Monday, May 11, 2026

Lessons for Leaders from Napoleon and the Battle of Austerlitz

My interest in Napoleon Bonaparte was triggered by an observation made in the introduction to Grant Wins the WarJames R. Arnold's account of how General U.S. Grant captured the City of Vicksburg, cutting off supplies from the West and sealing the doom of the rebel South in our American Civil War. The author stated, "Of the twenty most brilliant campaigns in military history, more than half were by Napoleon. Only two were conceived and executed by generals in the U.S. Civil War. The first was General Stonewall Jackson’s Shenandoah Campaign. The second, Grant’s victory at Vicksburg."

That simple statement made me seriously interested in learning more about this man. One of the first things I learned was that there were more books written about Napoleon than any other person in the 19th century. After a little research I purchased Chandler's 1200-page The Campaigns of Napoleon, the first hundred pages serving as an outstanding overview of his life, career, philosophy, achievements and more.

* * * 

The Battle of Austerlitz—often called “The Battle of the Three Emperors”—was Napoleon’s greatest battlefield triumph. Fought near the town of Austerlitz in what is now the Czech Republic, it pitted Napoleon Bonaparte against the combined armies of Austria and Russia, led by Emperor Francis II and Tsar Alexander I.


Napoleon’s Objective

Napoleon’s central objective was not merely to defeat the Allied army, but to destroy it decisively enough to break the coalition against France and secure French dominance in Europe. He understood that France could not survive endless coalitions forming against her. He needed a victory so overwhelming that it would psychologically and politically shatter his enemies. 


And that is precisely what happened. After Austerlitz, the Austrian Empire sued for peace, and the old Holy Roman Empire effectively collapsed soon afterward.


Napoleon’s Strategy

Understanding the map is not important 
to getting the point.
Napoleon’s brilliance at Austerlitz lay in deception. He intentionally appeared weak. He thinned his right flank and even abandoned the strategically important Pratzen Heights—high ground in the center of the battlefield. To the Allies, this looked like hesitation or vulnerability. They believed Napoleon was retreating and vulnerable to encirclement.


But this appearance of weakness was bait. Napoleon predicted the Allies would overcommit against his deliberately weakened right side. Once they did, their own center on the Pratzen Heights became dangerously exposed. That was the trap.


At the decisive moment, Napoleon launched Marshal Soult’s corps directly into the weakened center, splitting the Allied army in two. Fog lifted as the French attacked, and the sudden appearance of disciplined French columns emerging into sunlight became legendary, later romanticized as “the Sun of Austerlitz.”


As I read this battle description, I was reminded of Napoleon's 1805 naval defeat at the hands of Britain's Admiral Horatio Nelson, whose bust Napoleon had on his desk out of respect for this master strategist. The Battle of Trafalgar took place only two months earlier so it must have been fresh in Napoleon's mind. You can read here the strategy Lord Nelson used to rout his opponents in Trafalgar, dissecting the combined French and Spanish navies to create mass confusion.


Once the center collapsed, the Allied flanks became isolated and disorganized. Thousands drowned retreating across frozen lakes and marshes, though later accounts may exaggerate the scale of this catastrophe.


Napoleon had achieved what military theorists call the destruction of enemy cohesion.


Famous Quotes Associated with Austerlitz

Napoleon was extraordinarily conscious of morale, symbolism, and memory. Before the battle, he reportedly told his troops: “Soldiers, I shall end this campaign with a thunderbolt.”


And after the victory: “One sharp blow and the war is over.”


Another famous line associated with his philosophy of war: “Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.” 


That sentence almost perfectly summarizes Austerlitz. He allowed the Allies to execute the very maneuver he wanted them to attempt.


Another relevant Napoleon quote: “The moral is to the physical as three is to one.”


Napoleon understood that wars are fought not only with weapons and numbers, but with confidence, fear, perception, momentum, and belief.


Lessons for Today

Austerlitz still fascinates military strategists, business leaders, and political thinkers because its lessons extend far beyond warfare.

