Jocko Podcast - 48: “I Fought With Custer”, How Ego can Kill You, Avoid the Slippery Slope
Episode Date: November 9, 20160:00:00 - Opening / "I Fought With Custer" by Charles Windolph 1:47:17 - Thoughts and Take-aways 1:54:51 - Cool Internet, Onnit, Amazon, JockoStore stuff 2:10:31 - Closing ThanksSupport this ...podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content
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This is Jocko Podcast number 48 with Echo Charles and me, Jocko Willink.
We found General Custer on the bluffs, and near him lay the bodies of 11 of his officers.
As a tribute to his bravery, the Indians had not mutilated General Custer, and he lay as if asleep.
But all the other men had been most brutally mangled and had been.
had been stripped of their clothing.
Many of their skulls had been crushed in, eyes had been torn from their sockets, hands, feet,
arms, legs, and noses had been wrenched off.
Many had their flesh cut in strips the entire length of their bodies, and there were others
whose limbs were closely perforated with bullet holes, showing that the torture had been inflicted
while the wretched victims were yet alive.
There were 29 enlisted men missing from the field of blood,
and they undoubtedly had been taken prisoners and perished at the stake
while the Indians were celebrating their scalp dance
on the night of the 25th in sight of my camp.
Lying almost at Custer's feet was Young Reed,
a nephew of the generals,
who had been visiting him at Fort Lincoln
and who had pleaded to go on the campaign
where this handsome lad of 19
met such an untimely fate.
Within a few feet of the general
lay his two brothers, Boston and Tom.
There was in the whole army
no more popular man than gallant Tom Custer.
He was young, handsome,
a prince of good fellows
and full of that bravery
that even characterized the Custer's.
He had served with distinction during the war and had fought frequently before been engaged in Indian fights.
As we approached him, we were horrified to see that his body had been opened and his heart torn out.
Thus, I know that the vengeance of rain in the face had been at work.
Several years before, rain in the face had murdered two white men of our fort,
and afterwards boasted of it in the reservation.
He was arrested and brought to trial by Tom Custer.
But before the time appointed for his case it arrived,
the wily Indian had escaped,
sending back word to Captain Tom
that he would be revenged by cutting out his captor's heart.
Rain in the face kept his word
by literally tearing out the heart of young Tom Custer.
Near these three brothers and their boyish nephew,
Lay their brother-in-law, Lieutenant Calhoun, who had fallen on the skirmish line.
Custer's command was completely annihilated.
Not one of his men escaping.
Good evening, Echo.
Good evening.
That right there is an excerpt from a book called I Fought with Custer,
which is the story of Charles Windorf, who is a young.
young private that fought with one of the other companies in the same seventh cavalry regiment
that General George Custer led. General George Custer who was killed at the Battle of Little
Big Horn where he fought the Native Americans including our friend Wooden Legg who we heard
from on podcast 45. But the opening section that I just read was a
actually written by private windoff it is a section of an account that is written by a guy
named Major Reno who was one of the leaders of one of the other companies of men at the battle
that they include in this book this book called I fought with Custer and this was obviously a
brutal battle and my goal as always I shouldn't say as always but
My goal or where I like to focus is not so much on what details happen in the battle,
but what details happened with the human nature in the battle, the people, the leadership,
the decisions.
And we got some good understanding about the Native American perspective from Wooden Leg.
but now let's hear a little bit of what it was like for the troopers and I know I use that term on a fairly
regular basis but that is a very specific term in a cavalry unit this and at this time
a cavalry unit was literally units that they ride horses you know that's what it is mounted
cavalry, a soldier in a cavalry unit is specifically called a trooper.
And the word nowadays, it actually is used to cover a lot of different people.
You know, armored units use it.
Airborne units, you know, when you think of an airborne unit, parachuters, you think of a paratrooper.
Trooper being the key word.
There obviously, there's police, state troopers, and then obviously there's people that listen
to this podcast.
But that is what we have here.
The cavalry unit and this in particular was the seventh cavalry regiment and
The trooper like I said is this guy
Private Charles Windorf who was actually born in Germany
And emigrated to the United States. He became a cobbler
Like his dad. You know what a cobbler is? People who fix shoes people who fix shoes and you know what he fixed shoes for a while but he didn't like fixing shoes and
So what did you do?
Join the army.
And he ended up fighting in some of the Indian wars.
He actually received the Medal of Honor for his actions at Little Big Horn,
and we'll get into those.
But let's hear what Private Windorf has to say.
I'm going to the book.
June 25, 1946.
was the last time I saw him alive.
Two days later, I looked down on him lying in the White in the Montana Sun.
That would have been June 27, 1876.
And the following day, I helped him, I helped bury him and his brother, Captain Tom Custer.
They were putting graves alongside one another.
It was hard digging there on that high ridge that bordered little bit.
It's a long time to remember details and little things.
But when you've been thinking back on them all those years, they don't fade away as easily as you might think.
They're like burrs.
They stick in your mind.
People call it the Custer Massacre.
It wasn't any massacre.
It was a straight, hard fight, and the five troops who were with Custer simply got cut to ribbons,
and every last white man destroyed.
I say every last white man
because there were one or two crow scouts
who claimed they saw the start of the fight
and then skedaddled.
A crow Indian named Curley said he escaped
from the battlefield by putting a blanket over his head
and pretending he was a wounded sue.
I don't know whether there's any truth in that or not.
I never quite believed it.
There's been all kinds of stories about that battle.
Even the men who were with Bentine and Reno,
and live to tell the tale didn't come anywhere near telling the same stories about what they did and what they saw.
Some of them wanted to make heroes out of themselves or of their officers.
I only had one pair of eyes, so, of course, all I can tell is what I saw myself.
If it is something that I only heard, I'll be sure to mark it down as that.
Interestingly, this is something that we used to see all the time, in that you go out on an operating.
and when things happen, two guys, almost nobody will see the same thing.
Everybody sees some things a little bit different.
And it can be difficult to figure out what's actually accurate.
So that's, and he's going back.
When he's writing this book, I think it's been 70 years.
So when he's being interviewed and he's writing this book, it's been 70 years.
And he's saying he still remembers the details, but 70 years is a long time, long time.
and the characters that he just brought up,
Bentine is the guy that he worked for,
and Reno was one of the other majors.
And another word that they use here is troop.
Now, this is a word that's,
we think of it as an individual.
Hey, there's a trooper over there,
or there's a troop.
It actually is another term
that means basically like a company of guys.
Now, you can see it's small,
and this is more like a platoon.
What they're talking about
would be considered a platoon.
I would say from reading,
Um, he had five troops with him.
Custer did that got killed, you know, about 200 guys.
And so we're not talking about a massive group of people in each troop, but that's what
they're talking about, I don't know, 20 guys per troop or actually, what would that be,
40 guys per troop for five.
And so that's what they're talking about when they refer to the troops.
And even they use the word interchangeably and sometimes they'll refer to as companies and
sometimes they say troops.
Yeah.
So going back to the book here when he's initially in the army and what they're doing,
and he talks about what they were doing at this time.
It was pretty dull soldiering down there in the south.
The regiment was broken up into companies or small battalions,
and our job was to smash the Ku Klux Klan and run down illicit whiskey distillers.
It wasn't much fun for energetic, spirited young men.
And now he's going to talk a little bit about the 7th Cavalry.
As I say, the 7th Cavalry was only 7 years old in 1873, but it had a fine reputation.
Everybody in the country knew General Custer.
And he was always bragging about what a fine fighting regiment he had.
He was supposed to be the best Indian fighter in the American Army.
In the Civil War, they'd called him the boy general.
And he'd been a dashing popular figure.
The regiment had spent its first four years of its life on the Kansas Plains and an Indian territory.
The old timers in the outfit could sure tell some blood-curling Indian stories.
They used to say that it was worse than straight death to get captured by the Indians
because you would be slowly tortured until you gave up the ghost.
They told all of us young soldiers if we were ever wounded in an Indian fight and left behind
and in danger of being captured,
that we must save our last cartridge
to blow out our brains.
So that's an interesting point
when we remember Woodenleg said
that all the guys in Custer's group
ended up killing themselves.
And maybe that's a...
That very well might have happened.
Or at least some of them.
Back to the book.
By the spring of 1873,
the Plains Indians had been largely debased,
beaten and driven to the...
the great reservations that had been allotted to the various tribes.
It had not been a deliberate government policy,
but it had been a cruelly effective one.
Treaty after treaty had been broken by the relentless pressure of white men and their civilization,
constantly pushing against the ineffective resistance of the red men.
Now and again, the Indians had struck back,
and as a rule, their angry flare-ups were put down by the army
and then new and drastic treaties would be made and more land taken from them in punishment.
The ink would hardly be dry on these new government commitments
before the white pressure would be resumed, intrusions made,
and once again the bewildered, enraged Indians would strike back
only to be subdued by the army and harsh penalties imposed on them.
It was a deadly and vicious cycle.
The Indian found himself whirling endless.
in. So that reminds me of a lot of conflicts where you have you have these things happen.
You know, the white man is putting pressure on the Indians. The Indians don't know what's going on.
So they lash out a little bit. What do the white man do then? Go in there, smash them, take more land from
them, compress them more. Eventually there's another lash out and you just get this vicious cycle.
vicious cycle.
In 1864, a certain Colonel Shivington with a regiment of volunteer Colorado cavalry
had suddenly moved against a large encampment of Cheyans and indiscriminately killed some 300 Indians.
The massacre unquestionably had turned many lukewarm Indians into out-and-out hostiles.
This bitterness of the Cheyans was inflamed.
named two or three years later when Custer led his newly formed seventh cavalry against Black Kettle and his band in a sudden attack against their sleeping village on the Washita in Texas.
The Cheyennes, who were recognized as the most brilliant Indian fighters of the plains, never forgave either Custer or his seventh cavalry for this whirling attack on their sleeping village in the dead of winter.
another big yeah so you know atrocities on both sides clearly i'll talk a little bit about those as well
but one of the biggest atrocities beyond the killing of the indians themselves the native americans
themselves and those type of atrocities was what they did with the buffaloes because the white man
was coming and killing all the buffaloes and i'll go to the book here once the buffalo around whose existence
Since the whole economy of the Indian was based, was killed off, the nomads had nothing to do
but submit to government control and become agency Indians.
Degraded, whiskey crazed, and beaten.
Only the various tribes of the Sioux and the fighting Cheyennes refused to be broken
on the wheel of civilization.
