There is a very old poem, with many variations about for the want of a nail. Basically, the poem goes like this:
“For the want of a nail the shoe was lost
For the want of a shoe the horse was lost
For the want of the horse the rider was lost
For the want of the rider the battle was lost
For the want of the battle the kingdom was lost
And all for the want of a horseshoe nail.”
On occasion, I get to teach disaster logistics and I use this poem to get students to understand the ramifications of not having a robust logistics system. Logistics plays a tremendous part in our society and in every industrial sector. Logistics will also play a major part in a post-TEOTWAWKI world.
In the most simplistic analysis, our world, which is the most technologically advanced society in history, was taken down by a very low-tech, microscopic virus that we can not see, taste, or smell. The virus, coupled with government actions to slow the spread, have disrupted supply chains with ramifications to the level that have never been experienced by so many humans. For example, if a plant that might have processed a simple component used in numerous types of plastics that were then used in thousands of products closed, it would have massive ripple effects in numerous sectors of the economy as well as many countries. For as technologically advanced as our world has become, we have not mitigated the risks out of our very fragile, interconnected supply chains. In fact we have done quite the opposite, as we have become more and more technologically advanced we actually created more vulnerability.Continue reading“For the Want of a Horseshoe Nail, by 3AD Scout”