1. The Power of Controlled Weakness

Napoleon demonstrated that appearing weak can lure opponents into overconfidence. (Is this currently what has been happening in Iran?) Strategic patience and misdirection can be more effective than raw force. Modern parallels appear in diplomacy, politics, media, and business competition.


2. Concentration at the Decisive Point

Napoleon did not try to be strong everywhere. He identified the decisive moment and concentrated force precisely there. This principle still governs successful strategy today: Focus resources, identify leverage points and avoid dispersion.


3. Information and Perception Matter

Napoleon manipulated what the Allies believed about him. In many ways, Austerlitz was an information war before it became a shooting war. Modern conflicts—political and military alike—are often battles over narrative, confidence, morale, and interpretation. 


4. Overconfidence Destroys Judgment

The Allies believed Napoleon was retreating because they wanted to believe it. Their assumptions blinded them. Austerlitz remains a warning about confirmation bias: leaders often see what flatters their expectations.


5. Leadership Under Pressure

Napoleon projected confidence even when circumstances were risky. His calmness transmitted itself to the army.


Whether in war, politics, or business, morale frequently flows downward from leadership.


The enduring fascination of Austerlitz is that it was not merely a victory of force, but a victory of psychology, timing, deception, and clarity of vision. Napoleon made his enemies participate in their own defeat.


Related Trivia

Ludwig van Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major, Op. 55, known as the Eroica ("Heroic"), is a monumental 1804 work that redefined symphonic form, marking the transition from Classical to Romantic music. Originally dedicated to Napoleon Bonaparte, it is a revolutionary, large-scale composition characterized by its intense emotion, long duration, and dramatic use of dissonance

Related Link

Goethe on Napoleon
https://pioneerproductions.blogspot.com/2010/04/goethe-on-napoleon.html

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Air Quality Keeps Getting Better, But Wind Turbines Do Have Drawbacks

Remember how smelly diesel trucks used to be and how loudly their engines clattered? Remember those photos of the Pittsburg skyline with smokestacks belching black smoke from the steel mills and the dense black clouds that hovered over the hills of the city? Do you recall the firehouses on the Cuyahoga River that runs though Cleveland, firehouses built because the river was in the habit of catching fire four times a year?


These were a few of the memories that came to mind as I read yesterday's Energy Bad Boys' column titled Harvard Study Finds Wind Turbines Will Cause More Warming Than Emissions Reductions Would Avert. And the clever subhead: Hot air from the wind indusry.

The column begins, "A few weeks ago, we wrote about how Gallup polling found 66 percent of Americans think the environment is getting worse despite the fact that air quality in the United States has improved dramatically since the 1970’s. This improvement was due in large part to the Clean Air Act and its subsequent amendments, as a reader noted."

The authors argue that if the goal is to avoid harmful warming, why build something that causes immediate, noticeable local warming for people, animals, and plants living near the turbines today — especially when the climate benefit is small and far in the future?


They estimate the extra warming from all those turbines could cost the U.S. economy $72–75 billion per year in damages (based on earlier studies of warming costs).


Here's another consideration when discussing wind and solar. The size of their physical "footprint" compared to the energy they produce.

Click chart to enlarge

Bottom Line

Wind (and solar) are often hyped as planet-saving technologies, but they come with their own real, immediate temperature impacts. Instead of spending trillions on wind, the authors strongly suggest we should choose nuclear power instead, because it produces reliable electricity with almost no emissions and no local air-mixing warming effect.

I mention these things because our current Minnesota energy policies include a moratorium on nuclear (based on fear driven by misinformation) and a mandate to be "Net Zero" by 2040. [Fwiw, "Net Zero" in environmental law and policy refers to a state where the amount of greenhouse gases (GHGs) emitted into the atmosphere by human activities is balanced by an equivalent amount removed from the atmosphere over a specified period.]  

And however you slice it, wind and solar still have that major issue of intermittency so that it may not be there in the moments you need it most.

