Please take a look at Articles on self-defense/conflict/violence for introductions to the references found in the bibliography page.

Please take a look at my bibliography if you do not see a proper reference to a post.

Please take a look at my Notable Quotes

Hey, Attention on Deck!

Hey, NOTHING here is PERSONAL, get over it - Teach Me and I will Learn!


When you begin to feel like you are a tough guy, a warrior, a master of the martial arts or that you have lived a tough life, just take a moment and get some perspective with the following:


I've stopped knives that were coming to disembowel me

I've clawed for my gun while bullets ripped past me

I've dodged as someone tried to put an ax in my skull

I've fought screaming steel and left rubber on the road to avoid death

I've clawed broken glass out of my body after their opening attack failed

I've spit blood and body parts and broke strangle holds before gouging eyes

I've charged into fires, fought through blizzards and run from tornados

I've survived being hunted by gangs, killers and contract killers

The streets were my home, I hunted in the night and was hunted in turn


Please don't brag to me that you're a survivor because someone hit you. And don't tell me how 'tough' you are because of your training. As much as I've been through I know people who have survived much, much worse. - Marc MacYoung

WARNING, CAVEAT AND NOTE

The postings on this blog are my interpretation of readings, studies and experiences therefore errors and omissions are mine and mine alone. The content surrounding the extracts of books, see bibliography on this blog site, are also mine and mine alone therefore errors and omissions are also mine and mine alone and therefore why I highly recommended one read, study, research and fact find the material for clarity. My effort here is self-clarity toward a fuller understanding of the subject matter. See the bibliography for information on the books. Please make note that this article/post is my personal analysis of the subject and the information used was chosen or picked by me. It is not an analysis piece because it lacks complete and comprehensive research, it was not adequately and completely investigated and it is not balanced, i.e., it is my personal view without the views of others including subject experts, etc. Look at this as “Infotainment rather then expert research.” This is an opinion/editorial article/post meant to persuade the reader to think, decide and accept or reject my premise. It is an attempt to cause change or reinforce attitudes, beliefs and values as they apply to martial arts and/or self-defense. It is merely a commentary on the subject in the particular article presented.


Note: I will endevor to provide a bibliography and italicize any direct quotes from the materials I use for this blog. If there are mistakes, errors, and/or omissions, I take full responsibility for them as they are mine and mine alone. If you find any mistakes, errors, and/or omissions please comment and let me know along with the correct information and/or sources.



“What you are reading right now is a blog. It’s written and posted by me, because I want to. I get no financial remuneration for writing it. I don’t have to meet anyone’s criteria in order to post it. Not only I don’t have an employer or publisher, but I’m not even constrained by having to please an audience. If people won’t like it, they won’t read it, but I won’t lose anything by it. Provided I don’t break any laws (libel, incitement to violence, etc.), I can post whatever I want. This means that I can write openly and honestly, however controversial my opinions may be. It also means that I could write total bullshit; there is no quality control. I could be biased. I could be insane. I could be trolling. … not all sources are equivalent, and all sources have their pros and cons. These needs to be taken into account when evaluating information, and all information should be evaluated. - God’s Bastard, Sourcing Sources (this applies to this and other blogs by me as well; if you follow the idea's, advice or information you are on your own, don't come crying to me, it is all on you do do the work to make sure it works for you!)



“You should prepare yourself to dedicate at least five or six years to your training and practice to understand the philosophy and physiokinetics of martial arts and karate so that you can understand the true spirit of everything and dedicate your mind, body and spirit to the discipline of the art.” - cejames (note: you are on your own, make sure you get expert hands-on guidance in all things martial and self-defense)



“All I say is by way of discourse, and nothing by way of advice. I should not speak so boldly if it were my due to be believed.” - Montaigne


I am not a leading authority on any one discipline that I write about and teach, it is my hope and wish that with all the subjects I have studied it provides me an advantage point that I offer in as clear and cohesive writings as possible in introducing the matters in my materials. I hope to serve as one who inspires direction in the practitioner so they can go on to discover greater teachers and professionals that will build on this fundamental foundation. Find the authorities and synthesize a wholehearted and holistic concept, perception and belief that will not drive your practices but rather inspire them to evolve, grow and prosper. My efforts are born of those who are more experienced and knowledgable than I. I hope you find that path! See the bibliography I provide for an initial list of experts, professionals and masters of the subjects.

WIRED TO PROTECT

by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)


Nature's Instincts of Men as Protectors

An Interdisciplinary Exploration in Evolutionary Biology, Psychology, and Anthropology

 

 

Introduction: The Protector Instinct

If you've ever watched a man instinctively step in front of someone he loves when a stranger approaches too quickly, or seen a father's demeanor shift the moment he perceives a threat to his child, you've witnessed something deeply ancient at work. The impulse isn't learned from a book or enforced by a social contract alone — it's written into biology, shaped over hundreds of thousands of years of human evolution.


The protective instinct in men is not a simple or singular thing. It emerges from the intersection of evolutionary biology, hormonal architecture, neurological wiring, developmental psychology, and cross-cultural social norms. Understanding it means pulling threads from many disciplines — and the picture that emerges is both more complex and more fascinating than the cultural shorthand of 'man as protector' typically suggests.


This document explores that picture in depth: where the instinct comes from, how it works in the body and brain, how it manifests across cultures, what it looks like in development, and where it fits into the broader conversation about gender, behavior, and human nature.

 

Part I: The Evolutionary Roots

Selection Pressure and the Protector Role

Evolutionary biology offers the most foundational account of why male protective behavior exists. The core argument is straightforward: in environments where threats — predators, rival groups, resource scarcity — were persistent, groups and families with males who actively defended offspring and mates had better survival and reproductive outcomes. Over time, genes associated with protective dispositions were positively selected.


