This episode is supported by Vantage Point's Executive Sponsor, Stephen Bozer.
About this episode
Alliances are more important than ever, and Eli Amdur builds his case by traveling back more than 800 years before returning to the present. In this fourth of eight inaugural episodes of Vantage Point, he uses history as a mirror for critical thinking, arguing that the decision to go it alone or align with complementary interests is not really a difficult choice at all.
Eli traces the rise of the Hanseatic League, a medieval confederation of merchant guilds that grew to nearly 200 settlements across nine modern countries. He then contrasts today's alliances, comparing BRICS and NATO by population and GDP, and examines Trump's remarks on NATO, America First, and how European leaders like Macron responded by strengthening their alliances.
The episode is textured with three of Eli's aphorisms on time, kindness, and preparation, plus reflections on great minds, especially Benjamin Franklin, and a What If exploring Kosciuszko, Lafayette, and Thomas Paine's Common Sense. Listeners are invited to comment at his website and hear a promised Franklin story arriving in September.
In this episode
- What was the Hanseatic League and why did it matter
- Why are alliances more important than ever today
- How do BRICS and NATO compare in population and GDP
- What did Trump's NATO and America First remarks get wrong about alliances
- Why did Benjamin Franklin never become president
- What if Franklin and Jefferson had not recruited Kosciuszko and Thomas Paine
Eli’s Aphorisms
From Great Minds
Transcript
This is Vantage Point, the podcast for critical thinkers, where we make sense of and excel in our lives, our jobs, and our world.
We're not political, just critical.
Thanks for joining in the fourth of our eight inaugural episodes. I'm your host, Eli Amdur.
We've had a few weeks now to think about thinking, especially of the critical kind. And I hope we agree, critical thinking is in danger of becoming extinct.
What has happened here?
What has become of critical thinking?
Vantage Point has one objective, and one only, to help make you better, more competitive, and more fulfilled by constantly improving your critical thinking.
Read the full transcript
Today, let me take you back more than 800 years, and then bring you back to the present, all to explore good and perhaps not such good thinking.
Let's talk about alliances.
Alliances are more important than ever, and they will come up again in this podcast. But for now, you have a decision to make.
You're a major trader of goods over established trade routes, or you're a land baron controlling resources like timber, furs, grains, textiles, and chalk.
Resources that proliferate across your expansive lands and numerous ports in central and northern Europe.
You have come under increasing pressure over the last 30 years or so from trade competition, new trade routes, the need for new classes of goods, and from hostile forces like pirates and invaders.
The year is somewhere around 1175. 1975.
And new worlds and markets still haven't opened up yet because Marco Polo hasn't gotten here yet, let alone Christopher Columbus.
And Johannes Gutenberg's printing press, the great expander of the world's knowledge, is still nearly 300 years away.
Your world, as you know it, isn't global. it's narrowly parochial but surely becoming regional and increasingly difficult to manage what do you do essentially your decision comes down to this do you go it alone or do you align yourself with other complementary interests confident that there is a strength in numbers and opportunity in expanding your reach.
It's not a difficult choice.
I want to talk to you about the rise of the Hanseatic League.
In giving thought to the preceding discussion, what you've done, the decision you've made, is to join the Hanseatic League, a medieval, commercial, and defensive confederation of merchant guilds and market towns, both coastal and inland, in Central and Northern Europe.
Growing from a handful of northern German towns in the mid to late 12th century, the League expanded between the 13th and the 15th centuries and ultimately encompassed nearly 200 settlements across nine modern-day countries in Europe.
Estonia, Latvia, Russia, Sweden, Poland, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, and the United Kingdom, all being done without instant global communication, no less.
Ideals were ideals after all.
The League, originally a loose association of smaller commercial interests, coalesced to form what became the predominant global trading interest, not only promoting trade, but supplying defense and protection.
Hanseatic League traders enjoyed toll privileges, protection in affiliated communities and their trade routes, economic interdependence, and all sorts of alliances between ruling families. Otherwise known today as good foreign relations.
Ultimately, the League operated under common regulations and codes. And during its heyday, the League dominated trade in the North and Baltic Seas.