Related Links

Harvard Study Finds Wind Turbines Will Cause More Warming Than Emissions Reductions Would Avert

Groups align to lift Minnesota's nuclear energy ban

Is Our Energy Grid at Risk?


Wind farms pictured: Northern Iowa, Southern California, West Texas, San Gorgonia Pass

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Bob Dylan's Hibbing Childhood Home: A Northland Landmark Preserved for Pilgrims and Fans

If you've ever made the pilgrimage to Hibbing, Minnesota, you already know the pull. This Iron Range town isn't just where Robert Zimmerman graduated high school in 1959 or played his first public concert at the Memorial Building—it's where the future Bob Dylan spent the heart of his boyhood after the family left Duluth. The Zimmerman home here isn't a museum with velvet ropes. It's a lived-in piece of history, now stewarded by one of the world's great Dylan collectors, Bill Pagel, and a stop that keeps drawing fans from around the globe.

Collector/Archivest Bill Pagel
The house sits on what fans now know as part of Bob Dylan Drive (or at least the area tied to that spirit). In artist Daniel Botkin's striking 2016 painting Busy Being Born, the Zimmerman home appears front and center in a rearranged Hibbing landscape. Botkin placed it in the lower center, with Milton Glaser's iconic Dylan poster visible in an upstairs bedroom window. To the left, just above the green "Hibbing" sign, is the synagogue the Zimmerman family attended. Behind it looms the Androy Hotel, site of Bob's bar mitzvah. Across the street once stood Zimmy's, the legendary Dylan-themed restaurant and unofficial museum (sadly closed now, but forever part of the lore). The painting captures the whole scene—mining operations in the distance, the Greyhound bus nod to Hibbing's bus-line origins, and even a playful "BobYear" blimp overhead. It's a prenatal portrait of baby Bobby wrapped in a prayer shawl, umbilical cord turning into a shofar, floating above the town that helped shape him. As Botkin explained, he rearranged streets and buildings in the spirit of Dylan's own line from "Desolation Row" about rearranging faces and names.

That home is where young Bob and his brother David grew up. It's the place he left behind when he set out on the road that led to Greenwich Village, Newport, and beyond. Today, both of Dylan's Minnesota childhood homes—the early duplex in Duluth at 519 N. 3rd Ave. East (where he spent his first six years) and the Hibbing house—are owned by Bill Pagel. Pagel, the archivist featured in The Dylanologists and owner of thousands of photos, posters, manuscripts, and even little Bobby's highchair, didn't just acquire them by accident. He once lived next door to the Hibbing house and "pounced" the moment it became available (at a reasonable price). He's been thoughtfully restoring both properties toward their original forms, filling rooms with period furniture based on vintage photos. As Jon Bream noted in the Minneapolis Star Tribune piece that highlighted Pagel's collection, these aren't just addresses—they're tangible links to Dylan's Minnesota roots.


The Hibbing home has hosted its share of modern celebrations, too. In 2021, for Dylan's 80th birthday, the Hibbing Project held a groundbreaking for a memorial in front of Hibbing High School. About 80 people gathered—one for each year of his life. Afterward, the festivities spilled down the street to the former Zimmerman home, now Pagel's. The city even painted a creative crosswalk out front. Nelson French (Duluth Armory board member at the time) orignally shared that his brother lived in the Hibbing house—another reminder that this is still a real home, not a frozen shrine.


Hibbing itself embraces the legacy in quiet but meaningful ways. The Hibbing Library put together an excellent Bob Dylan Walking Tour with 14 points of interest. Fans stop at the high school, the old theaters, and yes, the former Zimmerman home for photos. One Swedish visitor I escorted years ago lit up when we stood there—he'd seen Dylan multiple times back home and in Barcelona, but this was the real deal. 


Despite the closure of Zimmy's and Howard Street Books, the community spirit endures. Local efforts like Dylan Days, temporary murals, and ongoing gatherings show the town hasn't forgotten its native son. As one fan commented after his own visit, "All the people were real friendly... you get a true feel of how Bob grew up."