David Buss, one of the leading researchers in evolutionary psychology, has documented extensively how mate preferences, parental investment, and competitive behavior in men align with predictions derived from evolutionary theory. In his landmark work The Evolution of Desire (1994), Buss argues that men across cultures have evolved dispositions toward resource acquisition and protection of mates and offspring — not as conscious calculations but as deep motivational tendencies shaped by natural and sexual selection.


The key evolutionary concept here is parental investment theory, developed by Robert Trivers in 1972. Trivers observed that in species where both parents invest in offspring, males and females develop different but complementary behavioral strategies. In humans, where offspring require years of dependency, paternal protection has significant survival value — meaning males who engaged in it left more descendants than those who didn't.

 

The Role of Physical Dimorphism

One piece of evidence that evolution has shaped males toward protective and competitive roles is physical sexual dimorphism — the fact that human males are, on average, significantly larger, more muscular, and physically stronger than females. This is not universally true across the animal kingdom; in many species females are larger. In humans, the pattern suggests evolutionary pressure toward male roles requiring physical capacity for defense.


Anthropologist David Geary, in his book Male, Female: The Evolution of Human Sex Differences (2009), synthesizes evidence suggesting that human male physical advantages — upper body strength, reaction time, spatial processing — align with ancestral roles in intergroup conflict, hunting, and threat defense. These capacities did not arise in isolation but co-evolved with behavioral and psychological tendencies that put them to use.


It's worth noting, as researchers consistently do, that these are statistical tendencies across populations — not deterministic individual fates. Biology provides a set of predispositions; culture, experience, and individual agency shape how they are expressed.

 

Coalitional and Intergroup Defense

Much of male protective behavior in evolutionary history was not individual heroism but group coordination. Anthropological and archaeological evidence suggests that coalitional defense — groups of related males coordinating to repel external threats — was a central feature of human prehistory. This matters because it means the protective instinct is not only directed at immediate family but can extend to community, tribe, and in-group.


Psychologist Mark van Vugt has proposed 'male warrior hypothesis,' published with colleagues in 2007, which argues that men evolved psychological mechanisms specifically suited for intergroup conflict — including heightened threat vigilance, in-group loyalty, and willingness to engage in collective defenseWomen, by contrast, showed what the same research called a 'tend-and-befriend' response to intergroup threat, prioritizing social cohesion over confrontation. These patterns held across multiple experimental studies.

 

Part II: Hormonal and Neurological Underpinnings

Testosterone: More Than Just Aggression

Testosterone is often flattened into a simple narrative — it makes men aggressive — but the actual research presents a more nuanced picture. Yes, testosterone is associated with competitive behavior, status-seeking, and willingness to take physical risks. But it is also strongly implicated in protective behavior, particularly toward mates and offspring.


Research by James Dabbs and Robin Morris, as well as later work by Peter Gray and colleagues, shows that testosterone levels in men respond dynamically to context. Fathers who are actively involved in caregiving show reduced testosterone compared to non-involved fathers — a pattern also observed in other pair-bonding species. This hormonal shift appears to facilitate nurturing behavior while reducing competitive drive. Interestingly, testosterone also spikes in men when they perceive threats to their partners or children — suggesting it plays a role in mobilizing protective responses, not just aggressive competition.


Lee Gettler's 2011 longitudinal study in the Philippines was particularly significant: it showed that men who became fathers experienced a sharp decline in testosterone, and that this decline was greater for men who engaged in more hands-on caregiving. This finding, replicated in subsequent studies, suggests that male physiology adapts toward protective nurturing when the social context calls for it.

 

Vasopressin and the Neurochemistry of Bonding

Oxytocin gets most of the popular press as the 'bonding hormone,' but in males, vasopressin plays an equally important — and in some ways more relevant — role in protective pair-bonding and parental behavior. Research on voles, particularly work by Sue Carter and Thomas Insel beginning in the 1990s, established that vasopressin receptor distribution in the brain is associated with pair-bonding and paternal protectiveness in monogamous species. Prairie voles, which are monogamous, have high densities of vasopressin receptors in reward areas of the brain; their promiscuous cousins do not.


In humans, research by Miranda Lim, Young, and colleagues has extended this work. Vasopressin appears to modulate male-typical social behavior, including territorial and protective responses. Brain imaging studies have found that vasopressin enhances the salience of threatening faces in men — essentially sharpening threat-detection in contexts associated with protecting in-group members. This is a direct neurological substrate for what we call the protective instinct.

 

The Amygdala and Threat Vigilance

The amygdala — the brain's threat-detection center — shows sex-based differences in response patterns, though the research is more contested here than popular accounts often suggest. What is fairly well established is that men and women show somewhat different patterns of amygdala activation in response to social threats, with male responses showing faster activation and stronger coupling with action-preparation circuits. This aligns with a pattern of rapid physical response to perceived threats.


Research by Ruben Gur and colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania using fMRI imaging found that while overall emotional processing differences between men and women are often overstated, threat-response circuits do show consistent sex-differentiated activation patterns. 


These patterns are not destiny — context, experience, and emotional regulation modulate them heavily — but they suggest a biological foundation for the rapid, action-oriented threat response commonly associated with male protective behavior.

 

Part III: Cross-Cultural Evidence

The Universal Pattern — And Its Variations

One of the strongest pieces of evidence that male protective behavior has biological roots rather than being purely socially constructed is its cross-cultural universality. Anthropological surveys across hunter-gatherer societies, agricultural societies, and industrialized nations consistently find some version of a male protective role — though the specific form varies enormously.


In a landmark cross-cultural survey by George Peter Murdock published in his Ethnographic Atlas (1967), male involvement in defense, hunting, and external threat response appeared in the overwhelming majority of the 1,267 societies catalogued. Women were primary caregivers in most societies, but active external defense was predominantly male in virtually all of them. This doesn't mean women aren't protective — they unquestionably are, particularly toward children — but the external, confrontational form of protection was a male-dominant pattern across cultures.


