerous other skills taught in that organization easily transfer on to service in the military.  I know this, because I am a Boy Scout and Eagle Scout, and I know exactly how helpful that experience was to me when I was a Smokejumper, Marine, and now a security contractor.

     The founding fathers of the Scouting Movement, Frederick Burnham and Robert Baden-Powell knew this too, and they certainly put together an idea that has benefited our Nation and our Military in a multitude of ways. And if you click on those links to Burnham and Powell, you will also find their histories to be very interesting. These men were legends in their own times, and did some amazing soldiering all over the world.  Something to think about if you have children. –Matt

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Most U.S. youths unfit to serve, data show

By William H. McMichael

Nov 4, 2009

U.S. military-age youth are increasingly unfit to serve — mostly because they’re in such lousy shape.

According to the latest Pentagon figures, a full 35 percent, or more than one-third, of the roughly 31.2 million Americans aged 17 to 24 are unqualified for military service because of physical and medical issues. And, said Curt Gilroy, the Pentagon’s director of accessions, “the major component of this is obesity. We have an obesity crisis in the country. There’s no question about it.”

The Pentagon draws its data from the Centers for Disease Control, which regularly tracks obesity. The steadily rising trend is not good news for military recruiters, despite their recent successes, nor for the overall health of the U.S. population.

In 1987, according to the CDC, a mere 6 percent of 18- to 34-year-olds, or about 1 out of 20, were obese. In 2008, 22 years later, 23 percent of that age group — almost 1 out of 4 — was considered to be obese.

The CDC measures obesity by body mass index, a figure calculated from height and weight that is considered a reliable indicator of body fatness for most people. According to the CDC, the body mass index for a man standing 6 feet, 2 inches tall and weighing 170 pounds is 21.8; the normal range lies between 18.5 and 24.9. Below that range is considered underweight; a BMI of 25 to 29.9 is considered overweight. A person with a body mass index of 30 or greater is considered to be obese.

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Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Building Snowmobiles: The Scouting Movement

On my honor, I will do my best

To do my duty To God and my country

And to obey the Scout Law;

To help other people at all times;

To keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight. –Scout Oath

*****

Col. John Boyd On Grand Strategy

Evolve and exploit insight/initiative/adaptability/harmony together with a unifying vision, via a grand ideal or an overarching theme or a noble philosophy, as basis to:

         *Shape or influence events so that we not only amplify our spirit and strength but also influence the uncommitted or potential adversaries so that they are drawn toward our philosophy and are empathetic toward our success,

yet be able to

          *Operate inside adversary’s observation-orientation-decision-action loops or get inside his mind-time-space as basis to:

          *Penetrate adversary’s moral-mental-physical being in order to isolate him from his allies, pull him apart, and collapse his will to resist. 

*****

    I am always fascinated by the power of ideas.  Here at FJ, I am always trying to find those ideas, and study how they came about and what makes them so powerful.  One of those ideas I want to talk about today, is the Boy Scouts and the Scouting Movement that was behind the development of the Boy Scouts.

   First off, I am an Eagle Scout and I am very proud of my Scouting background.  If you talk with some guys in the industry and military, you will find that there are quite a few of us Boy Scouts floating around out there. It is interesting to me that the military/police/firefighters/medical/security contracting industries all attract Scouts.  It is equally interesting to find out how Scouting has impacted all these folks in their careers. From the camping and hiking, to the navigation, knots and fieldcraft skills, the Boy Scouts is pretty cool. Not to mention the social connections you make with others, the love and dedication of your country and the respect you garner as a productive member of a community.

   But it goes beyond just being ‘cool’, because during my time at the Scouts, I was also introduced to leadership skills.  Leadership, as you know, is something that I am totally concerned with in this industry, and that is what makes the Scouts relevant to this blog. Not to mention all the land navigation stuff or first aid stuff we did, and I look back on my time with the Boy Scouts as not just cool, but essential life skills for all of my career choices.

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Thursday, June 12, 2008

Tactical Thought Process: A Tornado, The Boy Scouts and Leadership

A Tornado, the Boy Scouts and Leadership

   “They immediately started helping each other in this time of need and set up their own mini-triage unit.” Said Governor Culver

    When I heard that, I took a moment to really grasp what that meant.   I knew what that was, and knew how emotionally charged that kind of situation is, and understood that what these young men had gone through was a tough deal.

     This story really touches home for me.  I am a Eagle Scout and huge supporter of the Boy Scouts of America.  So when I read this story about a tornado killing and injuring these Boy Scouts and how they reacted to such a terrible thing, it really struck me as an incredible story.  If it wasn’t for the training and quick thinking of these young leaders, then there probably would have been more deaths. 

   It does not surprise me though.  The Boy Scouts teaches first aid and leadership and ‘being prepared’ as common virtues.  It is sad that there were four dead, but how these Scouts reacted and dealt with the situation, was absolutely amazing and made me proud.  And a tornado is just such a random thing.  It wasn’t a bomb or some murderer that did this, it was an act of nature, and just fate.  It struck their camp, and that was that.  Unfortunately, this has been a terrible tornado season in the mid-west, and this is just one more savage story about a tough deal.  

   On the upside though, is that we can learn a lot from how these children reacted, based on their training and preparedness.  We as adults should pay attention to such things, because all too often, we forget the basics.  The concept of ‘be prepared’ is an idea that needs to really be taken to heart, because you just never know what could happen.  Fate has it’s own plan.

   The reason I posted this, is because I firmly believe that the principals and concepts taught to Boy Scouts, are concepts that are universal and applicable to any organization.  I have heard of too many stories in various organizations of poor leadership, or a lack of ‘being prepared’, as being contributers to making a situation worse.  Any organization can learn a lot from how the Boy Scouts operate, and what they focus on when forging their leaders.

    Also, the Boy Scouts teach a lot of wilderness type medicine techniques, that are very basic yet effective.  Things like home-made tourniquets or splints, are common training practices for the Scouts.  I should know, I spent hours as a young Scout, performing such activities and earning relevant merit badges.  And from what I have been reading in this story, these young Scouts were using every last bit of ingenuity and training in this tragedy.      

    In this situation, it was sound leadership and team work, that got these young men through a bad situation.  It was there motto of ‘be prepared” which actually compelled them to conduct tornado training at the camp for such an incident.  They had also set up weather radio and brushed up on first aid skills.  And mind you, there is no Tornado merit badge, or Disaster Response merit badge.  So how they responded to this incident, shows the kind of universal application that their training  had.  It is not special forces training, it is basic life saving and leadership skills training for young men.  But it is this kind of training, that will help them the rest of their lives, in becoming this country’s future leaders.

     Overall, what got them through this is that they had the skills necessary to do the job, but also had the leadership capabilities to help orchestrate the effort. And you need individuals that understand the concept of being a good follower of those leaders, and all with the focus of accomplishing the mission.  And by all accounts, it sounds like these Boy Scouts implemented outstanding leadership under duress, and got the job done.  –Head Jundi

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4 dead, 48 injured as tornado hits Boy Scout camp

By TIMBERLY ROSS – 3 hours ago

BLENCOE, Iowa (AP) — Frightened Boy Scouts huddled in a shelter as a tornado tore through their western Iowa campground, killing four teens and injuring 48 others who had little warning of the approaching twister.

Tornadoes also raked Kansas on Wednesday, killing at least two people, destroying much of the small town of Chapman and causing extensive damage on the Kansas State University campus.

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