Friday - July 04, 2003
Introduction to the HogLog
What you will and won't find on here -- and why
this is going to be
the
place to bookmark if you like aviation books.
[UPDATE]: Contact me at kevin
at network impossible dot com.
Posted at 09:35 PM Read More
Sunday - January 20, 2008
A real Johnson
It's a small world. My brother and I were discussing a recent incident in which Associated Press reporter Glen Johnson let his personal politics drive him into a frenzy -- politics, and antipathy to Mormons in general, and Mitt Romney in particular. Rather typical for today's reporter, Johnson has gone beyond wearing these attitudes on his sleeve and more or less flies them as standards with a complete color guard and drum and bugle corps.
Bro is a strong Romney supporter. I'm undecided but like Mitt well enough. He was a decent governor for my hard-to-govern state, a good businessman, and is a genuinely nice guy; I think without naming names we could do worse for president (and the cynic in me says we probably will). Now, Bro and I also understand that being a reporter means you still have personal beliefs and attitudes and they do make it into your writing (which you admit if you're honest). We've both been pro journalists ourselves, writing daily news and features, so we know how it is.
Which brings us back to Glen Johnson. "I worked with him... at the Lowell Sun!" Bro remembers. "He was a complete jerk even then!"
Posted at 10:27 AM Read More
Friday - January 18, 2008
Vets' Charity a Scam... says... Charity Head
The latest in an ugly series of "charities" that's been exposed as a scam run to benefit its insiders at the expense of the people it's supposedly helping is... the Military Order of the Purple Heart Service Foundation. And it's been exposed by none other than the national head of the Order, retired SF officer Henry Cook. With key assists from his deputy Joe Palagyi and ABC's Brian Ross.
Cook found, once elected to the Order's board, he had no ability to control the separate Foundation, which parasites on the good name of the Order in order to provide cash and perks for insiders. He not only couldn't stop it, he couldn't even watch it happening -- Richard H. Esau Jr., the head of the MOPH Service Foundation, a separate corporation from the MOPH itself, banished Cook from its financial meetings.
The MOPH Foundation routinely gets F marks from watchdogs like the American Institute of Philanthropy (see also the .pdf statement to Congress here) and isn't rated by Charity Navigator which doesn't even consider it a charity. Why? Because of the tens of millions raised by the Foundation, most of it sticks to Esau's, his cronies', and his fundraisers' fingers and hardly anything gets spent on wounded vets.
Not all veterans' charities are a rip-off. The Special Operations Warrior Foundation for instance, is... well, read the link to see how a good charity's numbers should look. The SOWF also does something many vets' charities don't, it also provides educational benefits for the children of SOF warriors who die in training accidents like this one. Accidental death is always waiting in the wings when you're an operator... the slightest error by anyone and your ticket gets punched, and most charities neglect these victims in favor of the higher-profile war KIAs. But when Carlo Meth's kid is old enough, the SOWF will be able to help with college if needed. Unfortunately, for every SOWF there's a couple of MOPH Foundations, so I return you to the jeremiad in progress.
Posted at 09:34 PM Read More
Thursday - January 17, 2008
Today in SF History: January 17
Today in Special Forces History:
1944: OSS Operational Groups personnel moved to permanent HQ, Stromclarig in Scotland.
Posted at 12:00 AM Read More
Wednesday - January 16, 2008
Today in SF History: January 16
Today in Special Forces History:
1969: SSG Drew Dix awarded the Medal of Honor for action 31 Jan 68 (during the Tet Offensive).
1964: Military Assistance Command, Vietnam Studies and Observations Group (MACV-SOG) formed.
Posted at 12:00 AM Read More
Tuesday - January 15, 2008
Today in SF History: January 15
Today in Special Forces History:
1951: Guerilla Section, 8th Army G3 Miscellaneous, established. Korea.
