1 Author
5617 Log Entries
16134 Files
186 Locations
23 Episodes
27 Graphs
23 Time Periods
0 Saved Searches
756 Smart Tags
9 Polls

< January 2009>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
1
2
03
04
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
Expand Calendar

On This Day
1 Year Ago:
SufferFest 08 Day 4
2 Years Ago:
64 Miles on the Silver Comet
Friday, January 5, 2007
Ava and Aidan at El Matador
3 Years Ago:
Haircut
Camera Phone Action For Fri, Jan 6, 2006
Friday Jan 6th, 2006
Outside 5.36mi Night Run
4 Years Ago:
Comment Spammers
Fruit So Far Today
Dominic's Pants
Thrashing Rain
Couldn't Sleep
Pilates Class
6 Years Ago:
Speakerphone Hostage
Saddam: Don't Intimidate Me You Midget
8 Years Ago:
Jump 85
Jump 86
Jump 84

My Favorite Sites
a ticket to kona
ad astra, per aspera
amy kloner
anna
billy vandervalk
carole sharpless
danielle grabol
diva marketing
dogwood girl
dtundacova
duncan mills groundblog
dylan rist
father's blog
gordo
hunter
isaac freeman
jenny selan
joe elswick
joel
josh shields
kate parker
katrina mitchell
kendy's blog
lil stew
maddox
marc crouch
mark ziler
mother's blog
nat's negative split
particleman
peter king
scripting.com
tribirdie jill
uncle-packles
vanessa
yellowjeepgirl.com
zoomartin

Random Stuff Messages
1560 Messages Available

Search My Site


Email Subscription
Enter your email address to receive this site via email.


Graphs
None.

View this site in XML

Random Stuff


6
Month
15
Day
2004
Year
Starting to Understand John Robb's Global Guerillas Concept
11
Hour
29
Minute
PMTonight, while writing this useless rant on the NTSB a lot of what I've been reading on John Robb's Global Guerillas site started to click for me.

He's been writing about the shift from nation states to market states and uses news from Iraq as a case study/show-and-tell/I-told-you-so-without-the-sarcarm. Most of what he says makes sense, but the broad theoretical underpinnings haven't been that clear to me. (Possibly by design so that I buy his book, but as one of the key early movers in the web logging movement I trust that he's more open than most. And possibly because I'm lazy and haven't read back to the beginning of his site.)

Tonight I started to get a sense of those underpinnings. I was blabbing on and on about the NTSB and how it should stop trying to force airlines to implement their safety measures and instead just tell the public what they're recommending so that a market in safety could develop. (They probably already do so, but in boring white papers... they need to change the format of their information distribution.)

I had tripped onto the notion that to affect change more easily they need to harness the economic force inside each traveler's pocket. By giving out information as a catalyst they could create a new force in the market that would, in the end, make air travel safer... or at least put the definition of that level of safety into the hands of us travelers. It just seemed to me that information distribution would be so much easier than political fighting and enforcement of laws that the airlines are opposed to.

Clearly John Robb is thinking something similar but on a much larger scale... national security instead of airline safety.

His premise is that in a market state the combatants attack high-value targets defined more by market-effect than by traditional military metrics. The terrorists see more value in attacking things like power grids, oil pipelines and telephone lines. Infrastructures. Infrastructures that support markets.

Throughout history dramatic shifts in military protocol have been labeled heretical and terroristic. Napoleon was called a coward for awaking his troops before dawn to attack, the Americans snipers in the revolutionary war were cowards, etc.

John Robb spends a lot of time proving that the terrorists, Global Guerillas as he calls them, are employing these market-based methodologies of attack. I'm sold. My mother is plugged into the military leadership and she's been talking about asynchronous warfare for years now. It makes sense that if you only have 20,000 in your army (al quaeda) and you want to change the world (who doesn't?) you need to come up with some pretty novel approaches. But I'm sure John still has to convince many people and the ability to tie web log entries to stunning war news is certainly not to be missed.

But what I'm interested in seeing is how he makes the argument that information is the way to combat the Global Guerillas. I'm already sold that it's the way to go. I hope that he gives insight into the technological mechanisms we need to deploy. How information reaches the market itself. What feedback loops are needed to make the market efficient. Etc.

I also hope that he delves into the world of economics and uses some prior research to show how more traditional markets like, say, cattle futures are affected by information. Economists have long studied the effects of information on markets and I'm sure that John isn't overlooking this angle.

The general concept, as it seems to me, is that if you create a market for global safety you trust that people, as a whole, want the world to be stable and safe instead of unstable and dangerous. (Probably a good bet but it never seems to work well for the libertarians.) While our current approach focuses on direct destruction of those who disrupt peace, a better approach may be to invest in the creation of a market of world peace and let the world define its own peace level... which would change throughout time... much more fluidly than political policy and military might could ever hope to change.

What I'm missing is the mechanism that puts the Global Guerillas out of business. What is it that makes them stop disrupting peace? Lack of funds? Or do we, the side of the market that wants peace, fund better, smarter mercenaries who destroy the terrorists -- once they become a big enough threat as defined in our marketplace?

And, as always, I may be completely misreading where John Robb's going with his Global Guerillas book, site and concept. It'll be interesting to read the book. I've been subscribed to his RSS feed for a few months now and enjoy his daily analysis of Iraq news from his unique perspective.
Timezone: US/Eastern
5 Years Ago
Author:

Joe Reger, Jr.
Keyword Tags
Location:
All Locations
Not Specified
Related Entries
NTSB Should Be An Informational Agency, Not a Political One
John Robb on dataBlogging
Connectors, Mavens and Salespeople
When Will we See the First Peopopoly?
Bush Pre-Building War Coalition
Time Period
This entry took place during these time periods.
Tue, Jun 1, 1993 12:00:00
US/Eastern
Mon, Jan 5, 2009 22:26:38
US/Eastern

Tucker Home (view)
Engaged to Heather Dean (view)
Living in Atlanta, GA (view)
Favorite Entry?
No




blog comments powered by Disqus