I’d like to think that teaching planning would a good idea if they also focused on the fact of after the war- that it’s never final so how do they think about mitigating it
I know a guy who used to teach planning by getting folks to plan. Last week of the course they'd open the doctrine they were supposed to be using just to see how irrelevant it is.
Again, if war is never final why not plan on actions to lean forward on that premise
I’d like to think that teaching planning would a good idea if they also focused on the fact of after the war- that it’s never final so how do they think about mitigating it
I know a guy who used to teach planning by getting folks to plan. Last week of the course they'd open the doctrine they were supposed to be using just to see how irrelevant it is.
The only triangle is a chocolate hersey kiss with eyes ok well gone
Once again, the dreaded triangle of doom causes me to remove an otherwise valuable comment. Please edit and repost!