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Interesting and informative book about the State Dept. favorite security contractor company. It's by the company founder so it's going to be a biased but the vast amount of information on what it was like to be a civilian contractor makes a good read.
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ikeman100 | 3 altre recensioni | Sep 24, 2022 |
Interesting, definitely, but obviously biased as hell and that's understandable. I just felt like some potentially important things were missing. I wanted a little more detail and transparency in some areas, although again, I know why Prince might want to shy away from a couple of things. An interesting read, so recommended.
 
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scottcholstad | 3 altre recensioni | Dec 4, 2021 |
Erik Prince built an objectively great company and was the victim of political infighting about larger issues (the Iraq war itself, the role of contractors in war, etc).

Blackwater grew from a small training center in North Carolina into the world leader in the highest risk private security. This book details the rise and fall of the company, and based on my knowledge of events, is pretty accurate. It does explain the motivations for some things which always seemed inconsistent or difficult to explain, and was worth reading on that basis if you are already familiar, but it would be a solid introduction as well. As an introduction, though, be aware that there were 50 other companies doing what Blackwater did but in a much more subdued but often less capable way.

He certainly wasn’t perfect — cheating on his dying of cancer wife and getting an employee pregnant was a low poor, and he didn’t push back enough against stupid State Department policies which forced his personnel to drive like assholes, in high profile vehicles, due to being forced into high profile vehicles by incompetence at State (they wanted to “show that the US wasn’t afraid”, even though this essentially created new enemies every time they moved, and made them a net negative.) I believe Blackwater had enough credibility with their customer that they could have successfully gotten this changed, rather than using it as an excuse for the bad things, best exemplified at Nisour Square, which happened.

(As a disclaimer, I worked in Iraq/Afghanistan for about 7 years and was pretty familiar with Blackwater, Triple Canopy, DynCorp, and military/JSOC operations from multiple angles (I sold them communications services including Internet), and got to see a lot of this stuff evolve in real-time. I met Erik’s country manager for Iraq the second evening I was in country, and told him I’d come in from the airport in a bronco with a couple local guards; he pointed out that Blackwater only did that run in 3-5 hard cars with 3 personnel per vehicle. I then complained about challenges buying guns on the local market and basically pumped for information on how to get a Glock, HS2000, etc to augment my AK and Hi-Power. I’ve also been on the road in Iraq in an old low-profile BMW when “those crazy security contractors” went bombing past in their SUVs, and was afraid of getting shot by them.)

Overall, I hope Erik Prince continues to innovate in this space. His original concept (not accepted) of a completely private humanitarian or post conflict force (“assistance with teeth”) is something which I’ve always wanted to do, and which I think is the obviously correct way to provide aid in conflict zones.
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octal | 3 altre recensioni | Jan 1, 2021 |
The author is a flawed individual but also idealistic patriotic, and an entrepreneur of Blackwater. He has come into an enormous amount of criticism; however, here the founder of Blackwater gets to respond to his critics.

The key points of the downfall are undoubtedly the square shooting which resulted in the deaths of 19 civilians. During their heyday though the organization did not lose a single member under their care. They did however, lose 42 contractors. The work is part organizational history and part biography with a dash of a confessional thrown in.

The backdrop of the story is of course the inept Obama Clinton regime which publicly criticized the organization but privately used it services consistently.

An in-depth interview was conducted:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBfyyLLM3pc

The excuses have been rampant but as Prince indicates the Communists have already penetrated America and for decades have had assets in place in universities, technology, and targeted places in the US.

Trump had the Communist Chinese backing off but are not pushing the limits as the US is weaker with Obama and Biden.

It is the Chinese eliminating American young people with fentanyl since the Mexican cartels do not want their clients to die or they lose business.

Bureaucratic Despotism

Our three branches of government have been supplanted by bureaucratic despotism. The bureaucrats are unelected, unaccountable, and their provisions have the force of law by replacing Congressional legislation.

I detail this point in my forthcoming work: Burning America: In the Best Interest of the Country?