That said, cross-cultural research also reveals important variations. In societies with lower levels of intergroup conflict, male protective behavior is less prominent and less rigidly enforced. In more egalitarian societies, protective behaviors are more evenly distributed. This suggests that while the biological predisposition exists, cultural context heavily shapes how strongly it is expressed and who expresses it.

 

Fatherhood Across Cultures

Father involvement in child protection and rearing also shows both universality and variation. In all known human societies, fathers are recognized as having some role in offspring welfare — but the degree of direct caregiving varies widely. Among the Aka pygmies of Central Africa, studied extensively by Barry Hewlett, fathers engage in extraordinarily high levels of direct infant care, including holding infants more than 20 percent of the time — far more than fathers in most agricultural or industrialized societies.


What this variation tells us is important: the biological capacity and motivation for male nurturing and protection is clearly present across humanity, but cultural structures, economic arrangements, and social expectations determine how much of that capacity is activated. The protective instinct is not a rigid program but a flexible adaptive response that cultures can amplify or suppress to varying degrees.

 

Part IV: Developmental Psychology

When Does It Emerge?

If the protective instinct in males has evolutionary and biological roots, we'd expect to see early developmental expression — and research does find this, with appropriate nuance. Studies of children's play behavior consistently find that boys, from very young ages and across cultures, engage more in rough-and-tumble play, competitive behavior, and play involving defense and attack scenarios. Girls engage more in nurturing and caretaking play. These differences appear too early and are too consistent across cultures to be explained by socialization alone, though socialization amplifies them.


Psychologist Eleanor Maccoby, in her exhaustive review The Two Sexes: Growing Up Apart, Coming Together (1998), documented these play differences extensively and concluded that while sex differences in aggression and rough play have biological contributions, they are substantially shaped by peer socialization — with boys reinforcing aggressive-protective behavior in each other through play culture.


Importantly, the capacity for protective behavior toward those perceived as vulnerable — younger children, smaller peers — appears across both boys and girls. What differs is the form it takes: girls tend toward social and caregiving protection; boys toward physical and territorial protection. These are complementary, not competing, expressions of a shared human protective impulse.

 

Attachment and the Father Figure

Developmental psychology has long recognized the importance of secure attachment in child development — and increasingly, research focuses on the distinct contribution of fathers. While mothers and fathers can both provide secure attachment, research suggests fathers tend to engage differently: more physical play, more challenge and novelty, more engagement in the external world. These are protective in a different register — not soothing distress (a more maternal pattern) but building the child's capacity to navigate risk.


Researcher Michael Lamb, who has written extensively on the role of fathers in child development, has argued that father involvement is associated with better outcomes in social competence, risk management, and resilience — domains that connect directly to the child's later capacity to protect themselves and others. The father as protector, in this developmental framing, is also the father as preparer — teaching the next generation to handle threat and challenge.

 

Part V: The Social and Cultural Layer

How Culture Shapes the Instinct

It would be a mistake — and bad science — to talk about male protective instincts without acknowledging that culture doesn't merely reflect biology; it actively shapes behavioral expressionThe norms, narratives, and expectations that societies build around male protection determine when it is expressed, toward whom, and in what form.


Sociologist Michael Kimmel, in Manhood in America (1996), and anthropologist David Gilmore, in Manhood in the Making (1990), both document how cultures construct 'manhood tests' that often center on protection and provision. Gilmore's cross-cultural survey found that in the great majority of societies studied, adult manhood was defined significantly by willingness to protect the group and provide for dependents — a theme so consistent across unrelated cultures that Gilmore called it a 'deep structure' of the masculine role.


This does not mean culture simply reads from a biological script. It means culture takes a biological predisposition — heightened threat vigilance, competitive strength, bonding with mates and offspring — and shapes it into specific social roles, rituals, and expectations. The instinct is the raw material; culture is the sculptor.

 

The Protector Role — Shadow and Light

Any honest account of male protective instincts has to grapple with their shadow side. The same biological predispositions that motivate genuine protection of family and community can, under different conditions, fuel territorial aggression, in-group bias, control of women in the name of 'protection,' and intergroup violence


The history of human conflict is substantially a history of male protective instincts directed by cultural narratives toward destructive ends.


Psychologist Philip Zimbardo, who spent decades studying how good people become capable of cruelty, argued that the same social and psychological mechanisms that enable heroic protection can enable atrocity when the definition of 'us' and 'them' is manipulated. This is not an indictment of the protective instinct itself but a call for moral cultivation — directing it toward genuine care rather than territorial dominance.


The healthiest expression of the male protective instinct, as both evolutionary and developmental research suggests, is one integrated with empathy, restraint, and genuine care for wellbeing — rather than one driven by status, control, or fear. Biology provides the drive; character determines the direction.

 

Conclusion: Ancient Wiring, Modern Responsibility

The protective instinct in men is real, ancient, and multidimensional. It emerges from evolutionary selection pressures that rewarded threat defense, parental investment, and coalitional cooperation. It is encoded in hormonal systems — testosterone's context-sensitive responses, vasopressin's role in bonding and vigilance — and in neurological architecture that sharpens threat detection and mobilizes action. It appears early in development and consistently across cultures, even as its specific expression is profoundly shaped by social context.


Understanding this instinct clearly — neither romanticizing it as simple heroism nor reducing it to a source of oppression — is important for how we raise boys, how we structure societies, and how we think about human nature. The impulse to protect those we love is one of the better angels of human nature. Like all powerful human drives, it needs moral direction, cultural wisdom, and individual cultivation to be what it can be at its best.


The man who steps in front of danger for someone he loves is drawing on something very old and very deep. What matters is that the direction of that impulse — toward genuine care and genuine protection — is chosen thoughtfully, not just triggered reflexively. That's the work that biology sets up for us and that human character has to carry through.

