Paper. Scissors. Rock.

by Critt Jarvis on January 4, 2009

in discussion, opinion

Perhaps there is no binary outcome to war; it’s not war, then peace. But rather a continuum of personal, organizational evolution and involution–war and peace.

Paper. Start with a theoretical concept, On War.
Scissors. Parse the concept into its primitives,  parts and sections, then discuss.
Rock. Use what works, throw away the rest.

Imagine. It’s easy if you try.

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Graduate. Train. Movie.

by Critt Jarvis on January 3, 2009

in standing on shoulders

100 Years Later, Iraq Railroad Still Runs

AIB: 100 Years Later, Iraq Railroad Still Runs

Graduate. I am a self-proclaimed social media expert, but sometimes I feel like the result is expression absent communication. It’s time to move on, to extend and connect. Is there a “plastics” in Basra?

Train. Wouldn’t it be great to train around Iraq, meeting people, recording observations? I’d especially like to visit schools, libraries, and art collections.

Movie. The Librarian of Basra, I’ve read the book and read the interview. Perhaps we could crowdsource a movie?

There’s reason to go to Basra, to ride a train, to meet the people, to listen to our heartbeat…  Connectivity.

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Tea. Hayride. Farm.

by Critt Jarvis on January 2, 2009

in standing on shoulders

Paper, scissors, rock. Why do you want to go to Iraq?

Tea. Hayride. Farm. What more reason do I need?

farmers_dec2008

“Connectivity is the only [measure of effectiveness] that matters. Everything else that is good starts with that fundamental truth.”
- Thomas PM Barnett

Photo credit: SFC Philip Jarvis, US Army, December 2008

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River. Valley. Port.

by Critt Jarvis on January 1, 2009

in standing on shoulders

My goal for 2009: It’s Always Time for Chai…
… and a few questions, of course. In Basra, Iraq, What might I learn of life?

River is a resource for life support. Water is remarkable, and can be put to good use. The Tigris and Euphrates, What does their flow mean for Basrawis?

Valley is a natural habitat for people, providing opportunity for  abundant farming community. The Farmers Union HQ, How do you  go to market?

Port is a place for business, moving people and goods between regions. The Basra Development Commission, How do you foster trust?

Always time for chai

Always time for chai, Musayyib, Iraq

In 2009, I want to visit Basra, Iraq, where then I can ask, ” Might we drink some tea?”

Photo credit: SFC Philip Jarvis, US Army, December 2008

This article was inspired by Chris Brogan, Your 3 Goals for 2009

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Reducing the friction in work flow is a big deal to me. That’s why I’ve chosen Thesis as the foundation for my permanent home of the Internet, crittjarvis.com.

Standing on the shoulders of Chris Brogan and his implementaion of Thesis, over time, I’ll add functionality that easily enables you and I to connect.

And for now, may today’s configuration be sufficient.

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I got Thesis!

by Critt Jarvis on December 31, 2008

in miscellaneous

@Sooz noticed my PayPal plight and sent me Thesis. I’ve been drooling over it ever since Chris Brogan’s implementation.

Gonna be busy for a few days.

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Testing crittjarvis.com for Google index

by Critt Jarvis on December 28, 2008

in miscellaneous

[Update: submitted Sitemap, much better now. Ready to blog.....]

Seems weird to me that Googling “Critt Jarvis” or [crittjarvis.com] gets anything but my domain crittjarvis.com.

I’ll check Google blog search for this post, tomorrow.

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The New Army

by Critt Jarvis on December 25, 2008

in opinion

Doug Jarvis, my brother, visited my son SFC Philip Jarvis and his family in Schweinfurt, Germany, the week before the 1-2 deployed to FOB Iskan, Iraq. His observation and reflection follow.

I stood there in the drizzle, trying to warm myself against the wind. It was 6:15 in the morning; the sun was nowhere in sight. Around me were fifteen or twenty 30-something American men, most of them dressed in shorts or sweatpants and light Gore-Tex jackets with patches displaying unit, rank and name velcroed to the camouflaged fabric.

They are part of the “new” American army, specifically the B Company of the 1st Battalion, 2nd Brigade of the army’s 172nd Infantry Regiment. They were involved in a voluntary physical training period during which they attempted to meet or improve on a set of standards that would allow them to wear an embroidered badge on their black scarves.

Black scarves in the army? The “1-2,” as they are known, is the only infantry battalion authorized to wear a scarf with their daily uniform, a legacy of the Viet Nam war. The black scarves and the designation 1,2 are new to the battalion. At its core, the unit’s provenance is the 1-18 INF, “Vanguard.”

Vanguard served in Kosovo and then, during its first deployment, in the northern cities of Iraq. During its second deployment it was at the heart of turning Al Anbar province into a state where Al Qaeda and Sunni Nationalists were not wanted. The physical training this morning was optional, because all of their equipment is on its way to Iraq for their third “visit;” and they would leave three days later, right after Thanksgiving.

This morning’s group was led by Captain Brian Weightman, the Commander of “B” company and 1st Lt. Mike Miller, newly appointed as one of its Platoon Leaders. In the rain and with a head wind, Weightman ran five miles in thirty-three minutes. Suffering from a pulled groin muscle, he omitted the other parts of the test.

New to the unit, Miller, on the wet ground, started off with eighty-two sit-ups in two minutes, followed almost immediately by ninety-one push-ups in the same time period. He then ran the five miles in thirty-six minutes and finished up with a set of chin-ups and pull-ups to meet the standard on his first attempt.

Later that day, on a sloppy soccer field and pelted by alternate showers of rain and sleet, the officers of the 1-2 met the NCO’s in a one-hour game of two-handed touch football which could have passed for an NFL scrimmage. These are really tough guys.

