Exiting week for this fledgling author. Spent the day working on book 4/5 of the Steel and Honor Series. Late this afternoon book 2/5 “Antietam: Secession to the Bloodiest Day,” was published as a ebook on Amazon. https://t.co/249bD1IuPJ. #CivilWar#Antietam#WestPoint#Steel&Honor
Anthropic engineer:
"You're not supposed to prompt Claude. You're supposed to build a system that prompts itself."
In 45 minutes she breaks down how Anthropic builds agents that remember, learn from their mistakes, and get smarter with every run.
Worth more than any paid course you'll find on building agents.
Watch the session, then read the guide on building loops below.
On Dec 7, 1941, Doris “Dorie” Miller — a Black mess attendant with no gunnery training — became a Pearl Harbor hero.🫡
He carried wounded officers to safety under fire, then manned a .50-cal gun and blasted Japanese planes. First Black sailor awarded the Navy Cross. 🇺🇸🦉
Born in Waco, Texas, 1919. Big, strong farm boy turned sailor on USS West Virginia. Amid the chaos of bombs and torpedoes, Miller showed incredible courage when it mattered most.
Admiral Nimitz pinned the Navy Cross on him in 1942. Many believed he deserved the Medal of Honor. His bravery pushed against segregation barriers in the military.
Miller gave his life in 1943 aboard USS Liscome Bay. True American hero who proved valor has no color.
Remember Dorie Miller today — what’s one act of courage you admire from WWII history?
#PearlHarbor #WWIIHeroes
The single richest man in America personally bankrolled the Revolution, kept Washington's army alive with his own money, and then died broke in a debtors' prison. The man who funded the country got thrown in jail for being poor. Meet Robert Morris.
If the United States has a financial founding father, it's this guy, and almost nobody knows his name.
He was born in Liverpool, England, in 1734 and came to America as a 13 year old boy. He got into the shipping business in Philadelphia and was so good at it that by 1775 he was likely the wealthiest man in all of the colonies. Ships, trade, credit, money moving everywhere. He was the money.
Here's the wild part. At first he didn't even want to declare independence. He thought it was premature and voted against rushing into it. But once the decision was made, he didn't hedge. He signed the Declaration of Independence and threw his entire fortune behind the cause.
And thank God he did, because the young country was flat broke. The army was starving, unpaid, falling apart. So Morris did something almost nobody would do. He used his own personal credit and his own personal cash to keep the war going. When Washington needed money to march on Yorktown for the campaign that basically won the war, Morris helped raise it, at times pledging his own name and fortune to cover it. He became known as the Financier of the Revolution, and it's not an exaggeration. He kept the lights on.
He's also one of only two men to sign all three of America's founding documents, the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the Constitution. When Washington offered to make him the very first Treasury Secretary, Morris turned it down and pointed him to a young Alexander Hamilton instead.
Now the tragedy. After the war, Morris poured everything into massive land speculation, betting enormous sums on the future of the country. The bets went bad. Spectacularly bad. He ended up owing something like three million dollars, a genuinely staggering fortune for the time.
And so, in 1798, the man who had personally financed American independence was locked in a debtors' prison in Philadelphia. He sat in that cell for years. The Financier of the Revolution, penniless, behind bars, while the country he'd funded moved on without him.
He finally got out around 1801, aided by a new bankruptcy law, and lived quietly and broke until his death in 1806.
A man who was richer than anyone, gave it to a nation, and died with nothing.
Robert Morris. He bought America's freedom and went bankrupt doing it.
Every battlefield story begins with a first step.
Cadets to Captains: 1848–1860 builds the men. Antietam: From Secession to the Bloodiest Day tests them.
Experience the complete Steel and Honor journey.
#SteelAndHonor#HistoricalSeries#BookSeries#MilitaryHistory