bell-cot 10 hours ago Yes, the USN has a wide variety of major problems.But the article gets enough details wrong that I didn't bother to finish it. FrankWilhoit 9 hours ago Above a threshold of size, all organizations are the same, because none of them can any longer do what it says on the sign: the only thing they can do is just be an organization. bell-cot 7 hours ago History shows that under sustained existential pressure, many once-moribund military organizations have staged remarkable comebacks in functionality.But as the article points out, American's deindustrialization makes it pretty delusional to imagine the USN achieving that in the next decade or few.
FrankWilhoit 9 hours ago Above a threshold of size, all organizations are the same, because none of them can any longer do what it says on the sign: the only thing they can do is just be an organization. bell-cot 7 hours ago History shows that under sustained existential pressure, many once-moribund military organizations have staged remarkable comebacks in functionality.But as the article points out, American's deindustrialization makes it pretty delusional to imagine the USN achieving that in the next decade or few.
bell-cot 7 hours ago History shows that under sustained existential pressure, many once-moribund military organizations have staged remarkable comebacks in functionality.But as the article points out, American's deindustrialization makes it pretty delusional to imagine the USN achieving that in the next decade or few.
Naval Gazing blog is my go-to for anything navy-related.
Yes, the USN has a wide variety of major problems.
But the article gets enough details wrong that I didn't bother to finish it.
Above a threshold of size, all organizations are the same, because none of them can any longer do what it says on the sign: the only thing they can do is just be an organization.
History shows that under sustained existential pressure, many once-moribund military organizations have staged remarkable comebacks in functionality.
But as the article points out, American's deindustrialization makes it pretty delusional to imagine the USN achieving that in the next decade or few.