There was no doubt about its benefits.
It's hard to think of anything that hasn't changed in the world since the 12th century.
Until, of course, we think of things like alliances, leagues, treaties, unions, and guilds.
Unless polluted by politics or corrupted by personal interests, these organizations were established for and always served the benefits of their members.
Well, now, let's fast forward 800 years.
Leading alliances of the 20th century include NATO, the United Nations, Benelux, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, still in existence, by the way, but nominally, the European Union, the United Arab Emirates, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which was entered into by President Obama and withdrawn by President Trump and now operating without the U.S. and BRICS, B-R -I-C -S.
Originally it was BRIC, four letters, B-R -I-C, an acronym for Brazil, Russia, India, and China.
It soon added South Africa to make it BRICS So now let's do some addition The original four countries have a combined population Of three and a quarter billion people Or 41 % of the people who inhabit this globe This is United Nations data Their combined GDP is 24 % trillion dollars, which is 24.7 % of the world's output. That's a powerful block and even larger when we add in the remainder of the now 12 BRICS countries.
On the other hand, the combined population of the 31 NATO states is 960 million people, or 11.9 % of the world's population, with a combined GDP of $50 trillion, actually $49.8 trillion. This is NATO data, and that comprises 51 % of the world's economic output. So, 41 % of the people in the world, BRICS, are producing 24 % of the world's output. That's kind of weak.
It's just enormous.
On the other hand, in the West, 960 million people or 11, let's say 12 % of the world's population is producing $50 trillion.
And that is much smaller, but much more powerful and much bigger in economic output. Okay. So you see the contrast here.
In light of these numbers, First-term President Donald Trump's remarks about abandoning NATO countries, who failed to allocate 2 % of their GDP to NATO defense, seem to miss the whole point of an alliance.
Military defense is not the only issue, as the history of the Hanseatic League teaches us.
And when the distraction of the U.S.-Iran war dissipates, standing naked will be the only world leader and his sycophants who have the real possibility of taking us back 800 years and leaving us there.
A remarkably different take on global alliances. So what have world leaders and world citizens learned from this? What have they learned from the success of the Hanseatic League for a couple of hundred years? And what does that look like in today's world?
When Donald Trump first took office and discussed America first many people were afraid that our allies would not feel so strongly about that and would see a weakening of defense and business and take off in their own direction and that's exactly what's been doing Germany, UK, France, Italy, the larger economic and military powers of Europe.
Their leaders and their citizens seem to have learned the value of tightening up the alliance, strengthening it, bolstering it.
And we have not.
But recent actions and speeches by Emmanuel Macron of France and by the leaders of the other great nations, including the smaller great nations like Netherlands and Belgium, indicate that alliances as the title of this essay, this verbal essay, indicate are more important than ever. It's a lesson that should have been learned. It's the kind of lesson that if you're involved in good, clear, positive, forward-looking, critical thinking, you're going to get it. But we cannot afford to have negative forces take us back 800 years and leave us there.
We're going to begin this homestretch with a few of my aphorisms. I've been asked by a couple of people, where did I get these? There's no book, no text, nothing. And I haven't quoted anybody. These are, in total, about 368 truths, which I've discovered along the way in my very long business career, which began in the area of education in 1968 and the area of business in 1973. These are my truths.
After these, we'll talk about some great thoughts from great minds.
Today's aphorism number one.
Unattended over time, problems get bigger and opportunities get smaller.
There is no exception to that rule. Number two, forever try to be just a little kinder than is necessary.
No matter what you're doing, you need to be kinder than is necessary.
And number three, over-prepare.
Preparation is one thing you can't ever have enough of. So what are the three aphorisms dealing with today?
The use of time, kindness, and preparation.
As the leader of an organization or a political entity, if you are attentive, kind, and prepared, Good lessons as you are leading an organization or a political entity or whatever.
When you talk about great minds, you've got to talk about Ben Franklin.
Who probably invented things across as wide a spectrum as Thomas Edison.
And we'll visit with him in the weeks to come.
