A history of guerrilla warfare. The author posits that Unconventional Warfare often thought of as a modern means of war has a long tradition that dates back to antiquity. This is a little under an hour. Everybody got quiet. Good afternoon. Welcome to the Heritage Foundation and to our elected by the was lerman auditorium. We welcome those who are joining a some of these occasions on our heritage website. For those and house as we prepare to begin, please make sure cell phones had been turned off. It is a courtesy that the speakers to appreciate. We will oppose the Program Within 24 hours on our heritage home page for your further reference as well. Hosting our event today is steven bougie. Director of r. Douglass and sarah alice and center for policy studies. He previously served as Senior Research fellow for defense. The homeland security. He is well versed in the special Area Operations and Cyber Security areas as well as defense support to civil authority. He served for three decade
History we embarked the 50th anniversary of the cuban missile crisis and later the Martin Luther king speech at the lincoln memorial. We have invited to gas who are suited to do what we want to do to look at the past in its own terms edward muir one of their premier historians and Michael Ignatieff a thinker, a writer, a public figure engaged in Global Affairs and politics. Suppress is the starkest anatomy of power is without fear to show rulers how to survive in the world as it is and not as it should be. The only criteria is success success, goodness, justice, honesty, of virtue of available only if they help you 60s succeed and if not you should neglect them to be honest and just then to me so and one should not hesitate do deceived or do whatever else is necessary to hold power this is on the means of power. People should either be harassed or crushed to do minor damage they get revenge but if you cripple them there is nothing they can do so do it in a way you do not have to fear t
Paul Stevens
It was a seminal moment in Boake Sells’ life as he and his wife Marian loaded up their belongings in a U-Haul to move with their two young children from Fort Dodge for a new job in Milwaukee.
He was 29 and in his first job out of college. He worked for a phone company, but lost the job for “lack of humility” after a dispute with bosses on marketing strategy. He then worked in hydraulic sales for a Pocahontas company before starting work as a manufacturer’s rep for hydraulics from the basement of their Fort Dodge home. But it “went broke,” he said.