A few determined leaders such as Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, Gall, American Horse, Two Moon, White Bull,
Spotted Eagle and Chief Hunk stubbornly held out against the threats and blandishments of the whites.
But by the spring of 1873, they were beginning to be branded as hostiles.
So that's something that I didn't focus on enough when I talked about how the Sioux and the Cheyenne kind of faded.
Well, one of the main reasons that they faded was, you know, again, they gave up their guns at a certain point.
but the white man had decimated the buffaloes.
And so that was their main way of survival.
If you remember from Wooden Leg, that's where they lived.
They lived in shelters that were made from Buffalo skins.
And obviously they ate Buffalo all the time.
They hunted Buffalo.
They ate them.
They made their weapons out of Buffalo.
Everything that they did was with Buffalo.
So when the white man came in and killed all the buffalo,
that put them in a real precarious situation.
Now we go back to the book talking a little bit about
what it was like being the cavalry at this time.
Each man would look after his own horse
and we'd usually give him a little exercise and a good rub down.
A trooper thought a lot of his mount.
And a cavalryman would have to be a pretty mean,
would have to be pretty mean who didn't take good care of his horse.
If we got a good chance,
we'd steal him a little extra oats or hay for individual mounts.
My horse at this time was named Pig.
That wasn't his real name,
but I called him that because nothing could keep him from rolling in a mud hole when he was being
watered after we'd come in from a long ride.
He was fast and he could show his heels to most of the horses in the regiment.
I thought a lot of him, but the army condemned him after we'd been beaten in the Dakota country
a year or two, after we'd been in the Dakota country a year or two.
I'll tell you later about the horse I rode in the Battle of Little Big Horn.
But one more thing about pig.
Two or three years after the army sold him, I saw him in a contractor's six-horse team in the Black Hills.
He looked so poor and abused.
I'd have bought him from that contractor on the spot, but I didn't have the money.
I went up to him and petted him.
He knew me all right.
He knickered and looked at me as much to say, come on, please, Charlie, get me out of here.
I had ridden old pig thousands of miles, and more than once he had saved my life.
I pretty near cried when I saw him that time in the Black Hills.
Big connection.
You know, we see that nowadays with the guys that work with dogs
and the military working dogs,
which are awesome animals.
And those guys get majorly connected to those dogs.
Yeah, man.
She's like horse where it's just,
there's a lot of times where it's just you and him in the fighting situation.
It's just you and him.
It's like, dang, you go through so much together, up to downs.
For sure.
I can't even imagine the emotion of that situation.
Back to the book. It was at the Yankton that I first saw General Custer. He was not far from six feet tall. He must have weighed around 180 pounds. He was energetic and it was mighty hard to wear him out. I've heard people say that when he was at West Point, he was the second strongest man there. As I remember him at the time, he was wearing long hair, something like Buffalo Bill used to wear. He had a big wide-brinned Western hat and long military.
mustache. His hair and mustache were yellow, tawny colored. I suppose would be the right way to
describe them. He had on high Wellington boots. They were the kind that came up to the knees
with the front three or four inches higher than the back. They were popular among officers at the time.
General Custer wasn't the kind to mix freely with the men. In those years there was quite a gulf
between the officers and the enlisted men. Some of the officers were,
friendly and easy going with their troopers, but there was always a gulf. Custer struck me as being
aloof and removed, noted. It got to be gossip among the troopers that some of the officers didn't
set so very well with the general. My captain, Colonel Bentine. So there's something that I'm
going to point this out. Some of these, including General Custer, these guys have been promoted
during the Civil War.
So General Custer had become a general during the Civil War,
but after the war, they got demoted.
They got put back down and rank because they shrank the armies.
They shrank the army.
And so, for instance, General Custer at this time was,
he had been a general in the Civil War.
Now all of a sudden he's a colonel.
So he got put down and rank.
And it's the same with, he's talking about his boss,
Windhoff's boss,
Windoff's boss was a guy,
named Captain Bentin, but they call him Colonel Benton because he was a colonel during Civil War.
My captain, Colonel Benton, was one of those folks who didn't belong to the general's inner circle.
I suppose you could say about half the officers in the regiment were close to Custer and the rest were not.
I repeat that Benton was distinct, was distinctly not an intimate of Custer.
I heard all sorts of reasons why that was true.
There was one report that Benteen had turned bitter because Custer had pulled out after the battle
of the Washington, December 1868 in Kansas,
and it left Major Elliott and 17 men to their fate.
A day or two later, they were all found killed, scalped, and mutilated.
There was a story that Custer and Ben Tene had some hard words over that.
But of course, I don't know how true that old story is.
So, there you go.
Ben Tine thought Custer let some guys hang out to dry,
had to confront him about it,
and Custer didn't like that at all.
And now they got some stuff that they're at odds about.
And speaking of that event where these 17 men were killed,
in this book, they have an excerpt that's a letter from an army officer
that got published in a newspaper about that event.
And I'm going to read it.
The bodies were found in a small circle, stripped as naked as when born and frozen stiff.
Their heads had been battered in, and some of them had been entirely chopped off.
Some of them had the Adam's apple cut out of their throats.
Some had their hands and feet cut off, and nearly all had been horribly mangled.
In a way, delicacy forbids me to mention.
They lay scarcely two miles from the scene of the fight.
Who can describe the feeling of that brave band as with anxious hearts beating?
They strained their yearning eyes in the direction whence they help should come.
What must have been the despair that when all hopes of sucker died out nerve their stout arms to do and die?
Round and round rush the red fiends, smaller and smaller shrinks the circle.
but the aim of that devoted gallant knot of heroes is steadier than ever,
and the death howl of the murderous redskin is more frequent.
But on they come and masses grim, with glittering lance
and one long, loud, exulting whoop,
as if the gates of hell had opened and loosed the whole infernal host.
A well-directed volley from their trusty carbines
make some of the miscreants real and fall,
but their death rattles are drowned in the greater din.
Soon, every voice in that little band is still as death,
but the hellish work of the savages is scarce begun,
and their ingenuities are taxed to invent barbarities
to practice on the bodies of the fallen brave.
Some psychological warfare going on there.
clearly we know that the troopers at this time think you don't want to get captured by the Indians and the reason that they think that is events like this mutilated bodies everyone killed no court or given now going to what some of the other officers were like I'm going to talk about captain benton here's what captain benton was like back to the book most of the time we were in the field captain benton commanded a squad
Usually he'd have one or two companies besides his own H company.
He was a wonderful officer.
He let the first sergeant pretty much run the company.
Hmm.
Little decentralized command going on.
He wasn't always interfering and running the details.
So he wasn't getting in the weeds.
He wasn't a micromanager.
I served under Bentin for 12 full years, lacking only those three days.
One of the best descriptions of Captain Bentin is that penned by the
the late major general Hugh L. Scott on page 454 of his interesting book, Some Memoirs of a Soldier.
I found my model early in Captain Benton, the idol of the 7th Cavalry on the Upper Missouri in 1877,
who governed mainly by suggestion. In all the years, I knew him, I never once heard him raise
his voice to enforce his purpose. Think about that. Never once heard him raise his voice to enforce
his purpose. He would sit by the open fire at night, his bright, pleasant face framed by his snow
white hair, beaming with kindness and humor, and often watched, often I watched his every movement
to find out the secret of his quiet, steady government that I might go and govern likewise.
For example, if he intended to stay a few days in one camp, he would say to his adjutant, Brewer, don't you think we had better take up our regular guard, Mount Wallen camp?
And Brewer always thought it better, and so did everyone else.
If he found this kindly manner was misunderstood, then his iron hand would close quickly down, but that was seldom necessary.
and then only with newcomers and never twice with the same person.
So this is just complete example of indirect leadership.
Hey, do you think it be good if we're going to stay in this camp?
We should put our camp guards out.
What do you think?
Of course.
There you go.
So you make it happen.
I didn't give you an order.
I actually let you get some ownership of it.
It's actually now your decision.
It's not even my decision anymore.
That's a really good example of some solid leadership.
here's what it was like to be in the cavalry it was wonderful to be young and to be riding into
indian country as part of the finest regiment of cavalry in the world we were mighty proud of
the seventh it just didn't seem like anything could ever happen to it now i'm going to go through
they're riding out they're they're working the planes and i'm going to go through a little
battle on the plains where custer's in charge general george custer's in charge
The general started
So did the Indians
They had a good start
And General Costa resolved
Not to pursue them too far away from his men
After a sharp short race
He stopped on the plane
Keeping well away from the suspicious woods
When he stopped
The Indians stopped
It was evident that they would not be so audacious
Without a conscious
Without a consciousness of strength somewhere
For ways that are dark
and tricks that are vain
the heathen Sioux
is almost as peculiar
as the heathen
Chinese
and I actually had to go and
do a little research on that one
there's a poem
that's
it's about Chinese migrant workers
and interesting you can go and read
about this poem
it's called the heathen Chinese
and if you read the poem
you realize that
he's trying to
describe that they're playing cards
with a couple of the people
working on the train are playing cards of the Chinese guy
and as they're playing cards
they're
kind of treating the Chinese guy like he's ignorant
but he's actually winning
and when they accuse him of cheating
there's a fight and it was actually the white guy that was cheating
one of the other white guys that was cheating
so the guy that wrote the poem
had written the poem with the intention of showing
hey these people are smart
and they're trustworthy.
But because of the name,
it got read and misinterpreted a lot.
The title of the poem you mean?
The heathen Chinese, you know,
that's not a very positive, positive name.
At least that's kind of,
I did some very quick research on that
just to figure out what it's all about.
And that's sort of what I gathered
after a quick,
uh,
quick research,
meaning I googled it and read a few articles
to figure out what's going on.
No, it's, in,
um,
in a Hawaiian pigeon.
When we say Japanese, we say Japanese.
Oh.
Portuguese is Portuguese.
Hmm.
Chinese?
Chinese.
Maybe some kind of a...
Maybe some relationship.
Some connection there.
I don't know.
All right.
Back to the book.
This time, the trick was indeed vain.
They were fighting with no novice.
As soon as General Custer saw the Indian Dodge,
which was to use these men as a decoy to draw him into the woods,
he immediately sent his orderly back to Captain Moyland,
to order a platoon to dismount.
Before the order could get back,
250 mounted Indians drawn up in a line of battle
came out of the woods in fine military style.
The 7th Cavalry could hardly have done it better.
With painted faces, heads decorated with ribbons,
they sallied out with loud war wolves.
General Custer, putting more confidence in the feet of his thoroughbred
than the voice of his rifle against 250 Indians,
turned back to his command, calling out to his brother
to throw out a dismounted line.