We know Ben Franklin as a pamphleteer, poor Richard's almanac. We know him as a scientist and electricity.
Probably the single most dynamic changemaker from a scientific point of view.
Ever since Franklin was alive in 1706.
Franklin kept his eyes and ears and mind open and gave us immensely important things.
The Franklin stove, bifocals, electricity.
And really was one of the very first people who was a proponent of great diplomacy.
I always laugh when people say, why didn't Franklin ever become president of the United States? Well, that was simple. He should have, but he was ahead of us because Franklin died in 1790.
And our first president didn't take office until 1797. but he was an ambassador to France he was someone who developed a tremendous relationship with the great Polish diplomat Kosciuszko and attracted Kosciuszko here to help us develop the beginnings of this nation we owe Franklin more than we owe just about anyone else.
And it's always a good idea to have a copy of the book Poor Richard's Almanac in your bookshelf.
A little bit later this year I'll tell you a delightful delicious story about Franklin but that's going to come up in September.
If you want to be part of this discussion go to my website site, eleander.com, and leave a comment.
Now it's time to talk about what if.
Greatest question that ever was invented.
I've spoken about some of the founding fathers. I've spoken about the European Union. I've been up and down the scale of history.
But I'd like to ask you to think, this great nation of ours, the United States, in its 250th year, is a great example of what if, and what if something had not happened. What if Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson, were not so dynamically successful in attracting to the United States the Marquis de Lafayette at the age of 26, by the way, and Tadeusz Kosciusko from Poland, an immensely talented, very smart, strategic, and tactical thinker.
And indeed, it was Kosciuszko who was responsible for the defense of West Point with the famous chain across the Hudson River, which at the time was called the North River and who added to the discussion about how our constitution would work and how our branches of government would work. What if Franklin and Jefferson had not attracted Kosciuszko?
You know, Kosciuszko left the United States and went back to his native Poland and helped Poland establish the very first constitution on that continent. Now he had great difficulty.
Tsarina Catherine the Great couldn't stand him and imprisoned him and others made the rest of his life until the day he died very difficult.
He almost agreed to come back to the United States through Philadelphia, where he originally set foot on these shores, to accept the offer that Franklin, Jefferson, and Washington gave him of 50,000 acres.
There's 640 acres in a square mile. No, 50,000 square miles of land covering Western Virginia, West Virginia, Eastern and Southeastern Ohio. That's how badly they wanted Kosciuszko here in the United States.
They never got him on a permanent basis, but they did get all his wisdom, his strategies, his tactics. what if they were not able to do that we'll talk about it next time although that discussion runs itself there's another guy that franklin and jefferson and washington especially washington were instrumental medal in recruiting to the cause.
And that's Thomas Paine, who wrote Common Sense.
It is said that were it not for the pen of Thomas Paine, the sword of Washington would have been in vain.
What if they were not able to attract this Scottish immigrant to the United States' cause to write common sense?
It's estimated that of the three million colonists who lived in the colonies at that time, at the time of the revolution, half of them purchased copies of Common Sense, half.
That would be the equivalent today of an author selling 150 million copies of a book.
Nobody does that Thomas Paine did And it's not as if he was Clearly in agreement with everybody Because he and Jefferson And he and Franklin Had their spats But everybody knew That it was Thomas Paine Who made the revolution Live Through the citizens of the colonies at the time. These are things also that Jefferson and Franklin did.
What would have happened if they didn't succeed?
We can talk about that more next time, but think about it.
So with that, we're going to slide home, but not until I tell you that next week I'm going to talk about another one of my very famous and favorite human beings, Nicolaus Comperticus, one of the original critical thinkers of all time.
We're going to talk about writing. And thinking are very closely related. And we're going to talk about writing and continuing to write on a regular basis.
I'm going to talk in depth about critical traits for the 21st century, and there happen to be 21 of them, and how it is so important to think of critical thinking not as a skill but as a trait we all need to develop.
That brings us to the end of this episode thanks for your time see you next time until then keep questioning keep learning and keep thinking critically
Transcript auto-generated from the episode audio and lightly edited for readability.