Posted at 12:00 AM Read More
Monday - January 14, 2008
100-100: A look back at 2007, and forward at 2008
There's no way to splenda-coat this: 2007 was a bust on the weight loss front. I began at around 220 lb and ended at around 210.
In the first weeks I took off pound after pound, but then... my discipline flagged. It's a PITA to keep writing down every damn calorie you eat in a spreadsheet, and it's difficult to figure calorie counts out on the road. But those are just excuses. I ate more, and my weight stabilized, even though my exercising went way up.
My goal for 2008 is to finish my weight loss -- ideally, by the original 100-100 deadline -- which means I must redouble efforts. Both to diet and to exercise.
Posted at 06:49 PM Read More
Monday - January 14, 2008
Today in SF History: January 14
Today in Special Forces History:
1970: Battle of Camp Ba Xoai, Republic of Vietnam.
1943: Alaska Scouts set up OP at Kiska Island.
Posted at 12:00 AM Read More
Saturday - January 12, 2008
Today in SF History: January 12
Today in Special Forces History:
1944: Alaska Scouts land on Amchitka Island.
Posted at 12:00 AM Read More
Friday - January 11, 2008
Back from Hiatus!
HogLog hasn't been dead (or even pining for the fjords!) but it may have looked that way. I was away for some three weeks and unable to make any updates since Wright Brothers Day (12/17). Consider it my own personal Writer's Strike!
I missed some really worthwhile blogging subjects, but also was prevented from pontificating on some bleh ones. So for you, Dear Reader, it's probably a wash.
At this writing, I have updated Today in SF History (the site's most popular feature, except for the long-moribund Plane Porn) through December, 2007. When I get back to the blog I'll bring SF History current.
There's nothing in the extended entry, so don't "read more."
Posted at 06:09 PM Read More
Thursday - January 10, 2008
Today in SF History: January 10
Today in Special Forces History:
1969: US Army Special Warfare Center is renamed US Army Institute for Military Assistance.
Posted at 12:00 AM Read More
Sunday - January 06, 2008
Today in SF History: January 6
Today in Special Forces History:
1991: TF PROVEN FORCE activates in Turkey. This force was based around elements of the Eurocentric 10th Special Forces Group and Special Operations Command Europe.
1961: 24th Special Forces Group (USAR) organizes. This is one of many short-lived SF Groups in the reserve components. In the end, only the 11th and 12th would remain in the USAR and the 19th and 20th in the National Guard. The 11th and 12th were disbanded in 1994 as part of Clinton Administration defense cuts.
1945: 1st Canadian-American Special Service Force disbands.
Posted at 12:00 AM Read More
Thursday - January 03, 2008
Today in SF History: January 3
Today in Special Forces History:
1944: Training of Jedburgh personnel begins, UK.
Posted at 12:00 AM Read More
Tuesday - January 01, 2008
Today in SF History: January 1
Today in Special Forces History:
1883: 62 William Joseph Donovan born in Buffalo, New York. "Wild Bill" Donovan received the Medal of Honor for conspicuous valor in World War I. He was a classmate of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Roosevelt selected to serve as America's first peacetime spymaster in the years before the war. Donovan's job as Coordinator of Information grew during the war; the organization he headed became the Office of Strategic Services and is the direct ancestor of both the CIA and Special Forces.
Three OSS elements were most foundational to SF: The clandestine three-man Jedburgh resistance-support teams, the thirty-man independent Operational Groups, and the CBI Theater's Detachment 101, which worked with indigenous guerillas.
Accordingly, if Aaron Bank is the father of SF, Bill Donovan is its grandsire.
Posted at 12:00 AM Read More
Monday - December 31, 2007
Today in SF History: December 31
Today in Special Forces History:
1968: Special Forces officer James N. "Nick" Rowe escapes from Viet Cong captivity.
1943: 62 Americans arrive in the UK -- candidates for the radio operator position on Jedburgh teams.
Posted at 12:00 AM Read More