 

 

Bibliography

 

Buss, D. M. (1994). The Evolution of Desire: Strategies of Human Mating. Basic Books. — Landmark work in evolutionary psychology documenting cross-cultural patterns in mate preferences and protective behavior in men.

Carter, C. S., & Insel, T. R. (1997). A neurobiological basis of social attachment. American Journal of Psychiatry, 154(6), 726–735. — Foundational research establishing vasopressin's role in pair-bonding and protective behavior, primarily from vole studies.

Dabbs, J. M., & Morris, R. (1990). Testosterone, social class, and antisocial behavior in a sample of 4,462 men. Psychological Science, 1(3), 209–211. — One of several Dabbs studies examining testosterone's context-dependent role in male behavior.

Geary, D. C. (2009). Male, Female: The Evolution of Human Sex Differences (2nd ed.). American Psychological Association. — Comprehensive evolutionary account of sex differences including physical dimorphism and behavioral predispositions.

Gettler, L. T., McDade, T. W., Feranil, A. B., & Kuzawa, C. W. (2011). Longitudinal evidence that fatherhood decreases testosterone in human males. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 108(39), 16194–16199. — Key longitudinal study showing testosterone reduction in actively involved fathers.

Gilmore, D. D. (1990). Manhood in the Making: Cultural Concepts of Masculinity. Yale University Press. — Cross-cultural anthropological study finding protection and provision as near-universal components of masculine identity.

Hewlett, B. S. (1991). Intimate Fathers: The Nature and Context of Aka Pygmy Paternal Infant Care. University of Michigan Press. — Landmark study of extraordinary levels of paternal involvement among the Aka pygmies.

Kimmel, M. S. (1996). Manhood in America: A Cultural History. Free Press. — Sociological examination of how American culture constructs and shapes masculine identity around protection and provision.

Lamb, M. E. (Ed.). (2010). The Role of the Father in Child Development (5th ed.). Wiley. — Comprehensive review of developmental research on father involvement and its effects on child outcomes.

Maccoby, E. E. (1998). The Two Sexes: Growing Up Apart, Coming Together. Harvard University Press. — Authoritative developmental psychology review of sex differences in play, socialization, and behavioral predispositions.

Murdock, G. P. (1967). Ethnographic Atlas. University of Pittsburgh Press. — Cross-cultural database of 1,267 human societies providing foundational evidence for universal patterns in sex-typed social roles.

Trivers, R. L. (1972). Parental investment and sexual selection. In B. Campbell (Ed.), Sexual Selection and the Descent of Man 1871–1971 (pp. 136–179). Aldine. — Foundational theoretical framework for understanding sex differences through the lens of differential parental investment.

van Vugt, M., De Cremer, D., & Janssen, D. P. (2007). Gender differences in cooperation and competition: The male-warrior hypothesis. Psychological Science, 18(1), 19–23. — Experimental research supporting the hypothesis that males evolved specific psychological mechanisms for coalitional intergroup defense.

Zimbardo, P. G. (2007). The Lucifer Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil. Random House. — Psychological examination of how protective and aggressive impulses are shaped by social systems and situational factors.

 

 

Prepared with scholarly care for the intersection of evolutionary biology, psychology, and cultural anthropology.

Twelve Warnings

by Akira Ichinose (author, editor and researcher)


Twelve Warnings from History

A Narrative of Recurring Human Patterns

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Introduction: History's Unheeded Voice

There's a line attributed, in various forms, to Mark Twain that history doesn't repeat itself — but it rhymes. Whether or not Twain actually said it, the sentiment is hard to argue with. You look at the sweep of recorded human events and you start to notice something uncomfortable: the same disasters keep showing up. Different costumes, different geography, different names on the monuments — but the underlying pattern is disturbingly familiar.


This is not a counsel of despair. Recognizing a pattern is the first step toward breaking it. What follows are twelve warnings — twelve recurring catastrophic lessons — that civilizations, leaders, and ordinary people have had to relearn the hard way, across centuries and continents. Some of these warnings feel urgently modern. Others feel ancient. Most feel like both at once.

Each warning comes with its history, its logic, and its cost. The intent here isn't to lecture but to tell the stories as they actually unfolded — because stories, unlike statistics, have a way of sticking around in memory. And memory, in the end, is the only real defense we have.


Warning One: The Hubris of Overreach

The pattern shows up so often it almost becomes boring — almost. An empire or a power reaches a moment of genuine greatness, and then, instead of consolidating, it pushes further. It mistakes momentum for invincibility. It confuses the ability to project force with the wisdom of knowing when not to.


The Athenians were riding high in 415 BCE when they launched the Sicilian Expedition. Their democracy was functional, their navy was the best in the Mediterranean, and they had just survived a punishing war with Sparta. The statesman Alcibiades, brilliant and reckless in equal measure, convinced the assembly that Syracuse — a city they barely understood, thousands of miles across unfamiliar water — could be taken. The assembly cheered. Thucydides, watching, was horrified. The expedition was a catastrophe of the first order. Athens lost not just soldiers and ships, but the confidence that had defined a generation.


Napoleon learned the same lesson on the Russian steppe in 1812. The French Grande Armée that marched into Russia was the most powerful military force Europe had seen in a generation. The army that stumbled back out — what was left of it — was a ghost. Napoleon had assumed that Russian resistance would collapse the way Austrian resistance had, the way Prussian resistance had. Russia had other ideas. It traded space for time and let the winter do the rest.


Hitler reprised the performance in 1941 with Operation Barbarossa, apparently having read none of the relevant chapters. The pattern is not ignorance of history — Napoleon was famously well-read. The pattern is the psychological trap of momentum: when winning has worked before, the idea that it might stop working feels almost unthinkable. And that unthinkability is precisely where the danger hides.


The warning is simple to state and ferociously hard to internalize: the capacity to expand is not the same thing as the wisdom to know when expanding will destroy you.