The principles of the American Founding, embodied in the Declaration of Independence and enshrined in the Constitution, came under assault by Progressives of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Progressivism rejects the Founders’ ideas of natural rights, limited government, separation of powers, representation, and federalism. Progressive government, exemplified by the modern administrative state, has fundamentally transformed key aspects of the American way of life.

Progressives taught that stringent restrictions on government power were no longer necessary to protect liberty, since human nature and science had advanced greatly during the 19th century. Progressives did not believe that individuals are endowed with inalienable rights by a Creator; rather, they believed that rights are determined by social expediency and bestowed by the government. In conjunction with this new theory of rights, Progressivism holds that the government must be able to adapt to ever-changing historical circumstances.

One of the important events that led to greater progressive involvement in American life was the test of disaster relief. On Sept. 8, 1900, an unnamed hurricane slammed into the unprotected barrier island of Galveston, Texas, killing between 6,000 and 8,000 people. More than 111 years later, the natural disaster stands as the worst in the history of the United States. Citizens were viewed as incapable of taking care of themselves and middle-class reformers substituted Federal government assistance instead of the individuals, families, communities, and local government self-reliance.

In addition to reshaping the political process in order to ensure that middle-class goals were more easily met, reformers also sought measures to ensure that the right person got the right job. Sometimes this impulse meant that Progressive reformers made certain government positions exempt from voting altogether. One chronic complaint against city political machines was that important administrative posts always went to friends of the “bosses” rather than to experts, and middle-class Progressives wanted to make sure their values were implemented.

To get rid of cronyism, most Progressives supported the creation of a professional corps of administrators. The corps required anyone who wanted a government job to take a competitive exam. Only those who passed could get a job, and only those who excelled could rise to influential, decision-making positions. Ideally, no matter what political party won each new election, jobholders would be allowed to maintain their positions. This system claimed to provide continuity and efficiency rather than a chaotic turnover of personnel each time a new party came into office.

Erik Dean Prince is an American businessman, former U.S. Navy SEAL officer, and the founder of the private military company Blackwater. He served as Blackwater's CEO until 2009 and as its chairman until its sale to a group of investors in 2010. Prince heads the private equity firm Frontier Resource Group and was chairman of the Hong Kong-listed Frontier Services Group until 2021.

Thanks for reading Mick, The Doctor of Digital, Smith!

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3:47 - Erik's background and his family's business success. 11:19 - Erik discusses why he founded Blackwater. 16:27 - Erik explains who Blackwater's first client was. 27:02 - How the United Nation's hypocrisy led to Blackwater's founding. 29:57 - How the bombing of the U.S.S. Cole led to Blackwater's landing a $7 million a year military contract. 34:27 - The difference between a country's nationals fighting for their countries vs hiring a Private Military Company. 41:26 - Was Blackwater better at training soldiers than the U.S. government? 54:27 - Is there an oath soldiers took to train with Blackwater. 55:16 - Erik discusses the CIA's role in the Ukraine vs Russia war. 1:05:18 - Erik explains why he left defense contracting. 1:14:32 - Was Blackwater hired to train soldiers for The Wagner Group? 1:22:52 - Erik claims a Chinese Cyber Attack was behind the AT&T outage. 1:34:31 - Did "Leave the World Behind" predict a future cyber attack on the U.S. electric grid? 1:41:07 - Erik discusses which social and political issues Americans are united on. 1:48:52 - Erik explains who was behind the Cinema Rex fire that started the Iranian revolution.

Blackwater founder Erik Prince | PBD Podcast | Ep. 372

Patrick Bet-David sits down one-on-one with Blackwater founder Erik Prince.

https://www.youtube.com/live/qBfyyLLM3pc?si=wMCGR086ytZE9bwJ
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gmicksmith | 3 altre recensioni | May 13, 2016 |

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Statistiche

Opere
1
Utenti
177
Popolarità
#121,427
Voto
½ 3.6
Recensioni
4
ISBN
8

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