In the end, the Hibbing home isn't just a building—it's part of the thread that runs through Dylan's songs about time, memory, roots, and rambling. Whether you're walking the library tour, or examining Pagel's collection of unique memorabilia, pondering French artist Claude Angele Boni's paintngs, or simply standing out front imagining a young Bob heading off to wherever the music called, it's a place that reminds us: he not busy being born is busy dying. Preserve the memories. They're all that's left you.


A classmates yearbook, signed by Bob
when they attended Hibbing High together.
What about you? Have you visited the Hibbing home or the Duluth porch? Drop a comment or photo below. And if you're planning a trip, check the Duluth Dylan Fest or Hibbing library resources—they keep the spirit alive every year.


And here's a message from the curator of all these memories himself sent to me: If you do a blog post, please include that I (Bill Pagel) am looking for early photographs of Bob taken both in Hibbing and Duluth and early handwritten writings and drawings done by Bob when he was living in here.


THE REASON all this is relevant today is because Jay Gabler of the Duluth News Tribune did a very nice story about Bill and the Hibbing this weekend, with lots of juicy details and photos. Here's the link, with some very memorable photos: A rare look inside Bob Dylan's Hibbing childhood home


REMINDER: DULUTH DYLAN FEST 
will open with events in Hibbing, May 17.
Be sure to review the
FULL SCHEDULE FOR 
DULUTH DYLAN FEST 2026
CLICK HERE

RELATED
Bob Dylan in Minnesota: Troubadour Tales from Duluth, Hibbing and Dinkytown 

Noteworthy
Susan Beasy Latto, a classmate and friend of Bob's when growing up in Hibbing, passed away a few weeks ago. A close friend of many in our Duluth Dylan Fest circles as well as a Historic Duluth Armory supporter, where young Bobby saw Buddy Holly perform a few days before his tragic plane crash in an Iowa cornfield. 
Dylan’s mother Beatty Zimmerman was close friends with Susan’s mother Esther, and years later Beatty threw a bridal shower for Susan, who will be surely missed by many of us.
You can learn more about Susan here:
https://www.doughertyfuneralduluth.com/obituaries/susan-latto

Meantime, life goes on all around you.
Don't take it for granted or let it go to waste. 

Friday, May 8, 2026

Flashback Friday: Astonishing and Creative Ways of Marking or Keeping Time

Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash
Time it was, and what a time it was, it was 
A time of innocence, 
A time of confidences 
Long ago, it must be, 
I have a photograph 
Preserve your memories; 
They're all that's left you
--Bookends Theme, Paul Simon


Based on how often I've played it over the years, Tell Tale Signs must be one of my favorite Dylan albums. And one of my favorite songs on that double CD is Born In Time which I wrote about here in 2018:
"Born In Time" and Other Dylan Songs About Being Born

You can find the lyrics to "Born In Time" here.

Time is a concept that philosophers and thinking people have mulled over since the beginning time. Or at least since humans first appeared here. Poets and songwriters have been inspired by it, fascinated by the various ways we experience it, as too short, too long, too little and too much. 

Eve: Any idea what time it is?
Adam: Good question. Based on the angle of the sun I'd say it was after noon.

Or...

Gork: I killed another one of these things. After we skin it and build a fire it will be dinner time.
Glam: Oh good. I was getting tired of leftovers.

As life became more organized and sophisticated, so did our means of keeping time. When I took piano lessons as a boy I was given a metronome, which one can set to various speeds. It helps keep you from speeding up your pace when playing, something we often do when nervous.

If you go to see a live orchestra performance -- nowadays you can watch them on YouTube -- you'll notice how the conductor uses his baton to set the tempo.

During my years in advertising I wrote quite a few scripts for radio advertising. I would utilize an Online Stopwatch to time these scripts so that they fit the radio station's time constraints. Today, I use that same Online Stopwatch to time my speeches for Toastmasters.