Lieutenant Custer had anticipated the order
and was already dismounting his men.
That's awesome.
So these guys worked together.
He goes to give the order.
His brother's already on it.
They ran forward and took places in the grass.
The Indians opened a heavy fire,
which was quickly answered by our men
with their sharp carbines.
In a dismounted cavalry fight,
every fourth man is usually detailed
to hold the horses.
But being short of,
fighting men and the reserves being several miles back with the train, General Kuster ordered
every six men only to hold the horses, and the rest to join the skirmish line. The Indians,
having three times as large a force, and seeing the cavalry dismounted, followed their example
and dismounted. From their advantage of numbers, they were able to extend the skirmish line
clear around from river to river so as to enclose the cavalry in a semi-circle with the
woods and the river at their back.
They're getting flanked.
Finding that the horses were exposed to fire, General Custer ordered them to be led further
into the timber.
Now, some other things take place, and I'm going to fast forward a little bit through the
story.
The Indians, having lost two men, were more cautious in their advance, and finding that they
could not, with their heavy rifles, drive the cavalry into the woods, had recourse to
another favorite weapon.
they fired the grass in four or five places, meaning they set the grass on fire.
So you imagine you're hiding in the grass, and then all of a sudden they're setting the grass on fire.
Fortunately, there was little or no wind, and the grass was too short and too green to burn well,
else this new weapon might have proved formidable indeed.
The fire, however, raised a blue curtain of smoke, forming a corner segment between the fighting arcs,
Failing in their attempt to raise a great fire, the Redskins used this smoke line as a mask for their rifles.
Advancing under cover of this curtain, they would pour a volley at our line and retreat.
A little bit of cover and move happening.
Our men soon discovered the Dodge and laid equal claim to the curtain.
The Indians, abandoning this position, began to draw in their men.
Now, General Custard said to Captain Moylan, let us mount and drive.
them off the men immediately mounted and advanced as skirmishers on a trot finding
this was not fast enough a charge was ordered the men eager for the order gave a loud
yell and put their horses into a full gallop nearly 300 and number the sight of 80
cavalry men coming toward them like mad caps was too much for the Indians they turned like
sheep and scattered in every direction battles battles on the planes small unit tactics
very similar to the small unit tactics that are used today.
We use smoke.
We use smoke in Ramadi.
We have smoke grenades.
What do you use those for?
Set up a little curtain so people can't see you when you're moving.
And you'll notice also there was some aggressive action.
It's that aggressive action.
Both sides.
When they got aggressive, they started doing better.
When you start getting, when your opponent becomes the aggressor,
you start getting put on your heels.
You've got to stay aggressive.
default mode now talking a little bit about what it was like when they were back in
camp so they weren't out on the road all the time they weren't out in the planes all the
time sometimes they'd be back in camp they had their they had bands they had some of
them had their wives there they had good food and you know basically good stuff going on
they had pretty relaxed time but it was always let's prepare we're going back out in the
field so they're back out in the field here general custer
who as usual was riding ahead with a couple of troops came upon smoldering campfires that showed that three Indian TPs had recently been there.
He sent Bloody Knife ahead with several Indians.
So that Bloody Knife, you're going to hear his voice throughout here.
Bloody Knife was Custer's right-hand man.
He was an Indian scout.
Soon they galloped back with the information that they had located the Indians.
Custer surrounded the little camp and brought back four bucks with him.
to our camp. The head was a minor chief named one stab whose squaw was a daughter of red cloud.
Custer promised them food if they helped them. But they seemed to be in a hurry to leave. And before they
could be checked, they mounted their ponies and were off. Custer sent troopers after them, but the only
one they could catch and bring back was one stab. He was told he would be given all the bacon,
sugar and coffee that two ponies could carry if he'd act as a guide.
He agreed.
So again, I guess the reason I wanted to bring that up is it shows that there was Indians
working on both sides and there was Indians that went from back and forth between sides
depending on, you know, depending on what the situation is, depending on how they got bribed.
But, and also, you know, we know that there was wars between the Indians, you know?
So that's why sometimes the Indians team.
teamed up with the soldiers, the American troops,
and went and got after it with them.
Yeah, is that because they got, when you say bribe,
like they got kind of enticed with civilization.
Well, no, I'm talking about that was a straight up bribe right there.
They're talking to one stab and they say, hey, one stab, will you help guide us?
Well, I don't know if I feel comfortable about that.
Okay, we'll give you all the bacon, all the sugar and all the coffee that you can carry on two horses.
He says, all right, cool, I'm in.
Yeah, and if they're warring, you know, if that's kind of their enemy in a way, you know, you know?
Yeah, let's do it.
Yeah, maybe he was just getting some food out of what he would already like to do.
Yeah, and what is it, the enemy of my enemy is my friend.
There you go.
There you go.
Now, in the Black Hills, they think that they find gold.
They think they find gold in the Black Hills.
And this is just a good comment here about, I guess you could say it's about material desires.
Gold to most men mean sudden wealth, big times.
Whiskey and gambling and women.
It means fortune and adventure and all the things they never had.
The gold fever is like taking dope.
You're helpless when it strikes you.
Be careful that material greed.
I once read about how everyone who touched an Egyptian king's tomb
was doomed to die of violent death.
Seems to me that the Indians must have put some curse like that on the white men who first touched their sacred Black Hills at this time.
Custer got a lot of notoriety from his Black Hills expedition and the discovery of gold.
But he never had any luck after that.
Now, getting just a cursory look at the politics of what were happening at the time.
An attempt was made that summer of 75.
to buy the Black Hills from the Indians
and make legal this onslaught.
But the Indians were in no mood
to believe anything the commissioners told them.
And it was impossible to make a deal of any kind.
A feeling of utter despair and despondency
cast its spell over even the friendly reservation Indians.
Maybe the radical thing sitting bull
and crazy horse and gall and two moons
and the other wild chiefs far back in the buffalo lands
around the powder and the big horn were preaching,
maybe they made sense.
The free Indian was doomed.
They were all to be made reservation Indians.
That meant all the colorful old life would be gone forever.
The buffalo hunts, the feasts, the sun dances, the visiting,
and the pleasant horse-stealing wars.
All the old life would be no more.
Maybe those radical chiefs were right.
Maybe they'd all be better to make one big battle against the whites.
It would be better to die a free Indian than live as a degraded, helpless treaty Indian.
So evident was the hostile feeling that in the fall of 1875 that an order was submitted by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Edward P. Smith, to the Secretary of the Interior, Z. Chandler, who in turn submitted to the Secretary of War, General Belknap.
A subsequent communication from the Secretary of Interior to the Secretary of War dated December 1st, 1875 read as follows.
I have the honor to inform you that I have this day directed the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to notify said Indian Sitting Bull and the others outside their reservations that they must return to their reservations before January 31, 1876.
and if they neglect or refuse, so to move,
they will be reported to the War Department as hostile Indians
and that a military force will be sent to compel them to obey the order of the Indian Department.
There it is.
To compel them.
Yep, there it is.
And how, you know, that's, that's, that,
you have to be wary of your government having so much.
power and leaving yourself defenseless in these situations I think we learn a lot
from the Indians from the Native Americans on that back to the book general
Custer was not at for Abraham Lincoln when we arrived there in late April 1876 of
course that aroused a lot of talk and suspicion when you jiggled all those
rumors down you got about this
We were soon to start a big expedition up to Yellowstone
to round up the hostiles and drive them back to the reservations.
If they would not go peacefully, we were to make good Indians out of them.
There was a lot of suspicious talk going around all over the place.
Custer was still in the east, so Custer had gone back to the east,
and you could hear a hundred tales of how he was being kept away from the expedition
because he had got under the skin of President.
Grant. A lot of the troopers didn't much care for Custer, but it looked as if Major Reno would
command the regiment if Custer didn't arrive. And most of us didn't know or care a great deal about
Reno. Of course, we knew that he had been a colonel of a Pennsylvania cavalry regiment at the end
of the Civil War, but he had never fought Indians. And he didn't seem to be very popular with either
the men or the officers. If I remember correctly, he was a West Pointer.
and was three or four years ahead of Custer.
It was pretty clear that there wasn't much love lost between the two men.
Politics.
Total politics.
And sometimes people in the civilian world, they don't realize this stuff happens all the time.
This is politics, crazy politics in the military.
And just this kind of stuff right here.
Oh, you're senior to me.
Oh, you made the other guy mad.
And now we're going to get pulled up.
I'm going to pull you off this operation.
I'm going to let this guy go on the operation.
This is just so typical of the military.
unfortunately.
And you know what?
It's not just typical
to the military.
It's typical in any company,
any business, any team.
There's always going to be
these political things that are happening.
I mean, occasionally you get to a great
organization that really limits that.
I shouldn't say it's everywhere, but it's very,
very common.
Yeah.
And, you know, someone just asked me on Twitter,
you know, hey, it's really political.
I'm not really good at politics.
You know,
is it something that I should actually try and engage in?
Yes.
Yes, it's going to, you have to.
If you're in an organization, that's a political organization, and you want to make things happen, you want to implement changes, yes, start figuring out how to play those games.
Yeah.
Oh, you don't, you're not a political person, cool, become one.
Yeah.
Because what you want to do is you want to do a good job.
You want to do a good job and whatever it is that you're doing.
And sometimes that requires that you play those games.
So play the games.
Get good at them.
Back to the book.
Everything was uncertain in those late April.
and early May days while the regiment was being whipped into marching shape.
We had a few recruits, a bunch and a bunch of fresh young horses,
so there was plenty to do to break in both of them.
One thing that people get wrong about the recruits was that
about half of the 150 new men we had were men who either had civil war experience
or had already served a five-year hitch in the army.
Most of the rest were plenty green.
A good many of them were German boys.
They made fine soldiers once they were trained.
I think it was about May 10th that General Custer suddenly showed up.
General Terry was with him.
Terry was of slight build and wore whiskers.
He was a gentle, kindly man who never strutted or roared.
Nothing at all like the quick-moving, dashing young Custer.
Terry was a brigadier general of the regular army, and so he ranked Custer by two grades.
Word ran around camp that General Terry was to command the whole expedition, but that Custer was to have his old regiment.
Custer was as happy as a boy with a new red sled.
He put a lot of zip into us.
Now Custer, this political stuff that he's dealing with,
it's still going on.
It's still happening.
And I'm not going to go through the details of it,
but he's somehow seen as an agitator or an enemy of President Grant.
And so he actually gets ordered off.
So he goes back out, takes back over the regiment, starts whipping people into shape.