Warning Two: The Cost of Appeasement

There's a reason the word 'appeasement' has become a political insult. It used to be considered statesmanship.


Neville Chamberlain was not a fool, and he was not a coward. He was a man who had lived through the First World War and could not bear the thought of another one. When he flew to Munich in September 1938 and handed Adolf Hitler the Sudetenland in exchange for a promise of no further territorial ambitions, he genuinely believed — or desperately needed to believe — that he was buying peace. The paper he waved at Croydon Airport was not theater. It was hope.

It was also catastrophically wrong. Hitler read the concession not as generosity but as weakness. Every boundary that yielded without resistance confirmed his judgment that the Western democracies lacked the will to fight. Czechoslovakia fell six months later. Poland fell the September after that. The war Chamberlain had tried to prevent arrived anyway — and arrived in far worse circumstances because the time bought had been spent arming Germany more than it had been spent preparing to stop Germany.


The trap of appeasement is that it feels like de-escalation while it functions as escalation by proxy. It signals to the aggressor that aggression works, which is precisely the signal most likely to produce more aggression. This is not a counsel for permanent confrontation — negotiation is essential, and most conflicts are best resolved at the table. The distinction lies in whether the negotiation is conducted from strength or from fear, and whether the concessions offered address genuine grievances or simply reward coercion.


History does not look kindly on the Munich Agreement. But it looks even less kindly on the world it helped create.


Warning Three: Intelligence Ignored

If there is a single sentence that appears more often than any other in post-disaster investigations, it might be this one: 


the warning signs were there.


The attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 was not a bolt from a clear sky, despite how it felt at the time. American intelligence had broken Japanese diplomatic codes. Analysts had noted the movement of Japanese carrier groups. A radar operator at Opana Point picked up a massive incoming formation at 7:02 a.m. and reported it up the chain. The officer on duty told him it was probably a flight of B-17s expected from the mainland. Fifty-three minutes later, the first bombs hit Battleship Row.


The failure at Pearl Harbor was not primarily a failure of intelligence collection. It was a failure of imagination — the specific cognitive error of dismissing information that doesn't fit the picture you've already formed of what is and isn't possible. Admiral Husband Kimmel and General Walter Short had assessed that a carrier-based attack on Pearl Harbor was too difficult, too risky, too far outside the envelope of what Japan would reasonably attempt. That prior conviction filtered out the signals that contradicted it.


The same pattern played out on September 11, 2001. The 9/11 Commission's report is, among other things, a meticulous catalog of warnings that were received, noted, and not acted upon with sufficient urgency. An FBI field agent in Phoenix had sent a memo in July 2001 noting that an unusual number of Middle Eastern men were seeking flight training. A Minneapolis FBI agent had tried urgently to get a warrant to search the laptop of Zacarias Moussaoui. The President's Daily Brief on August 6 contained the now-infamous header: 'Bin Ladin Determined to Strike in US.'


The warning here is about what psychologists call confirmation bias — the very human tendency to weight evidence that confirms our existing beliefs and discount evidence that challenges them. In intelligence and security contexts, that bias can get people killed.


Warning Four: The Demagogue's Bargain

The demagogue is not a new invention. Thucydides wrote about them in fifth-century Athens. Polybius analyzed the cycle by which democracies tend to decay into mob rule. The warning has been posted in one form or another for as long as there have been democracies to threaten.


The demagogue's bargain works like this: a society under real stress — economic dislocation, cultural anxiety, a perceived loss of status by a significant portion of the population — becomes receptive to a leader who offers simple explanations for complex problems, identifies enemies (internal or external) who can be blamed for the society's pain, and promises a restoration of greatness that is always somewhat hazy on specifics but emotionally vivid.


The mechanism is familiar from Weimar Germany, where the economic devastation of hyperinflation and then the Great Depression created a population that was genuinely suffering and desperately looking for someone to blame. Hitler provided the blame, packaged in a mythology of national humiliation and redemptive violence. The conditions that produced him were real. The story he told about those conditions was catastrophically false.


What makes the demagogue's rise so historically persistent is that each generation tends to believe it is immune to the manipulation that destroyed previous ones. The Germans of the 1920s considered themselves an educated, culturally sophisticated people. They were. It didn't protect them. The warning from history is not that certain kinds of populations are uniquely susceptible to demagoguery — it's that virtually all populations become susceptible under sufficient stress, and that the antidotes — strong institutions, a free and skeptical press, civic education, economic security — require constant maintenance.


Warning Five: The Quagmire of Prolonged War

Every prolonged military disaster in history begins with someone being confident it will be short.


In August 1914, the German military leadership calculated that the war would be over before the leaves fell. The British army, a professional force, was sent to France 'by Christmas' in the cultural imagination of the time. Four years, seventeen million dead, and civilizational trauma later, the leaves had fallen four times.


The lesson was not absorbed. In Vietnam, the United States military entered with a doctrine of 'limited war' and a conviction that superior firepower and technology could break North Vietnamese will within a manageable time frame. Robert McNamara's Defense Department tracked kill ratios and body counts with the same precision it had once applied to Ford Motor Company production targets, and was equally confident the numbers would tell the real story. They did tell a story, but not the one McNamara wanted: 


the North Vietnamese were fighting for national survival and reunification, and they were willing to absorb casualties that the American public would not sustain indefinitely.


Afghanistan, where both the Soviet Union and later the United States-led coalition invested years and treasure against an insurgency that outlasted both of them, is the most recent iteration of this ancient lesson. The graveyard of empires earns its nickname.


The warning is about the fundamental difference between military capacity and political will — the adversary's, and your own. A war that cannot be won quickly and cheaply tends not to be won at all, regardless of the military balance on paper, because political will erodes under the weight of time and cost in ways that firepower does not address.


