Have A Nice Day! The Return on Investment of War. A Story in Three Acts.

Doris picks up the mail and brings it to the kitchen table. Inside a manila envelope from the government is an invoice for three wars: Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. Their household share is $55,000–$75,000. As she reads the itemized results to her husband Phil—each war’s objective, cost, and outcome—a pattern emerges: every conflict ended worse than or identical to where it started. The total carrying cost is $200–300 billion a year. The wars ended; the bill did not. Then the doorbell rings. A government man named Elmer is there with a glossy prospectus for a new war—Operation Epic Fury, the war with Iran. He describes what’s wanted. He is vague on what might be gained. Phil asks him the return on investment. Elmer smiles, laughs, and walks out the door with these words: “Have a nice day.” Every number in this story is real. Phil and Doris are fictional. Their bill is not.

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Courage and Consequence – The Woman Who Chose the Tube

In 1917, Alice Paul was jailed for standing on a sidewalk with a banner asking the president to let women vote. She began a hunger strike knowing exactly what it meant — she had been force-fed in British prisons three times before. For twenty-two days, guards pushed a tube through her nose and into her stomach three times a day. They moved her to a psychiatric ward, flashed lights in her face through the night, and nailed her windows shut. She smuggled notes out on the back of hate mail. She never asked to stop. Three years later, the Nineteenth Amendment became law. This is her story — the latest installment of Courage and Consequence: Profiles in Difficult Decisions.

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Courage and Consequence – The Man Who Volunteered for Auschwitz

In September 1940, a Polish cavalry officer named Witold Pilecki walked deliberately into a German roundup on the streets of Warsaw. He had false papers, a plan, and a destination: Auschwitz. He spent 945 days inside, built a resistance network, smuggled the first eyewitness intelligence on the Holocaust to London — and was ignored. He escaped, fought in the Warsaw Uprising, returned to Communist Poland on an intelligence mission, and was executed with a shot to the back of the head in 1948. His last words: “I cannot live. I have tried to do what was right.” His daughter still has no grave to visit. This is his story.

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Courage and Consequence – The Man Who Didn’t Launch

On September 26, 1983, a Soviet lieutenant colonel named Stanislav Petrov received satellite data showing five American nuclear missiles inbound. His training said report it. His chain of command said report it. The system said report it. He didn’t. He told his superiors it was a malfunction — and then he waited twenty-three minutes to find out if he was right. He was. The system had mistaken sunlight on clouds for missile exhaust. Petrov was reprimanded for incomplete paperwork. His wife never learned what he had done. He died alone in a Moscow suburb in 2017, and no one noticed for four months. This is his story.

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Command of the Reload: When Does the World’s Greatest Military Machine Run Out of Gas?

The United States fired 400 Tomahawk cruise missiles in 72 hours — ten percent of the entire national inventory. Annual production: 100. Then the Pentagon requested $200 billion more. At that price, the war could build 5,000 new schools, 1,818 hospitals, or replace a third of every deficient bridge in America. In this analysis, we apply the Eight Critical Skills to one question: when does the world’s greatest military machine run out of gas? Built from public data, anchored in the Founders’ own words on war power, the answer is sobering.

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