He's going to work for General Terry.
President Grant says, no, actually, come back.
You don't get to do this.
And Custer decides he writes a dispatch to be sent directly to the president of the United States.
That's kind of crazy.
We didn't do much communications with the president from my task interview.
here we go back to the book and oh wait here's so here's what he actually sent is awesome that's
what's beautiful about history this is what custer actually sent and and grant grant president grant
was a guy that was you know went to west point as well he fought in the mexican-american war
he retired after that was retired from the army but then the civil war started so he went back
in the army as a
general and he fought it. Shiloh and Vicksburg and actually generally surrendered to
President Graham. So this guy's a warrior and here's what you're going to hear Custer kind of appeal
to that. Here we go. I have seen your order transmitted through the general of the army directing
that I not be permitted to accompany the expedition about to move against the hostile Indians.
As my entire regiment forms a part of the proposed expedition, and as I am the senior officer of the regiment on duty in the department, I respectfully but most earnestly request that while not allowed to go in command of the expedition, I may be permitted to serve with my regiment in the field.
I appeal to you as a soldier to spare me the humiliation of seeing my regiment march to meet the enemy, and I am I.
not to share its dangers.
It was too much for the hero, the hero of Appomattox.
Custer was to have back his beloved regiment.
So Grant gives in and says, okay, you can go.
You're not going to be in charge, but you can go.
And so they roll out on this expedition.
And here's the description of what that felt like.
You felt like you were somebody when you were on a
good horse with a carbine dangling from its small leather ring socket on your saddle and a cult
army revolver strapped on your hip and a hundred rounds of ammunition in your web belt and your saddle
pockets you were a cavalryman of the seventh regiment you were part of a proud outfit that had
a fighting reputation and you were ready for a fight or a frolic so these guys had some pretty
good morale rolling out they did some hard training when they were in camp and now
they're ready to get after it talks a little bit about Custer he describes Custer
I can almost see him myself in my mind's eye he was wearing a broad Western
hat with a low crown and a wide brim it was grayish in color he'd had his long
yellow hair cut just before we left and he had on a buckskin suit with fringe
he had two short bill barreled bulldog revolvers and a Remington sporting rifle carried
in a scabbard.
It's my recollection that he carried a hunting knife
in a fringed buckskin case.
So that's,
I mean, you know, straight up
rock and roll stars of the 70s
wore fringe on their outfits, right?
So Custer is a, he's a character.
He's definitely a character.
Back to the book,
when the regiment was formed in Kansas in 1866,
the general that went,
the general went to a lot of trouble
to have each,
troop mounted on distinct colors.
I thought this was awesome, so I included it.
He's talking about what color horses they had, and each troop had a specific colored
horse.
I can still call them off even at this late date.
H, my own troop rode blood bays.
B, D, I, and L also were mounted on bays.
C, G, and K had sorrels.
A had coal blacks.
and Lieutenant Edgeley's E-Troop had gray's.
We used to call E, the band box troop.
M-trop was the only troop that had mixed colors.
The whole band rode white horses.
I remember the drummer had a horse that would run away
every time he mounted him,
except when he put his drum on him.
Then that old horse would stand still as a wooden horse.
It was a fine regiment right enough.
And there wasn't a man in it
who didn't believe it was the greatest cavalry out.
in the entire United States Army.
That actually is,
when I hear about these guys talking about the horses,
we actually had little relationships like that
with our Humvees.
We'd name them, you know, we named our Humvees.
Yeah, we named our Humvees various names.
We used to have, when we used to do a lot more water work
before the war started, we would, we actually named our
outboard motors than they had little, my,
one of my, the guy that handled the outboard motors in my second platoon, he was all into it.
And his nickname was Zulu.
But Zulu, he was all into these motors.
And he had every motor had a name and he kept these detailed logbooks on how many hours and when the maintenance was done all that.
And when we came back from one deployment and we were going to go do another deployment, we came back, they said, hey, you know, you guys, guess what?
Good news.
We got all new motors.
and we're going to issue you whatever it was.
We had eight outboard motors.
We're going to give you all new motors.
You know, come and turn yours in
and we'll send those off to wherever,
get repaired or going to
go into the garbage can.
And you know what Zulu said?
He said, I want the new motors.
I got my motors.
I know where they've been.
I know their personalities.
The motors have personalities.
Well,
the motors have personalities.
Motor nalities.
Yeah, they had personalities.
Yeah.
motor nalities and he wanted to make sure he had a relationship with those motors and you want to give
them up going back to the book they're they're starting to be out on patrol and they're marching up
what's called the rosebud h and the five remaining troops headed down the powder and eventually
arrived at the southern bank of the yellowstone the wagons had a tough time and it wasn't until
custer had taken a troop and scouted out a good road that the heavy wagons could make it custer was
mighty good at this kind of work. He had a nose for scouting and finding the best trails.
It was June, it was noon on June 22nd when we broke camp and started our march up the rosebud.
This, just before we packed our mules, Bentine ordered us to take an extra supply of salt.
That meant we might be living on mule or horse meat before we got back.
I suppose we all knew by this time that we'd be hitting it into dangerous country.
but as I look back I don't believe many troopers were very worried we knew there'd be some hard fighting
but a soldier always feels that it's the other fellow who's going to get it never himself
that morning word spread about the camp the mail was going to be sent back home and that this
would likely be the last chance to get off letters of course I didn't have anybody to write to
but the officers and many of the men heard least scribbled letters to their dear ones
And as they go to mail off these letters, they're on a boat.
The troops are on a boat, and they've barely gone 50 feet with these letters to get them mailed off when the boat was overturned.
And all three men disappeared along with the mail sack.
Now here's the orders that they get as they're going up.
These are actually the orders to Custer.
And again, what's awesome is these are documented.
This isn't the hearsay.
These are documented orders.
Colonel, the Brigadier General Commanding, directs that as soon as your regiment can be made ready for the march, you proceed up the rosebud in pursuit of the Indians whose trailed was discovered by Major Reno a few days since.
It is, of course, impossible to give you any definite instructions in regard to this movement.
And were it not impossible to do so the department commander places too much confidence in your zeal, energy, and ability to wish to improve.
pose on you precise orders.
Pretty, so he's giving him, hey, look, here's my general idea.
He's giving me some commander's intent, but he doesn't want to give him anything too specific
because he knows he can't, he hasn't always going to be in two days.
What's going to be happening up there?
He will, however, indicate to you his own views of what actions should be and desires
that you should conform to them unless you should see sufficient reason for departing from them.
So he gives them his orders, but he gives them.
some pretty good leeway to work through.
And that's why there's some,
there's some discussion on whether or not Custer disobeyed.
It's,
and there's, it's a long discussion probably with no one could ever come
with a solid conclusion on because there was some,
there was definitely some,
some leeway in,
in the orders and those,
that was the leeway that I just read.
Then the orders continue to go on,
but I'm not going to go into those minor details of them.
Back to the book, we hit the trail at 5 o'clock sharp that second morning.
These guys are up pretty early.
Probably had to get up like, I don't know, 4.30 to get on the road before 5 o'clock.
Around noon, we began past signs of big Indian camps.
As I remember, we made around 33 miles that day.
The next day, we rode hard too.
There was no foolishness.
Custer had a bunch of re and crow scouts ahead with him.
And he kept them covering the ground far off both flanks of the column.
We were an Indian country now, right enough.
So that's very common.
We'd still do that today.
You have a main element moving in a formation and out on the flanks, maybe some high ground.
You have other smaller elements that can protect your flanks
and see if there's any problems up ahead.
In one place we halted there had been a sun dance lodge.
The scalp of a white man was still hanging from the ridge pole.
Getting in an Indian country.
It was around 8 o'clock when we got orders to saddle up.
We marched about 10 miles when we were halted in a sort of ravine.
We've been told to make as little noise as possible and light no fires.
There'd been no bugle calls for a day or two.
The sun was at our back, so apparently we were headed straight west now toward the little
big horn. I later learned that the Indians called it greasy grass. I never did know why. About the time
General Custer came back from his scout, word went around that the Indians had found a box of hard
tack that had dropped from one of Captain Yates' mules. Two or three troopers who had been sent back
to pick up the box had reported seeing two hostels trying to open it with their tomahawks. This
meant that the Indians
held us,
had us under observation.
Apparently,
Custer had figured
on hiding the command
in the ravine
during the day
and then attacking
the big Indian village
on the little big horn at daybreak
the next morning.
So they're,
they know that the Indians
know that they're there,
is why I included that.
And you're going to hear
that kind of over and over again.
Custer's thinking they're going to surprise them
and everyone's telling them,
we're not going to surprise them.
They know we're here.
It was Sunday morning June 25th.
We were still more than 12 miles from the Little Horn and the Indian village, but the
Indians knew where we were and all about us.
I approached as near that now so he sees a conversation going on and it's actually Custer
and Ben Tien and they're having a conversation with a couple people including some of the
scouts and he kind of goes over and does a little ease dropping.
As I approached as near as seemed respectful and while I was waiting to catch Ben Tien's attention
I couldn't help but overhear part of the conversation.
Charlie Reynolds, the famous White Scout,
who was never to see the sunset that day, was talking.
And I heard him say that there was the biggest bunch of Indians he'd ever seen over there.
Finally, I heard Bentine say to Custer,
hadn't we better keep the regiment together, General?
If this is a big camp, as they say, we'll need every man we have.
Custer's only answer was, you have your orders.
So you can see, again, Custer, he's not listening to people, scouts, reconnaissance units,
and his other officers that are with him.
And this is sort of the classic, you know, hey, I've got to, I disagree with your plan.
Shut up and do it anyways.
You have your orders.
That's a classic example of that.
We were tired and dirty and hungry.
Our horses hadn't had a good drink of water since the day before, and we weren't much better.
off. We knew right enough that this was the day. This was it. This was what we've been training and
working for all these years. Captain Bentin used to say the government pays you to get shot at.