Warning Six: The Plague Ignored

Plague has reshaped history more often than most wars. And the historical record on how societies respond to it is, with painful consistency, a catalog of denial and delay.


When the Black Death reached Sicily in October 1347 on Genoese trading ships, the sailors were already dying. The Sicilian authorities, to their credit, attempted to quarantine the ships — but the disease had already escaped to the harbor. Within three years, somewhere between one-third and one-half of Europe's population was dead. The speed of the catastrophe overwhelmed every institution designed to respond to it.


What's historically striking about epidemic responses is not primarily the failure of quarantine logistics — those failures are understandable given what fourteenth-century medicine knew about contagion. What is striking is the consistent political reluctance to take early warnings seriously when taking them seriously would be economically disruptive. Venice invented the forty-day quarantine — the quarantino — in 1377 precisely because the mercantile city had learned, catastrophically, what happened when trade was allowed to flow unchecked during an outbreak. Other cities learned the same lesson repeatedly because the economic incentive to keep ports open repeatedly overcame the health-based incentive to close them.


The 1918 influenza pandemic — which killed more people than the First World War that surrounded it — was mishandled at every level, in part because wartime censorship suppressed early reporting and in part because public health officials in multiple countries were reluctant to trigger panic. Philadelphia held a large public gathering in late September 1918, over the objections of the city's public health director. Within days, the city's hospitals were overwhelmed.


The warning is that early, decisive action in a pandemic costs far less than late action — economically, medically, politically — but that the political cost of acting early, before the crisis is fully visible, has historically been high enough to discourage the response that would actually save the most lives.


Warning Seven: When Inequality Breaks the System

Rome is the case study here, though it is far from the only one.


The Roman Republic did not die in a day, or from a single cause. But if you had to identify the structural crack that widened until the whole edifice collapsed, the concentration of land and wealth in the hands of a small senatorial aristocracy is a strong candidate. The Gracchi brothers — Tiberius and Gaius — tried in the 130s and 120s BCE to push through land reforms that would have redistributed some of the ager publicus, public land that had been effectively privatized by the wealthy. Both were killed by mobs organized by the senatorial class they threatened. The reforms failed. The underlying inequality did not go away; it deepened. A century of civil wars followed.


The relationship between severe inequality and political instability is one of the most robustly documented patterns in historical and social science research. Walter Scheidel's work on the 'Great Leveler' documents how, across history, significant reductions in inequality have been achieved almost exclusively through catastrophic violence — war, revolution, pandemic, state collapse. The implication is that societies that resist the gradual, institutional redistribution of resources tend to get the violent version eventually.


France in 1789 is another textbook case. The tax burden fell almost entirely on the peasantry and the urban poor, while the nobility and clergy were effectively exempt. When a series of harvest failures combined with the fiscal bankruptcy of the monarchy, the explosive pressure of accumulated grievance found its expression in ways that nobody — including most of the revolutionaries — had quite anticipated.


The warning is not that inequality is simply unfair — though it often is. It's that extreme inequality is politically destabilizing in ways that tend to produce outcomes that are bad for everyone, including the people at the top.


Warning Eight: Technology Outrunning Wisdom

The bow and arrow, the stirrup, gunpowder, the Maxim gun, poison gas, the atomic bomb, the internet. Every new technology that has substantially altered the capacity for violence, surveillance, or mass persuasion has arrived faster than the social, legal, and ethical frameworks capable of governing it.


The introduction of poison gas in World War I is instructive. Germany deployed chlorine gas at Ypres in April 1915, initially to considerable tactical effect. Within months, both sides were using it routinely. By the war's end, chemical weapons had caused approximately 1.3 million casualties. The Hague Conventions had existed since 1899, but nobody had quite anticipated the industrialization of poison, and the legal framework was inadequate.


The nuclear case is in some ways even more instructive, because the gap between technological capability and governing wisdom was so extreme and so conscious. The physicists at Los Alamos knew exactly what they were building. Many of them were deeply troubled by it. Robert Oppenheimer's now-famous quotation from the Bhagavad Gita — 'Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds' — has become a cultural cliché precisely because it captures something genuine about the moment when technology achieves a scale of destruction that human moral frameworks have no ready response to.


The pattern since has been consistent: new technologies with transformative potential — nuclear energy, the internet, social media, artificial intelligence — arrive with their benefits visible and their risks unclear, and the regulatory and ethical frameworks that might govern them tend to be built reactively, after the damage is already accumulating.


The warning is not that technological development should be slowed or stopped. It's that the development of wisdom and governance to match new technological capabilities is not automatic, not guaranteed, and historically one of the areas where human civilizations have most consistently fallen short.


Warning Nine: The Revolution That Eats Its Own

Jacques Mallet du Pan, watching the French Revolution consume the idealists who had launched it, wrote in 1793: 'The revolution devours its children.' He was describing a mechanism that has recurred with remarkable consistency across revolutionary history.


The Terror of 1793-1794 began with a genuine security crisis — France was at war with most of Europe, and counter-revolutionary forces were active within its borders. Robespierre and the Committee of Public Safety were responding to real threats. But the logic of revolutionary purity, once unleashed, has a terrible momentum. The definition of 'enemy of the revolution' expanded continuously, consuming first the obvious royalists, then the moderate republicans, then the radical Hébertists, then Danton and his associates, and finally, almost inevitably, Robespierre himself, guillotined in Thermidor 1794.


Stalin's Great Purge of 1936-1938 followed the same logic with industrial efficiency. The revolution's original leadership — the Bolsheviks who had made the October Revolution — were tried in show trials and mostly shot. Loyal party members who had spent decades serving the Soviet state were denounced by colleagues under torture, and then those colleagues were denounced in turn. The mechanism fed on itself until Stalin decided it had served its purpose.