But they are also bright, professional, extremely well trained. Furthermore, they are part an institution that emphasizes the concept of family and the value of the individual.

That evening, the Family Readiness Group, comprised of the dependents and several commercial organizations serving the military, held a farewell party for the 1-2. In a large, heated tent, three or four hundred men and those dependents living in Germany ate hamburgers and hot dogs, drank good draft beer and Cokes and dodged children under their feet. They watched as the unit’s commander, Lt. Col. Steven Miska, announced promotions, handed out awards and thanked the families for their support while the unit is in Iraq.

This was no Hollywood speech with patriotic backdrop and a memorized script. It was the heart-felt thoughts of a leader talking with his family of soldiers, wives and children. I realized I was in the company of heroes. Not just the soldiers, but the wives and children who will spend the next year coping alone with their family’s invariable problems.

For me it was an emotional American moment. The feelings I had watching this group define the word, “patriotism.”

If my country is forced by others to maintain a standing army, then I am thankful that I am being protected by units like the 1-2 and its men, women and dependents.

The Army I knew in the mid-fifties was quietly resting after the Korean War and convinced that it had no important future in the scheme of things. It was not in shape, not proficient in its military tasks, lax in discipline and rife with recalcitrant men acting out their frustration at being in the military.

A “problem” soldier provided the clue as to why the two armies were so different. The soldier was on the verge of leaving the outfit and the military, only to be caught up in the Army-wide “Stop-Loss” order prohibiting a return to civilian life. The order forced him to stay an additional sixteen months and into another deployment to Iraq. He had become a discipline problem and was heading for an unfavorable discharge but was brought back in line by the insightful work of his platoon sergeant and others. The Army had, once again, reoriented one of its own who was headed in the wrong direction. In doing so, it retained an experienced soldier, and a soldier’s life was kept heading in the right direction.

The difference, which had eluded me, was that mine was a conscripted army; and the men and women of today’s army are all hand-selected volunteers and thus more career-oriented than the indifferent draftees I served with. In return, they are respected by the organization as valuable assets and maintained with great care.

All the high-tech equipment in the world won’t create a great military force. It’s the motivated privates, sergeants and officers, as exemplified by the 1-2, that win the battles and, with their professionalism, deter even more battles than they win.

Whenever, wherever called, the administration of peace is the result of an effective military, and the willingness to use it.

We came, we saw, we changed

by Critt Jarvis on December 24, 2008

in miscellaneous

I’m still fuming mad that crittjarvis.com has dropped out of the Google index. I know it will get back in, but Sheesh! this is bad timing. Okay, nuff said afore I start spewing a mindless rant. Turns out, after a cup of hot tea, goodness has come out of today’s adventure, a piece of history, if you will.

Right now, if you Google “Critt Jarvis” and follow the first link, it takes you to my first real blog– Critt Blogs, “After the inspiration… It’s bloggers all the way down.” The enabling technology? Radio Userland, a legacy version, now stranded–Hosed by a gone-out-of-business-in-the-middle-of-the-night hosting service.

My knee jerk reaction at seeing a broken blog, absent relevant content, as potentially someone’s first impression of my web presence was WTF! However, that was before I scrolled down, below the fold, where the good stuff slumbers, awaiting discovery…. A piece of history, an upcoming election 2004. And mentions of three guys who, then and now, profoundly impact my life: Dave Winer, Jay Rosen, Tom Barnett.

And to the Google Search Algorithm engineers, my bad.

So, below the fold, a bit of history from Thursday, January 22, 2004. Full text of post follows:

Murphied, so I’m posting this again

Dave reports:

I’m heading back to Boston, taking some Chris Lydon interviews with me on the Rhomba: Paul Krugman, Jay Rosen (I met his nephew Zach Rosen on this trip) and Joe Trippi. There’s a stretch on I-89 where there’s not much on the radio. It’ll be good to get a refresher from these teachers. Had great talks with Jim Moore and John Palfrey this morning on next steps. We’re not finished fighting for democracy through technology. [Scripting News]

I’m designing a weblog to further the conversation this book begins. I read the manuscript over the weekend, but I am not yet permitted to post excerpts or quotes. What I will say is this, the author Tom Barnett, has given language that allows me to fully embrace globalization as a vision and strategy toward a furture worth creating. And he does so in a way that makes every current Presidential candidate’s agenda a puny (if not dangerous!) pathway. (Note: do not infer that the content or conext are in alignment with the current administration’s plan. The book is explicit where it lines up with the Bush plan, and where it does not.)

I believe citizen reporters and voters will be better able to frame this election if they read this book. So here’s the offer. If Dave will send me a list of 10 people and their shipping address, I’ll get them a first edition copy as soon as it’s available.

Why do I blog? [link updated. Original no longer available.]

Grumble, grumble… I botched this one, too. Oh, well. I’m done for now.
2:47:02 PM  permalink

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Attention 2009: Basra

by Critt Jarvis on December 23, 2008

in miscellaneous

As my son, SFC Philip Stephen Jarvis, settles in at FOB Kalsu, Iraq, it’s becoming easier for me to identify and focus on topics I want to write about next year. Clearly, the southern region of Iraq, with an eye toward Basra, will be central to my content strategy. That said, here’s an illustrative list of core topics, beginning with, of course, strategic connectivity as…

…the security-market nexus
…strategic flows: security, energy, FDI, people

Key considerations…
SOFA (Status of Forces Agreement)
Political reorganization of regional entities
Capacity building programs, Basra Development Commission
Large-scale international investment, Royal Dutch Shell
Development-in-a-Box™ approach

I’ll start with those and see where it goes. Your feedback is appreciated.

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