And I suppose the dumbest, greenest trooper in the regiment figured that this day he'd get shot at
plenty. Here was the 7th cavalry, with a total of some 600 men split up into four outfits.
apparently the Indian scouts and experienced old guys guides knew that there were several thousand of the hostels but it was it is my belief that Custer and most of our officers thought they'd have to whip somewhere between a thousand and fifteen hundred and they expected most of these to be poorly armed and poorly led from experience they figured the Indians would fight only a rear guard action while the women children old men and
pony herds got away but in place of a maximum of 1500 Indian warriors it developed that there
were possibly twice that number about to face Custer's total of 600 so that's the report that they're
getting and it's it's there's a little bit of controversy about what how many Indians were there
but it was a lot and here here we go this I'm going to jump forward to another section and
talking about Custer and did Custer, the name of the chapter is did Custer, and it's sort of
an appendix, so it's not part of the story, it's after the story, but it talks about did Custer
refuse advice from his scouts? How many Indian warriors were camped on the west bank of the
Little Bighorn that Sunday morning of June 25th? Against the real figure, how many did Custer
think he would have to fight? Did Custer refuse to believe the estimated number of warriors
his scouts told him he would have to fight? Did he fail to follow the advice of his
experienced guides and interpreters.
One of the best accounts of what the guides thought about the number of Indians and the
chances of Custer closing with them is contained in the excellent book William Jackson,
Indian Scout, by James William Schultz.
Willard Schultz.
It is worth careful reading.
And here's a couple excerpts from that.
On the third day, we struck the trail of the hostels, the one that Reno had found several
days before.
Said Bloody Knife.
Now remember, Bloody Knife is
Custer's, you know,
main scout.
They're tight.
Said Bloody Knife.
My friends,
this big trail
proves what we heard.
That the Ogallala,
the Minniconju,
the Sansark,
and the Titon Sioux
have left their agencies to join
Sitting Bowl and Crazy Hurs.
horse. I am sure that even this trail does not account for all that have left their agencies.
There surely are other trails. And trails two of the Cheyans and the Arapahos. Bloody Knife continued.
It is, as I have told Longhair, this gathering of enemy tribes is too many for us, but he will not
believe me. He is bound to lead us against them. They are not far away.
Just over this ridge, they are all encamped and waiting for us.
Crazy horse and sitting bull are not men without sense.
They have their scouts, too, and some of them surely have their eyes upon us.
Well, tomorrow, we are going to have a big fight, a losing fight.
Myself, I know what is to happen to me.
My sacred helper has given me warning that I am not to see the set of tomorrow's son.
Sad words, those, they chilled us.
I saw Charlie Reynolds nod an agreement to them
and was chilled again when he said in a low voice,
I feel as he does.
Tomorrow will be the end for me too.
Anyone who wants my little outfit of stuff,
pointing to his war pack, can have it now.
Lieutenant Varnum, who was in charge of the scouts,
came over and said that it was General Custer's plan
to attempt a surprise attack on the camp of the enemy.
Said bloody knife,
We cannot surprise the enemy.
They are not crazy.
Without doubt, their scouts have watched every move we have made.
Convinced at last that we could not possibly surprise the enemy,
General Custer ordered a quick advance with the scouts and himself in the lead.
We had not gone far when Bloody Knife and his two rees joined us and reported that on the other side of the ridge,
they had found the day-old trail of many more enemy going toward the valley of Little
Bighorn.
They were excited and said to Custer, General, we have discovered the camp down there on the
little big horn.
It is a big one, too big for you to tackle.
Why there are thousands and thousands of Sue and Cheyenne's down there.
For a moment the general stared at him angrily, I thought, and then said sternly,
I shall attack them.
Classic ego maniac right here.
Sorry, but that's what this is.
Yeah. Custer gave orders for attack upon the camp.
None of the scouts had been far in the lead, and they all came in.
Rees and Crows and whites and Robert and I, we were a gathering of solemn faces.
Speaking in English and the sign language, too, so that all would understand, Brewer described the enemy camp.
It was, he said, all of three miles long and made up of hundreds of lodges, hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of lodges.
Above it and below it and west of it, there were thousands of.
and thousands of horses that were being close-herded.
With his few riders, Longhair decided to attack the camp,
and we were going to have a terrible fight.
We should all take courage, fight hard, make our every shot a killer.
He finished and none spoke.
But after a minute or two, bloody knife looked up and signed to the sun,
I shall not see you go down behind the mountains tonight.
And at that I almost choked.
I felt he knew his end was near and there was no escaping it.
I turned and looked the other way.
I thought that my own end was near.
I felt very sad.
So there's the full account of these, all the scouts.
Some are, you know, some are white, some are Indian, Native Americans, different tribes.
And they're all telling them the same thing.
This is not a good plan.
So back to the book, apparently Custer had planned to stay in hiding in the ravine.
We had reached a little after 10 o'clock that Sunday.
And then attacked the village at daybreak the next morning of the 26th.
That would more or less have dovetailed into Terry's idea of boxing the Indians.
But when he found the hostile scouts had discovered his column,
he figured there was nothing to do but attack it once.
Now, we get a little report here.
from a guy named Sergeant Daniel Knaip,
who had barely turned 23 at the time of the battle.
In Knaip's own account of the fight
published in the magazine of the Historical Society of Montana,
he said, when we got to the top of the bluffs,
the Indians had disappeared,
but we were in plain view of the Indian camps,
which appeared to cover a space of about two miles wide
and four miles long on the west side of the river.
We were then charging at full speed.
This camp is two miles wide.
That's a map, two miles.
Two by four.
Two by four miles.
And you got 600 guys.
And actually, they didn't even, Custer doesn't have 600 guys.
He got 200 guys.
Reno and his troops were again seen to our left,
moving at full speed down the valley.
At the site of the Indian camps,
the boys of our five troops began to cheer overconfidence.
Some of the horses became so,
excited that the riders were unable to hold them in ranks and the last word i heard general custer
say we're hold your horses in boys there are plenty of them down there for all of us again now we have
total overconfidence in the situation we think we're going to win this is going to be fun oh there's a
two by four mile big camp no big deal i got 500 guys with me so this is where the force is
split up and custer goes off to attack it seems like he
goes about a mile away, mile and a half away.
And again, I'm going to make the same statement that I said when I talked about the battle
with when we did the wooden leg podcast.
I'm not trying to historically reconstruct the battle right now.
There's plenty of books that do that.
So I'm just kind of assembling the broad design of what's happening.
So now the forces split up.
Reno and Bentino kind of have troops and holding, but they're starting to get a little
firefight themselves.
we saw a second figure in uniform riding towards us.
He was trumpeteer martini of my company
who had been assigned that morning
as a special orderly trumpeteer to General Custer.
I learned afterwards that he had a message from Custer to Ben Tene
that had been scribbled out on a field order pad
and signed by Lieutenant Cook the adjutant.
It read Benteen, come on, big village, be quick, bring packs.
P.S. Bring pack.
That's the note that they get from Custer.
Sounds like Custer might have, once he split off,
things started going sideways real quick.
They, again, Bentine and Reno have their troops
start now getting engaged in a firefight.
Back to the book, we could hear heavy firing now.
Before long, we passed several Croweer rescouts,
driving a few head of Indian ponies,
and they shouted soldiers and pointed toward the bluffs that were rising towards the north.
We knew that we were close to the valley of Little Big Horn
and that somewhere in this neighborhood there was hard fighting going on.
Bentine ordered us to draw pistols and we charged up the bluffs at a gallop,
expecting at any moment to run into hostels.
When we reached the brow of the first set of rolling hills,
the river valley suddenly opened up below us to our left.
It was a sight to strike terror in the hearts of the bravest men.
Down there in the valley, maybe 150 feet or more below us, and somewhere around a half a mile away, there were figures galloping on horseback and much shooting.
Farther down the river, there were great masses of mounted men.
We suspicioned were Indians.
We were going at a fast clip ourselves, and we had no more than caught the swift glimpse of this tragic battlefield below when we saw mounted and dismounted soldiers on a knoll of a hill to the northward.
We swiftly rode towards them.
So these guys are seeing this massive battle take place.
They're kind of on the high ground.
He talks about here what kind of weaponry the Indians had.
For my part, I believe that fully half of the warriors carried only bows and arrows and lances.
And that possibly half of the remainder carried odds and end of old muzzleloaders and single-shot rifles of various vintages.
Probably not more than 25 or 30% of the warriors carried modern repeating rifles.
That sounds pretty close to what Wooden Legs said.
They said they mostly had bows and arrows.
Some guys had rifles, but it was mostly bows and arrows.
And one other point.
Indian boys from 14 years old up accompanied the warriors and took part,
especially in the later stages of the fighting.
The soldiers, incidentally, were armed with single shot 45-70 caliber Springfield carbines
and accurate and deadly weapon up to 600 yards.
But when fired rapidly, the breach became foul,
and the greasy cartridges often jammed.
It could not be removed by the extractor.
This meant that the empty shell had to be forced out by the blade of a hunting knife.
This very fact was responsible for the death of many a trooper this hot Sunday
and may actually have been the indirect cause of the great disaster.
Weapons getting dirty.
Weapons getting hot and dirty.
Got to take care of your weapon.
It sounds like this was beyond that.
them just taking care of their weapon.
Sounds like it was a design issue as well.
Reno had crossed the river and had his troops in line of columns of four with the Indian
scouts on his left.
Soon Indian horsemen were seen riding madly to and fro in the valley and shortly the southern
end of the Indian camps came into view.
Reno now had his three troops and scouts thrown out in a skirmish line covering possibly
the full width of the narrow valley.
So they see the enemy.
Now they get online.
That's a very common thing.
If you can picture this, you've got your guys in a column.
If you're in a column of three, three columns,
and you see the enemy ahead of you,
how many people do you think can shoot?
The three.
The three at the front.
So that's why you keep hearing this idea of a skirmish line.
And it's the same tactic that we use now.
Oh, we got enemy at front of us.
Cool.
We're going to get online.
They call it a skirmish line here.
We would call it a get online.
Like the old.
They spread out and get online.
So now they get, they got 50 guys.
Cool, they have 50 guns online instead of three.
Yeah.
Realizing that this charge toward the Indian hordes would end in almost certain disaster,
Reno now ordered his troops to dismount and fight on foot.
Even before this order came, scores of Indians had swung to the southwestward
and pressed against the crow and re-scouts.
These were forced to give way.
Things were looking bad for Reno and even.
ordered his skirmish lines to fall back to the edge of a heavy grove of cottonwoods that followed
a bend in the river and jutted out halfway across the valley. The horses were led into the woods
while a thin line of men held three sides of the grove. Some 90 men were holding not less than
250 yards of line. Hundreds of mounted Indians were now half-circling the skirmish line,
riding in close, firing from under their ponies' necks and then galloping away.
Reno's men were now either firing from a prone position or using the bank of a dry creek bed as a barricade and rifle rest.
So Reno's guys are now getting basically surrounded.
In taking up this new position, Sergeant O'Hara of Troop M had been killed, the first man on the skirmish line to die.