The Cambodian Khmer Rouge, the Cultural Revolution in China, the Iranian Revolution's treatment of its own secular and leftist allies — the pattern is persistent enough to constitute what might be called a law of revolutionary dynamics: radical movements that gain power through the logic of absolute ideological purity tend to turn that logic inward, because purity is a standard that nobody can finally meet.


The warning is about what happens when the mechanisms of accountability and restraint are dismantled in the name of revolutionary necessity. Once those mechanisms are gone, there is nothing left to protect even the revolutionaries.


Warning Ten: The Bubble Always Bursts

In 1637, Dutch tulip bulbs were trading at prices equivalent to several times the annual income of a skilled craftsman. A single Semper Augustus bulb — a particularly coveted variety with dramatic flame-patterned petals — reportedly sold for 10,000 guilders, enough to buy a fine house in Amsterdam.


Then the market turned. In February 1637, buyers began to balk at the prices. Sellers who could find no buyers panicked. Within weeks, tulip bulb prices had collapsed to near zero. The Dutch economy absorbed the shock — tulip mania was not as systemically catastrophic as sometimes portrayed — but the pattern it established is one of the most reliably recurring in economic history.


The South Sea Bubble of 1720, the U.S. railroad speculation of the 1880s, the roaring stock market of the 1920s, the savings and loan crisis, the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s, the housing bubble that produced the 2008 financial crisis — each one has its specific features, its specific instruments of speculation, its specific cast of characters. All of them follow the same basic arc: an asset class rises in value beyond any rational connection to underlying fundamentals, sustained by a belief that prices will continue rising indefinitely and by the fact that rising prices attract buyers who are afraid of missing the gains.


Charles Kindleberger's classic analysis identifies the pattern: displacement (a genuine new opportunity or technology), boom, euphoria, distress, revulsion, tranquility — and then, eventually, the next displacement. The warning embedded in the cycle is not that speculation is irrational in any simple sense. At certain stages of a bubble, buying into the rising asset is individually rational precisely because others are doing the same thing. The irrationality is collective and systemic.


Every generation has believed, with some justification, that this time the asset in question — whether railroad stocks, internet companies, or mortgage-backed securities — represents a genuine paradigm shift that justifies elevated valuations. Every generation has eventually been wrong about the valuations, even when they were right about the underlying change.


Warning Eleven: The Fragility of Complex Systems

The Bronze Age Collapse of roughly 1200 BCE remains one of the most dramatic civilizational failures in recorded history. Within a span of perhaps fifty years, the great palace cultures of the Eastern Mediterranean — Mycenaean Greece, the Hittite Empire, Cyprus, and much of the Levantine trading system — disintegrated. Writing systems disappeared. Trade networks that had connected Greece to Egypt to Anatolia collapsed. Population levels dropped drastically and took centuries to recover.


Historians debate the causes: the Sea Peoples, climate disruption, internal rebellions, earthquake storms, systems collapse. Eric Cline's work argues compellingly that no single cause is adequate to explain what happened — the Bronze Age system was simply too interconnected, too dependent on long-distance trade in specific commodities (copper from Cyprus, tin from Afghanistan), and too lacking in redundancy to survive the simultaneous failure of multiple nodes.


The warning embedded in the Bronze Age Collapse is one of the most relevant to the modern era. Contemporary global supply chains, financial systems, and energy grids are all characterized by the same features that made the Bronze Age system vulnerable: high efficiency achieved through specialization and interdependence, with redundancy minimized as a cost to be eliminated. The system works beautifully until it doesn't.


The COVID-19 pandemic provided a vivid recent demonstration. Decades of 'just-in-time' manufacturing and global supply chain optimization had eliminated the slack and redundancy that might have buffered a sudden shock. When the shock came, the result was shortages of personal protective equipment, semiconductor chips, and basic goods on a scale that surprised even those who had spent careers studying supply chain vulnerability.


The warning is about the hidden costs of efficiency — that the optimization of complex systems for normal operating conditions typically reduces their resilience to abnormal conditions, and that abnormal conditions are less rare than the models tend to assume.


Warning Twelve: The Destruction We Don't Notice Until It's Gone

Jared Diamond's account of Easter Island is well known enough to have become almost a cliché, but it earns its place in this list because it represents a category of warning that is uniquely hard to hear: the slow-motion destruction of the foundations on which a civilization rests.


The Rapa Nui people who settled Easter Island around 1200 CE built a remarkable culture, capable of quarrying and transporting the massive stone figures — moai — that still define the island's landscape. They did this, apparently, by using the island's palm forest for timber, rope, and agricultural land clearance. The forest was not inexhaustible. By the time European explorers arrived in 1722, the island was largely deforested, its soil eroding, its bird populations decimated, and its population a fraction of its peak. The culture that had built the moai had collapsed in what appears to have been a combination of environmental degradation, warfare over scarce resources, and starvation.


The haunting question Diamond poses: what was the person thinking who cut down the last tree? The answer, most likely, is that no single person made the decision to cut down the last tree. The forest disappeared incrementally, each individual decision to cut marginally more timber being locally and temporally rational even as the cumulative result was catastrophic.


The same logic applies to the depletion of fisheries — the Grand Banks cod fishery that sustained Atlantic communities for centuries was declared commercially extinct in 1992, despite decades of scientific warning — and to topsoil loss, aquifer depletion, and atmospheric carbon accumulation. The destruction is distributed across millions of individual decisions, none of which feels decisive, which makes collective response extraordinarily difficult.


This is perhaps the deepest and most troubling of the twelve warnings, because it describes a failure mode that is structurally resistant to correction. Individual rationality produces collective catastrophe. The benefits of the destructive behavior are immediate and private; the costs are delayed and shared. History offers few examples of societies successfully solving this problem at scale without external forcing — usually a crisis that makes the costs impossible to ignore.


