-
Website
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/ -
Original page
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/declaring-your-indepdendence/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Ari Herzog
120 comments · 23 points
-
Don Lafferty
59 comments · 3 points
-
Danny Brown
77 comments · 28 points
-
Dale Cruse
65 comments · 2 points
-
gerardmclean
43 comments · 7 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
While the Iron is Hot
1 day ago · 61 comments
-
I Was Wrong About Twitter Lists
2 days ago · 64 comments
-
The Visible Media Maker
1 day ago · 23 comments
-
Simplicity Trumps Most Other Emotions
3 days ago · 53 comments
-
How to Make Goals Happen- Part 1 – GoalBox
5 days ago · 65 comments
-
While the Iron is Hot
Thanks for the holiday inspiration.
My answer has become this: If you feel stuck, move. Do something that moves you forward to where you want to be. If you stay where you are then it's on you, you didn't take the next action to get you where you want to go. Don't complain to me that you are unhappy when you aren't doing anything to actively change that (this doesn't mean that I don't listen when someone needs me to). Wallow and then let. it. go.
I'm trying to apply that to myself everyday as well. All of my success (or failure) is up to me.
And to that end, I'm going to be working through some stuff while everyone is quiet for the day. Happy Independence Day my friend.
Words that I live by.
-N
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_the_United...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Revolution
Thanks for the thoughts, Cameron.
We could take pot shots at each other all day, because I'm sure I could quickly spout off a few "founding" issues with other countries, but for me, I'm glad that I live in the US.
Have a great 4th everyone.
Many had their fortunes completely destroyed by the British in reprisal for their willful rebellion. Richard Stockton is just one example.
The wealthiest folks had the most to loose by the instability of revolution. Yet they went ahead anyway. And it cost many of them a great deal.
No, I don't history supports your position, one uncertain flag anecdote notwithstanding.
Can I add don't be afraid to ask/suggest things and *keep* suggesting even when you don't get the response you want?
Maybe I'm just 'talking out loud' to myself. Don't get discouraged too easily. If it took 2 years to get from tea party to gettin the party started, it's ok for some of your own efforts to take time.
Start today.
Just being a skilled craftsperson in the media field is fast becoming a commodity. So I say to old media people - build that social media, community building skill set. To new media pioneers, ease up on the pitchfork and torch, scorched earth screeds that at times dominate the new media discourse. Take a few notes from old media dogs like me. ;-)
These type of collaborations will produce promising value propositions for content consumers and the marketers trying to reach them.
While I'm not going to claim the BEIC story is official history, it has always struck me as interesting that a new nation would adopt the flag of the company they were supposedly protesting against. When else in history has a country adopted the flag/logo/brand of a corporation? Why would a new country, founded in revolution, adopt the flag of the instrument of their recent oppression?
Again, I'm not taking potshots at American history, just asking what I think are interesting questions.
I'm basing this solely on the Wikipedia entry you cite, but it seems you might want to read that source a bit more carefully.
The entry states that the Grand Union flag was *possibly inspired* by the BEIC flag, not that it was a part-and-parcel adoption of said flag (and the implied corporate sponsorship).
An interesting bit of trivia, sure, but it's hardly proof or even significant evidence that the American fight for independence was motivated by a corporation.
I was in a hurry to get to a 4th of July party. :)
Besides which, even if it is true, it is hardly proof that the East India Company was driving the bus of the revolution. They were chaotic times. With no official flag existing people wanted to show their defiance by flying something, anything, other than the Union Jack.
Being a land of merchants and traders perhaps someone had a BEIC flag (which apparently wasn't allowed to be flown outside the Indian Ocean) handy and hoisted it to thumb their noses at the British in Boston.
Because the article Carmeron pointed to is speculative itself there is no way of knowing for sure.