Apparently, Reno had a fairly defendable position, and some people think if he had pulled in his lines and consolidated his position, he might have held out here for an indefinite length of time.
or at least as long as his ammunition lasted.
But the savage yells, the heavy firing, the smoke and dust, all, and fear, all combined to fog his judgment.
Suddenly Custer's favorite scout, Bloody Knife was shot through the head and his brain scattered all over Reno.
Then the scout Dorman fell, and Charlie Reynolds was shot through the head.
Reno, figuring that his only chance lay in getting to high ground across the river,
shouted for his men to mount up in company formation.
Two troop commanders heard the order, and amid the confusion and excitement,
had their men mount up and line in column of force.
The third troop, G, under Lieutenant McIntosh, himself part Indian,
who had been adopted by General McIntosh, was in the woods and did not get the order
until the two other troops, with Reno riding at their head,
were racing upstream trying to find a place to cross the river.
All order and discipline were gone.
So they're surrounded.
Things fall apart.
He's basically saying we got to retreat.
We got to get out of here.
And the assessment was that maybe they were in a defendable position.
They could have held there.
Who knows?
Who knows whether that's true or not?
Nobody will ever know how any man escaped alive from this mad retreat.
All we are sure of.
is that the charging troop broke through the cordon of mounted Indians
and followed a buffalo craft to the river.
Here, they somehow managed to jump their horses over a four or five foot bank,
plunge across the stream, and scramble up a narrow trail to the steep hills to the east.
Hundreds of Indians fired indiscriminately into the panic-stricken soldiers,
and the wonder is that any trooper escaped.
No motion picture could be as fantastic as this wide,
milling of frightened men and horses.
Again, just to remind you that this is what's happening with Reno and his group, they don't
know where Custer is right now with his crew of 200 guys.
Back to the book, in all 26 troopers and scouts and three officers were killed, either in
this ride through the Indian gauntlet or back at the edge of the woods.
of the 19 men left behind, 17 crossed the river, and reached Reno Hill on foot within two hours.
Lieutenant Derrudeau and Private O'Neill did not join us until 36 hours later.
They came right through where I was on guard.
It was now somewhere around 3.30 in the afternoon.
Reno, shaken and unnerved, had reached the hilltop and here his frightened troopers were joining him.
he was whipped and completely disorganized.
This is a rally point.
And if you have a pre-designated rally point
and you say, hey guys, look,
you see this big hill over here?
If everything goes to hell,
we get all jumbled up,
go to that point.
It doesn't sound like he actually pre-brief that
because that would have been a,
you could have just said, hey, back to the rally point,
you could have given a very clear order.
If you're trying to not really know where you're going
and you're saying retreat, well, you don't do it in a very organized fashion.
So pre-plan some contingencies.
Now they get in this position and Reno, like I said, is in rough shape.
Back to the book.
Cool, capable Bentine, more or less assumed command.
Major Reno had just come through a terrible experience and at the moment was glad to have
Benteen his junior take over.
Quickly Benteen dismounted his own three troops.
and ordered us to form a skirmish line.
Reno's men had expended most of their ammunition,
so we were told to divide ours with them.
We had Bentine's 120 men intact,
and there were around 60 men who'd been fighting in the valley with Reno.
And even before we got the kinks out of our legs
from our long hours in the saddle,
we were asking each other,
where's Kuster?
What had become of Kuster and his five troops?
Apparently, Custer was now much farther on to the northward, and in this moment was hotly engaged, but no one was certain.
All we knew was that he had disappeared with almost half the regiment.
We could hear the sound of distant firing echoing through the hills and valleys from that direction.
Custer must be down there.
So this is happening.
They're in the skirmish position, and they're starting to try and get reorganized.
back to the book
The wounded men who could mount were put on horses
But the others were carried in blankets
By details of six troopers on foot
It takes a lot of people to carry a down man
Downman
It takes a lot of people to carry a down man
And in this case it takes
Six people to carry one down man
Nowadays we weigh a lot more
We got we got all of our guns
We got body armor
It's hard guys are heavy
Pretty soon
it looked as if the Indian masses were coming towards us.
It didn't take long to realize that this was true.
Here we were stretched out all over Hell's half acre,
a troop on this hill knob, another in this little valley,
and over there a third troop.
Behind at a slow walk came pack trains, the wounded men, and the rear guard.
Reno and Bentine both sensed danger and order to withdraw.
the advanced troops were dismounting and fought as skirmishers in the center in a slight depression
the horses and mules were staked and an inadequate little field hospital was established
but it was impossible to shield the men and stock from the Indians firing from a hilltop off to
the east Indians got some high ground on them can't stop them what are you going to do they got
high ground you can't hide animal after animal was killed
and the men were hit.
It was tough not to be able to do something about it.
We'd hardly got settled on our own skirmish line
with H men posted at 20-foot intervals
when the Indians had all but completely surrounded us.
And the fighting began in earnest.
There was no full-fledged charge,
but little groups of Indians would creep up as close as they could get
and from behind bushes or little knolls opened fire.
They'd practiced all kinds of cute tricks to draw our fire.
Maybe a naked redskin would suddenly jump to his feet.
And while you drew a beat on him, he'd throw himself to the ground.
They're under this attack for a pretty good amount of time.
And then finally, the sun went down that night like a ball of fire.
Pretty soon the quick Montana twilight settled down on us,
and then came the chill of the high plains.
There was no moon and no one ever welcomed darkness more than we did.
We felt terribly alone on that dangerous hilltop.
We were a million miles from nowhere, and death was all around us.
All through that short black night, the orgy went on down below in the river valley.
It struck fear in our hearts.
Just as the mystery of Custer's disappearance made our blood run cold each time we tried to solve it.
Where was Custer?
What had happened to him?
So down, they're up there, they're hiding, it's dark,
They're scared.
They got wounded.
And all they hear down in the valley is the Indians going crazy, the rhythm of the tom-toms, the wild victory dance.
They can hear all this.
Back to the book, they're talking about Custer.
They could not all be killed.
Not lucky Custer and those five-gallant troops who rolled with him.
Why had he abandoned us?
In those three bloody hours before darkness had saved us, we had no less than a dozen men killed and three times that number wounded.
He's actually saying, man, where was Custer?
Here we were getting crushed on the battlefield
and Custer's not there to support us.
Where'd he go?
Now, during the night it rains a little bit
and finally the sun starts to come up
and just as the sun starts to come up
and starts getting light.
Back to the book, Jones said something about taking off his overcoat.
He started to roll on his side
so that he could get his arms and shoulders out
without exposing himself to fire.
suddenly I heard him cry out
he'd been shot straight through the heart
a minute or two later
another bullet from the hilltop torn
to the hickory butt of my rifle
splitting it squarely in two
I was plenty mad because my army carbine
wouldn't let me return the compliment
so he just got shot in the rifle stock
actually happened one of my guys in Ramadi
one of my guys got his
his rifle stock got blown up by an RPG
I see him come falling out of a sniper position
And he's got his slaying his weapon is in two pieces
I'm thinking oh
Lucky to be alive
Along about this time
Our 30 or 40 wounded men began crying out for water
H troop held the hill here on the southwest
There was a draw that ran down the west side of the hill to the river
It was rough and exposed and it looked like a dead cinch that anyone who tried to work his way down that draw to the river would be
killed. Indians concealed in the bushes across the river were firing up at us and they had every
foot of this draw and riverbank covered. But we had to do something for those men who were up
wounded crying for water. Finally, Bentine called for volunteers. I think there were 17 of us all
together who stepped forward. He detailed four of us from H who were extra good marksmen to take
up an exposed position on the brow of the hill facing the river. We were to stand up and not only
draw the fire of the Indians below, but we were to pump as much lead as we could into the bushes
where the Indians were hiding, while the water party hurried down to the draw, got their buckets
and pots and canteens filled, and then made their way back. So we got a little cover and move
happening, obviously. It just happened that the four of us who were posted on the hill were all
German boys, Geiger, Meckling, Voigt, and myself. None of us four were wounded, although we
stood exposed on that ridge for more than 20 minutes, and they threw plenty of lead at us.
Several of the water party, however, were badly wounded, although we kept the steady fire into
the bushes where the Indians were hiding. Each of us was given a congressional medal of honor.
You don't think about that. You don't think about it. You're actually going to need water. You
run out of water. You're going to get guys dehydrated and die, so now you're going to risk people's
lives to go get water.
Bentine had been walking up and down the line,
urging men to hold fast not to waste
their fire and to keep cool.
I remember saying to him, Colonel,
you better get down, sir, you'll get killed.
Don't worry about me, he answered grimly.
I'm all right.
He sure lived a charmed life that day.
But things looked bad, and finally,
Benteen hurried to the north side of the lines
and asked Major Reno for reinforcements.
He made it clear that the Indians were about to
charge his line, and that if they were able to
sweep over it, the whole outfit would be destroyed. Reno told him to take as much of M-trop as he
could gather. Those men certainly look good to us. Soon after they came up, Captain Bentin led the
charge. Yelling and firing, we went at the double quick and the Indians broke and ran. When we had
cleaned them out for a hundred yards ahead of us, we hustled back to our holes. Once again, we
settled back to the business of getting fired at with men hit at intervals, with men hit at intervals,
and with the poor horses and mules taking a terrible beating in their hollow.
It must have been a long time, long about this time that Bentin called me to attention and made me sergeant.
We had one sergeant, two men killed and 12 wounded in age troop alone.
So once again, we see some aggressive and we also see some focus of forces, right?
We see some prioritize and execute.
Hey, we're going to get overrun.
Our biggest problem right now is we're going to get overrun.
So you know what?
Hey, Major Reno, give me a bunch of guys.
and we're going to go do an aggressive assault
and take care of this number one priority.
So let's focus our forces on that.
Here we go.
And that's what they did.
They got aggressive and got after it.
Back to the book.
The gun fired almost ceased
and some of us left our trenches
and stood in little groups
on the brow of the hill.
Then something happened that I'll never forget
if I lived to be a hundred.
The heavy smoke seemed to lift for a few moments
and there in the valley below
we caught glimpses of the thousands of Indians
on foot and horseback with their pony hordes
with our pony herds, dogs and pack animals,
and all the trappings of a great camp,
slowly moving southward.
It was like some biblical exodus,
the Israelites moving into Egypt's,
a mighty tribe on the march.
We thought at first that it must be some trick
that the Indians were only moving their families from danger
and that the warriors would soon return
and try to overwhelm us.
Patiently we waited in our little trenches.