Conclusion: The Purpose of Warning

Twelve warnings. Twelve recurring catastrophes, each with its own specific texture and its own specific cast of actors making choices that, with hindsight, look obvious — but in the moment felt justified, rational, or simply inevitable.


The purpose of reviewing them is not to produce despair about human nature. Human beings are capable of learning. Smallpox has been eradicated. The ozone layer is recovering, slowly, because international cooperation on the Montreal Protocol actually worked. Germany and France, which spent a century destroying each other and the continent around them, are now at peace and economically integrated in ways that would have been literally unimaginable to anyone present at Verdun in 1916.


But learning requires, first, a willingness to look at the pattern rather than dismissing each recurrence as unique and therefore unprecedented. The demagogue always feels new. The bubble always seems different this time. The intelligence warning always seems ambiguous in the moment. The war always seems like it will be short.


History is most useful not as a sourcebook of tactical wisdom but as a corrective to the psychological traps that make these warnings perpetually necessary: the overconfidence that converts capacity into recklessness, the motivated reasoning that converts hope into policy, the short-term thinking that converts immediate benefit into long-term catastrophe.

The warnings are there. They have always been there. The question — and it is always the question — is whether anyone is listening.

 

Bibliography

Cline, Eric H. 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2014.

Diamond, Jared. Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. New York: Viking Press, 2005.

Galbraith, John Kenneth. The Great Crash 1929. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1954.

Kindleberger, Charles P., and Robert Aliber. Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises. 6th ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.

Levitsky, Steven, and Daniel Ziblatt. How Democracies Die. New York: Crown Publishing, 2018.

MacMillan, Margaret. The War That Ended Peace: The Road to 1914. New York: Random House, 2013.

McNamara, Robert S. In Retrospect: The Tragedy and Lessons of Vietnam. New York: Times Books, 1995.

National Commission on Terrorist Attacks. The 9/11 Commission Report. New York: W.W. Norton, 2004.

Prange, Gordon W. At Dawn We Slept: The Untold Story of Pearl Harbor. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1981.

Roberts, Andrew. Napoleon: A Life. New York: Viking, 2014.

Scheidel, Walter. The Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality from the Stone Age to the Twenty-First Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2017.

Snyder, Timothy. On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century. New York: Tim Duggan Books, 2017.

Taylor, A.J.P. The Origins of the Second World War. London: Hamish Hamilton, 1961.

Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War. Translated by Rex Warner. London: Penguin Classics, 1954.

Tuchman, Barbara W. The Guns of August. New York: Macmillan, 1962.

Tuchman, Barbara W. The March of Folly: From Troy to Vietnam. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1984.

 

Integrated Fact-Check

Warning One: The Sicilian Expedition (415–413 BCE) is documented in Thucydides' History of the Peloponnesian War, Books VI–VII. The defeat is confirmed as catastrophic for Athenian power. Napoleon's Russian campaign losses are well-documented; estimates of total casualties range from 300,000 to over 500,000.

Warning Two: Chamberlain's flight to Munich and the text of the Munich Agreement are historical record, September 29-30, 1938. His statement at Croydon Airport ('peace for our time') is documented. The German occupation of remaining Czechoslovakia followed in March 1939.

Warning Three: The Opana Point radar report and duty officer response are documented in the Pearl Harbor investigations. The Phoenix Memo (July 10, 2001) and the August 6 PDB are confirmed in the 9/11 Commission Report.

Warning Four: The attribution of 'History doesn't repeat itself, but it rhymes' to Mark Twain is disputed — it does not appear in his verified writings. Its use here is appropriately hedged.

Warning Five: The 'home by Christmas' sentiment is documented in accounts of August 1914 public mood; Schlieffen Plan anticipated a six-week western campaign. Vietnam casualty figures and McNamara's body-count doctrine are well-documented.

Warning Six: The Black Death death toll estimate (one-third to one-half of European population) reflects the range in current historical scholarship. Venice's quarantine (quarantino) dates to 1377–1403. Philadelphia's September 28, 1918 Liberty Loan parade over health officer Dr. Wilmer Krusen's reported objections is documented in multiple sources.

Warning Seven: The Gracchi brothers' dates (Tiberius tribune 133 BCE, Gaius 123–122 BCE) and their deaths by mob violence are confirmed in Plutarch and other ancient sources. Scheidel's 'Great Leveler' thesis accurately represents his 2017 Princeton University Press work.

Warning Eight: Ypres gas attack is confirmed as April 22, 1915. Chemical weapon casualty figure of approximately 1.3 million is within the scholarly range (various estimates run 1–1.3 million casualties, with around 90,000 deaths). Oppenheimer's Bhagavad Gita quotation is documented from Trinity test accounts.

Warning Nine: Mallet du Pan's 'revolution devours its children' quote (Considérations sur la nature de la Révolution de France, 1793) is historically documented. Robespierre was executed July 27, 1794 (9 Thermidor Year II). Stalin's Great Purge dates and scope are confirmed in standard historical sources.

Warning Ten: The Semper Augustus tulip bulb pricing figures are drawn from Mike Dash's Tulipomania (1999) and are representative of peak prices, though precise figures vary by source. Kindleberger's bubble cycle model accurately represents his Manias, Panics, and Crashes framework.

Warning Eleven: The Bronze Age Collapse dating (c. 1200–1150 BCE) is standard scholarship. Cline's multi-causal 'systems collapse' thesis accurately represents his 2014 Princeton work. The 1992 Grand Banks cod moratorium is confirmed.

Warning Twelve: Easter Island settlement dating (approximately 1200 CE) reflects current consensus. The 1722 Dutch explorer arrival (Jacob Roggeveen, Easter Sunday) is confirmed. Diamond's 'last tree' framing is from Collapse (2005). The deforestation-collapse connection is supported by palynological and archaeological evidence, though some scholars (e.g., Hunt and Lipo) attribute greater weight to introduced rats and post-contact disease.

Twelve Warnings from History  |  Page