Photo courtesy @aronvisuals on Unsplash
The film Back to the Future had much to do with time. Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) figures out a solution to being stuck in the past when he realizes that the Hill Valley clock tower will be struck by lightning on a specific moment in time...

Back to the Future is just one of many films that had time travel as a central theme. Others include 12 Monkeys, the Terminator films and Peggy Sue Got Married.

When I was a little tyke we used to watch a cartoon called Mr. Peabody's Improbable History that was on the Rocky & Bullwinkle Show. Mr. Peabody was the smartest being on earth and one of his inventions was the WABAC (Way-Back) machine. A central feature of the cartoon series was going back in time to teach Sherman about various people throughout history, from Napoleon and Lord Nelson to Jesse James and Sir Isaac Newton.

When I was in college I had a philosophy professor who introduced us to Husserl's On the Phenomenology of the Consciousness of Internal Time.  The book is a foundational phenomenological investigation into how we experience time not as objective clock-time, but as it appears within consciousness itself.

The central insight is that time-consciousness is not a mere succession of isolated “now” moments. Instead, every present moment of awareness has a thick, structured “living present” composed of three inseparable elements: primal impression (the immediate now), retention (the immediate just-past, which we still hold onto directly much like the eye briefly retains an after-image), and protention (the anticipation of the immediate future). Of this idea, much more could be said, if I had more time.

All these thoughts about time were stimulated by this fascinating web page titled Astonishing and Creative Ways of Marking Time, Keeping Time. I found it so interesting I wanted to. share it... and if you have time to explore, you will enjoy it, too.

Meantime, whatever is on your agenda for the weekend, have a good time. 

Originally published in May 2020 when many of us had a lot of time because of the lockdowns.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

The Sinking of the Lusitania Has Lessons for Today

At a "book exchage" several weeks ago I obtained a copy of Colin Simpson’s The Lusitania (1972), a provocative examination of the 1915 sinking of the RMS Lusitania, which killed 1,198 people — including 94 children — and helped tilt America toward entering World War I.

Simpson’s book peels back the official narrative to reveal a more complex and disturbing picture. Far from a simple case of unprovoked German aggression against a civilian liner, the Lusitania was carrying significant quantities of munitions and other contraband destined for the British war effort. British authorities, Simpson argues, were aware of the risks yet failed to provide adequate protection, while the ship’s rapid sinking was accelerated by both its unstable design and explosive cargo. The result was a human catastrophe which was then exploited with ruthless efficiency by Allied propaganda.


Lifejacket from Lusitania
The parallels to events in our own era--Gaza, Ukraine, Iran--are striking. In 1915, as today, ordinary people struggled to discern truth amid conflicting government statements and sensational media coverage. British and American newspapers amplified heartbreaking images of drowned children and grieving families, framing the disaster as proof of German barbarity. German sources, meanwhile, insisted the ship was a legitimate target. Public trust in institutions eroded as citizens sensed they were being fed selective facts to serve larger geopolitical aims. 

Sound familiar?


The emotional focus on innocent victims — especially children — proved devastatingly effective. Posters showing mothers and babies sinking beneath the waves stirred outrage far more powerfully than dry debates over maritime law or secret cargo manifests. Simpson shows how tragedy was transformed into a potent propaganda weapon, much as civilian casualties and graphic imagery dominate today’s information wars.


In an age of contested narratives and weaponized empathy, Simpson’s account reminds us that the Lusitania was not merely a maritime disaster — it was a masterclass in how governments, media, and public emotion intersect during crisis. Nearly 110 years later, its lessons about skepticism, hidden agendas, and the strategic use of innocent suffering remain painfully relevant.  


What especially sad (or disturbing) is how the truth is buried beneath a sea of noise, and facts about what's really happened don't come to light till decades later.  


After the latest attempt on the president's life someone said to me, "I don't know what to believe any more." I knew what he was referring to. Every action now has a groundswell of conspiracy theories in its wake, propelled by unrestrained social media. Charlie Kirk, Butler, October 7, JFK--and the beat goes on.



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