The long June afternoon dragged,
dawn the firing had all but ceased the smoke in the valley had blown away and the last indian had gone then reno
ordered the whole camp to move as close to the river as possible we would get as far as way as we could
from the terrible stench of death there was plenty of water now for the wounded and towards the
evening the company cooks made us the best meal they could at least we had hot coffee and plenty
of bacon and soaked hard tack
It was our first meal in 36 hours.
Then night came down.
We were weary, but while those on guard were awake and alert, the rest of the command slept.
But it was an uneasy sleep.
We still had heard no word from Custer.
We began to suspicion that some terrible fate might have overtaken him.
What it was, we could only guess.
The sun was well in the sky that next morning of the 27th,
and we saw dust rising slowly from the valley northward.
So then they get approached by a young officer that had been out scouting what was happening.
A young officer flung himself off his horse.
He was Lieutenant Bradley chief of scouts.
Early this morning, scouting in the hills on the east side of Little Horn,
Lieutenant Bradley had come across a battlefield dotted with the white bodies of dead men.
He had counted more than 190 dead.
He was certain that Custer was among them.
Apparently no white man had escaped.
one or two Crow Scouts, notably young Curley, had reported at the steamer far west at the junction of Little Big Horn and Big Horn the day before.
There had been no interpreter on hand, but Curley had convinced the officers that all white soldiers who rode with custard had been killed.
At dawn, Lieutenant Bradley had a few men and a few men had started out to search for the field of tragedy.
Curly was right. No soldier or white man had escaped.
A little later, the slight figure of bearded General Terry with his staff and a small escort arrived on the hill.
There were tears running down his cheeks when he spoke.
I think most of us had tears in our eyes too.
More than 200 of our comrades that had met a violent death.
And now, naked and unburied were lying in the hot Montana sun, three miles northward.
so they go out to
recover the bodies or bury the bodies
they're on patrol
back to the book suddenly we caught glimpses of
white objects lying along a ridge
that led northward
we pulled up our horses
this was the battlefield
here Custer's
luck had finally run out
from the way the men lay
it was clear that the first one troop
had been ordered to dismount and fight as a
skirmish line. Then a second troop had been posted a little further on and to the east. Then a third
troop and a fourth. And finally, there on the knob of a hill lay some 30 bodies in a small circle.
We knew instinctively we would find Custer there. We rode forward at a walk. Most of the troopers had
been stripped of clothing and scalped. Some of them had been horribly mutilated. Custer was lying a
trifle to the southeast of the top of the knoll where the monument is today i stood six feet away
holding captain bentin's horse while he identified the general his body had not been touched save for a
single bullet hole in the left temple near the ear and a hole on his left breast he looked almost as if he'd
been peaceably sleeping his brother tom lay a few feet away he was terribly mutilated
Scattered over the field were the swollen bodies of the dead horses, but there were not many of them.
It seemed clear that the Indians sweeping up from the draws and coolies on all sides had stampeded the mounts while the men were fighting dismounted.
From every direction, hordes of crazed Indians must have attacked with the wild courage that their desperation and hate gave them.
Nothing could check their mad charges.
Captain Bentine found a bit of wood.
hollowed out a hole, found an empty shell, wrote Custer's name on a bit of paper and placed it in the shell and shoved the deep in the hole in a piece of wood.
Then he pushed this into the ground at Custer's head.
He would make sure that the burial party would identify Custer's body.
The following morning we went back to Custer Hill and buried as well as we could the naked mutilated bodies of our comrades.
It was a gruesome task.
Custer may have made a mistake to divide his command that Sunday afternoon of June 25th,
but the gods themselves were against him.
It was the Indians Day.
And I'm going to go back to finish this up to the section of the book that we started at.
And that is this account from Major Reno, who we know a little bit more about now.
but I think that the way he wraps it up
and they actually did a massive trial
a big trial for Reno
and they found that the actions that he took were not negligent
he might have made some calls
that might not have been the best tactical calls
if you look back on it
but he
he was basically cleared of any wrongdoing
clearly clearly I think it's pretty clear
that Windolph thinks
you know he broke and he lost control of his troops and then bentin kind of took over and got things
squared away okay clearly clearly windoff was also a huge fan of bentine so he might be spinning that
story a little bit in that direction but i do think that reno i think that him looking back on the
incident and he kind of wraps up his assessment of what happened and what went wrong that day
And also, I think, for lack of a better word, that there is a warning of sorts in this.
So here's Reno.
After much reflection, I've concluded that several great blunders were the direct causes of the Custer massacre.
It is an established fact that Custer disobeyed the orders of the general in command of the expedition,
for instead of waiting to meet General Gibbon and General Terry on June 26 at the Rosebud
and then cooperate with them in their concerted plan of action as he had been directed,
as soon as he struck the trail of the Indians, he followed it until he came upon the Indian village June 25th.
Then, without attempting to communicate with either Terry or Gibbon,
and without taking the trouble to ascertain the strength or positions of the Indians,
he divided his regiment into three separate battalions.
An act which nothing can justify, and dashed against the Indians, thus recklessly driving his own and my commands into an ambuscade of 5,000 sous.
Nor did Custer take into consideration the unfed and exhausted conditions of the men and his horses,
and he entirely ignored the fact that the Indians were key vivay and ready for the attack at noon,
whereas it would have been an easy matter to surprise them very early in the morning.
The only explanation for such conduct on the part of so brilliant an officer as Custer undoubtedly was otherwise was his great personal ambition.
He had fought himself partially disgraced because he had been superseded in command of the expedition by General Terry,
and it was well known that he was resolved, if possible,
to carry off all the honors of the campaign.
For being in command of the only cavalry regiment attached to the expedition,
he knew the brunt of the fighting would necessarily fall on him,
and he made it no secret of his intention to cut loose from Terry
where there was fighting to be done,
and to carry on the campaign on his own hook.
Absolutely insensible to fear.
He was so reckless and daring in the extreme.
and driven by an intense desire to distinguish himself by some brilliant exploit.
He made his headlong dash to a horrible death without the most causal regard for the maxims of military prudence.
Even now, after the lapse of nearly ten years, the horror of Custer's battlefield is still vividly before me.
And the harrowing sight of those mutilated and decomposing bodies crowning the heights on which poor Custer fell will linger in my memory till death.
And I think that's a pretty clear warning.
And of course there are military lessons to be learned from this account of the Battle of Little Big Horn maintain the element of surprise.
Keep your forces unified as much as possible.
Take and maintain the high ground.
To rule we should always follow.
Trust your reconnaissance units.
You've got them out there.
Listen to them.
Make sure your troops are rested and fed and have water.
But beyond those fundamental military tactical lessons,
I think it
becomes quite clear
that there is another enemy
that we must always be on the watch for
and that is
ego
ego
we have to keep our ego in check
you have to watch out for it
guard against it getting control of you
and interfering with your decision
making process
now I always say this
this doesn't mean that ego should be banished
it absolutely has a very positive side as well.
It drives us to push hard.
It drives us to do our best.
And a guy like Custer,
who personally led cavalry charges at the Battle of Gettysburg
that were critical in stopping,
flanking actions from Confederate troops,
an action that no doubt was fueled by courage and bravery
but also was fueled at some level by ego because ego is a driver of our actions and sometimes it can be a positive driver of our actions
but it has to be balanced has to be balanced by humility and open ears and an open mind keep the ego in check
and I'll tell you something else
I'll like your ego
another lesson from this
is that you have to keep your emotions
in check
and you heard the brutality
that was committed
in these wars on both sides
both sides
anger
and fear
and frustration
those result
in an essence
on both sides and on both sides there were truly horrific acts of
savagery and that's an extreme example this whole story is an extreme example of
both those both the ego and the emotional mayhem that are shown in this
example are very extreme but also think about how they relate to your everyday
life how often do you let your ego get in the way of making the right decision how often do
you let your emotions drive your decisions how often do you go to war because of your
emotions and because of your ego how often do you go to a war because of them and
what I'm saying is stop get control of your emotions and get control of your emotions and
get control of your ego and put them in check so you aren't escalating to situations where
you savage your enemy or your friends or your coworkers or your peers or your family or
whoever you do nothing in those situations to further your mission in life but instead you just
distract and detract from reaching your real goals learn from this particular battle see what the
emotions and ego do and find a better way de-escalate to build coalitions with people instead of building
blood feuds work with people instead of working against people lift people up instead of
casting them down what that is is leading that is what true leadership is
and that is what a true leader does.
So go out there.
And I think that's all I've got for tonight.
Just a brutal situation that this is.
I actually pull up some other quotes too.
In the beginning of the book,
I talk about some of these massacres
that were considered committed by the soldiers
in some of these raids.
and this is one right here
John S. Smith from his congressional testimony
This is from the Sand Creek Massacre by the way
I saw the bodies of those lying there
cut all to pieces
worse mutilated than any I ever saw before
the women cut to pieces with knives
scalped their brains knocked out
children two or three months old
all ages lying there
from sucking infants up
to warriors by whom were they mutilated by United States troops.
And again, my point in bringing that up is that it's the escalation of emotions
and the escalation of ego and I'm going to pay them back and we so often drive ourselves
to these situations in everyday life.
I mean, obviously not to this scale.
But how do we overcome that?
and I think you've got to concentrate on keeping your ego and your emotions in check.
Yeah.
Yeah, and there's also that slippery slope factor where, like, remember the one, I think it was, I think it was Milai,
where we're talking about the slippery slope.
And kind of one thing leads to another where if you kind of look at the end, the result,
you're like, no way, I would never do that.
I would never be in that situation.
but it starts like with one little thing
you know so from one step to the to the next step
or for one little step where you slide or on the slippery slope
it's like that's easy you know where it's like all right
one guy gets mad he slaps this guy you know
or even I mean it goes really with anything with a slippery slope
anything like cheating on your diet I don't know it
it does and what we're really talk about is
what's the cure to the slippery slope it's the discipline
It's maintaining the discipline.
It's maintaining the personal discipline
of what you're talking about.
Like, yeah, it's a slippery slope.
Going down the donut slope.
Yeah.
Right?
We don't want to do that.
But on top of that,
you get into a leadership situation.
Absolutely.
It's a slippery slope.
And you give that little bit.
You think, oh, you know, it's no big deal.
I like that guy.
Hey, he's got a little angry.
That's okay.
But everybody else saw that happen.
And now you're just allowing this to happen.
And it's only going to escalate.
But it's so.
And think about this.
Think of how easy it is to
Stop that one thing and say, hey, Echo, what are you doing?
Come over here.
Hey, look, we don't hit prisoners.
Stop what you're doing.
