December 16, 2004

800 MORE REASONS WE LOVE YOU:

The Brothers long ago reconciled themselves to the notion that the main attraction of this blog is the commentary by readers, rather than the ravings of the proprietors. (For the most part) folks keep the discussion civil, informative, and amusing. And the articles that people send us make our task much easier.

But you've really outdone yourselves in contributing $800 to this worthy cause.

We are humbly grateful to everyone who gave and to everyone who helps make this particular (or peculiar) community so much fun for us to hang out in. May God bless each and every one of you in this Christmas/Hanukkah season and may your New Year be happy and healthy. And may 2005 be especially good to the deserving people of Iraq.

MORE:
Friends of Iraq Blogger Challenge (Spirit of America)

Support freedom, democracy and peace in Iraq

Ends on December 15th at midnight Pacific time.


MORE:
Spirit of America: Here's a way you can help the cause in Iraq. (DANIEL HENNINGER, April 16, 2004, Wall Street Journal)

Thus spake George W. Bush this week: "The people of our country are united behind our men and women in uniform, and this government will do all that is necessary to assure the success of their historic mission." Still, many Americans who support the war don't much like sitting on their hands doing little more than watch it on TV. Some have written here, asking what they can do to help. This column will describe a real project that lets the folks at home lend a hand to the soldiers in Iraq.

Over the past year, a successful technology entrepreneur named Jim Hake has been working with the Marine Corps to help their reconstruction projects in Iraq. The Marines identify local equipment needs, and Mr. Hake's organization, Spirit of America, after raising the money, acquires the stuff, typically for schools and medical clinics. It flies directly out of Camp Pendleton in California. Jim Hake and the Marines are a coalition of the can-do, bypassing the slow U.S. procurement bureaucracy. More on that effort in a moment. Here's where you come in:

The First Marine Expeditionary Force and U.S. Army in Iraq want to equip and upgrade seven defunct Iraqi-owned TV stations in Al Anbar province--west of Baghdad--so that average Iraqis have better televised information than the propaganda they get from the notorious Al-Jazeera. If Jim Hake can raise $100,000, his Spirit of America will buy the equipment in the U.S., ship it to the Marines in Iraq and get Iraqi-run TV on the air before the June 30 handover. [...]

Jim Hake's organizational insight is to deploy the best practices of the modern U.S. economy--efficiency and speed--around the margins of the Iraqi war effort. The Amazons, Best Buys, FedExes and DHLs can get anything anywhere--fast. Why not use the same all-American skill at procurement efficiency and quick distribution to get the soldiers in Iraq (and Afghanistan) the stuff that government red tape will never provide in time?

His operation, in Los Angeles, is wholly New Economy. For past projects he's gotten the word out via Web loggers such as Glenn Reynolds's InstaPundit.com, windsofchange.net and hughhewitt.com. Mr. Hake finds low-cost suppliers on the Internet and negotiates prices. His donor network also suggests suppliers.

Earlier projects for the Marines flew over cargo planes of school supplies, basic medical equipment and toys (turns out Iraqi children love Frisbees). One anecdote: The day before the school equipment was to ship, they found that all the pencils broke easily. On a hunch, Mr. Hake made a morning call to a Staples manager in southern California. By midafternoon the Staples man lined up sources for 120,000 pencils--cheaper than the original buy. Mr. Hake bought and shipped them. Spirit of America is all-volunteer. The accounting for its projects, down to the penny, is listed on the Web site.

Posted by Orrin Judd at December 16, 2004 12:30 PM
Comments

Interesting about the pencils: this year the market was flooded with cheap, cheap Chinese pencils, which institutiional buyers snapped up without regard to quality. A pencil's a pencil, right?

Wrong. The cheap pencils, "Mao Tse Tung's revenge," I've heard them called, were less than worthless, as they resulted in much wasted time, and had to be replaced in the end. The leads crumbled, you see, and the wood barrels split. What was worst, the leads were off-center, so they did not work in Western pencil sharpeners. One supposes that they sharpen pencils with knives in China, or, more likely, they just don't care.

A competent logistics system would look at a test of product quality before buying a gazillion of something, but I'm talking about places like public schools here. Are we surprised?

Posted by: Lou Gots at December 6, 2004 8:45 PM
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