Yeah.
Get it together.
If you're mad, go over there, take a breath.
Yeah.
That's pretty easy for me to stop.
Now what happens when you shoot somebody?
Now we have, you know, we have a major incident.
Now you're going to jail.
I mean, it's a totally different thing.
I could have stopped that very easily in the beginning.
Yeah.
Or I can have major issues to deal with in the end.
Yeah.
like this I mean this is more like the slippery slope situation but not war nothing like that
but you know how like I don't know financial guys right though they'll they'll be like hey I'm
gonna do in I don't know investments you know you hear about this where they'll be like okay I'm
gonna collect this money from my quote my people you know my clients and then I'm gonna invest it
right and then hey I'm just gonna grab this little bit I'll pay it right back oh yeah
next thing you know you're gonna level seven Ponzi scheme
Yeah, see that, and that's the thing, that's the slippery slope where when you start, even before you like start to slip or whatever, when you start, you think of, okay, where I am right now and going to prison for the pond disease.
Yeah, you never would have.
You're like, no way.
No way.
I'm going to, you know, I've seen.
Have you ever read?
Is that sounds like that would really be the psychology of people that do that?
Like, I bet a lot.
Well, I don't know because I've, are you, is this a specific example that you read about or something?
No, no, no.
Or you're just kind of assuming that that's what the mindset is.
Yeah, well, I had read about like the slippery slope situation.
And really it's like two perspectives.
One is like when you're in the mix and the next step or down the slippery slope,
the is always totally understandable.
No one's going to run, you know, sound the alarms.
I mean, I bet if you looked at the Bernie Madoff where he had that giant,
I would have to read about it.
But it would make sense to me that your assumption is correct.
In the beginning, he wasn't like, you know what I'm going to do?
I'm going to rip off a bunch of people.
Right.
I bet in the beginning he said, you know what?
I got these good investments.
I'm going to get these people to buy in.
And then he goes, you know what?
I didn't quite make what we were going to make.
But I'm just going to go ahead and take some of these other people's money and just distribute it.
Yeah.
So everyone's kind of happy.
Yeah.
And you know, that's where it starts.
Yeah.
And then you realize you can get away with it and you go on down that road.
Yeah.
That's ego, by the way.
Because that's just ego because you're like, I don't want to admit to everybody.
buddy that, hey, I didn't make the money I promised you.
So you know what I'm going to do?
Double down.
Double down.
Yeah.
But the two perspectives is kind of the thing where when you're in the mix, that one step is
like that's hard to see in a matter of speaking.
It's hard to see because you're like, ah, why should I, you know, this guy came in 30 seconds
like.
So what I'm going to do, reprimand him in front of everyone?
Come on.
You know, like really, you know, so no one's, you know, that's easy to understand.
but every last employee never coming in on time.
You're like, no way.
Impossible.
No way.
When I started this company,
no way I would ever let that happen.
But here's the thing.
It will happen with that,
you know,
because of that.
Because each little step is hard to see.
You can't see it.
That's why it's like,
this is the rule and straight up.
So, you know,
sticklers of,
you know,
people like when they're sticklers on the rules.
Yeah.
It's kind of like,
I guess maybe like socially the norm is like,
yeah,
he's a sticklies of tight wad,
whatever, you know?
But I will say this though
There's some value to that
There's also the way to lead
Like when you heard about Bentine
Benton wouldn't have called a guy out like that
But he would have just given him a look
Right right
Don't you think it's a good idea
Don't you think it's really important
That we are on time
Yeah yeah yeah
You know we wouldn't have called him out in front of everybody
You reprimanded him
But he still would have been a leader
He still would have led
And that's the
That's what we want to do
Yeah
So I guess we'll
Yeah
Save the question
Questions from the interweb for next time.
Hey, Native American names are the coolest, man.
They do have the coolest names.
Yeah.
But if I had another son, I think I'd name him Bloody Knife.
Oh, right.
Or what was the other one?
Quick stab or something.
One stab.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Native Americans definitely knew how to put their names together.
So what you, like, what's the, what's the formula?
It's like, oh, it's some significant thing that this guy did, and we'll just call him that.
Well, you remember wooden leg, because his name was eats from the hand.
And then they changed it from eats I think it was eats from his hand or eats from the hand
Once he proved that he was actually a a badass warrior
His dad said because he had he had requested the name from his uncle right from his uncle because they could both they could both walk
They could both walk the distance long and never give up and so he requested that name and when a once they fought it to bit a little big horn
He introduced his son as this is my son wouldn't leg
Yeah, yeah
my Sarah before they were like hey I wonder how the Native Americans get their name I know how they just when they do something significant they just they just give it to them they don't make up a name surrounding it that's their name what they do so her friend Abby she smoked a lot at the time so her name was Abby smokes a lot legitimately no that's her Native American name but but in the warrior culture it's way cooler
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Like dances with wolves.
I mean, that's probably not warrior culture.
You ever seen that movie dancing?
I have seen that movie.
There was a long time ago.
That was when I still went to movies before I just found them all kind of lame.
It's old school for sure.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, I guess with that, how about you talk about how we can.
Get in the game.
Getting the game.
Get in the game.
And a little support the podcast maybe would be nice to learn how to do that.
If you want to support the podcast, you can do it.
And this is how.
Yeah, there's some cool ways.
If you don't know already, I would say with supporting this podcast, support yourself.
I think that because if you're incapable, or, you know, if you're not capable of supporting yourself, how can you support a podcast?
Well, how can you support others, right?
That is a true.
That is a true part.
By the way, we got mixed reviews from the last podcast.
I had said something along the lines of, hey, does this take too long?
Yeah.
Actually, we didn't get mixed reviews.
I think the only reviews we got were positive.
Now, there might be some people that just didn't say anything because they were trying to be kind and gentle.
Yeah.
So that's fine.
They press stop right now.
The rest of the people that are kind of like the little deep in the game.
They're deep in the game.
Yeah.
And that's a good.
Well, in a way, and there were some good points that they brought up because,
I forget who said it, but they were like, there's some nuggets in there.
Yeah, no, we don't stop trying to learn while we're talking about things that help us, right?
Correct.
We're still trying to figure some stuff out.
Yeah.
There's some nuggets of information in there that might be dropped at any time.
Yeah.
And even if not, that's part of the reason.
in why I put the guide, you know, on YouTube.
Oh, yeah.
So, you guys are done talking about this stuff.
So just turn it off.
So it's like, oh, whatever, the internet stuff,
I'll just skip that part.
Yeah.
You can skip it and it'll tell you where to skip to.
Both options are there.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because some people might just want to take everything they can from the podcast.
That's why I put, you know, the timestamp for all the subjects.
Yeah.
Because, you know, look, I like to assume.
that every 100% of the people,
everybody 10 out of 10,
like every single word of the process.
And they like every single subject and they like,
I like to think that.
But in the event of that not being the case,
I don't want them to be all this while.
I got to sit through,
Echo talking about, you know,
Amazon click-throughs and on it, you know,
so they have the option.
I think that's important.
Yeah.
We're all here.
We're working together.
I feel like we're all in this together, you know?
We don't need the one guy being,
hey, I have a different opinion.
Then you I have that right and then now I got to sit through the stuff that you guys like
You know what I'm saying?
All right well I think we're taking care of both sides of sure so and to do that you know of course
Like I said you support yourself supplementation if you're into it and here's the thing where I didn't
Think that like krill oil was supplementation here's the thing it is and it helps because that's
You're you're now on the crew I'm on the krill oil and it's and I've reaped its benefits and
My wife's dad was talking about krill oil from oh
dish oil no not fish oil
fish oil is good don't get wrong it's
outstanding but guess you know what's better
krill oil is what he would say all the time
I'm like yeah yeah he's kind of you know one of these health
like guys
and um
the old man was right
the old man was right yeah
so um yeah curle oil from from on it of course
that's the main one they have like the quality
the quality stuff
don't get the cheap stuff
no don't and he
one might think oh yeah
Yeah, of course.
I'm not going to go get the cheap stuff.
Like what, but here's the thing.
And so with supplements, like there is cheap stuff.
There's like stuff that straight up doesn't work.
Like you might as well be taking like chalk condensed into pill.
It's true.
Absolutely true.
Chalk, you said.
Yeah.
Okay.
Don't do that.
Because it's not like, I don't know, something about it being a supplement.
It's not regular.
I don't know something.
But on it is all legit.
Like it has the literature, all that stuff like where they get it.
Even the krill oil is like.
You're so excited about where the krill oil comes from always.
That's a deal.
Like I said,
we're all in this together.
You're about to tell us
about the environmentally friendly ships.
See,
you love that.
That was kind of a cool video too.
You can see.
Yeah.
No,
I like that.
That obviously left an impression on you.
Big time.
And for you to say something's a cool video,
that's a pretty good compliment.
Yeah.
You kind of like cool videos and make them.
At least we hope that you make them.
I tell myself.
Yeah, sure.
Because a lot of times we don't make them.
You don't make them.
Sometimes you make one every three months.
Then how do we feel about that there in the world?
We don't feel really good about it.
it yeah all right there you go i mean um i okay you know i take your point fully but back to the
krill oil it's good anyway what else the krill oil worry bars uh shroom tech for performance you know
if you if you want the edge that sounds like kind of commercially but but for real if you want
the edge if you want you can do alpha brain too alpha brain cycle that mental mental edge yeah anyway
and you can get 10% off
you can support your wallet, which is good to.
Go to onit.com slash jaco.
Also, a cool way, good way,
legit way, doesn't cost you anything.
Way to support this podcast,
reinforce this podcast, and be in the game.
Let's face it.
It's much better to be in the game.
In the game, fully.
And here, how's this?
And this is on a side note from this.
So, you know, like, you know, like people will go to,
like, a motivation.
motivational seminar or something, you know, like this, or or listen to a motivational speech.
My motivational seminar would be three minutes long.
Yeah.
So there's this like party of brain where, you know, it's seek something and then you get the payoff and then it's it's basically a sense of satisfaction.
So you seek no more.
So you're satisfied.
So people seeking inspiration and motivation, they'll go and they'll go to a speech or a seminar or something like this.
and they'll consume the speech or the motivational video or whatever.
But they're spectating.
Yeah, they're watching it.
They're spectating.
Yeah.
The speech, sure.
Yeah.
So the whole, really, the big picture should be, I'm going to get, see this speech,
motivation, video, whatever.
I'm going to be inspired, motivated.
Now I'm going to go take action, right?
But to take action, you still have to have a need, you know, that needs to be satisfied.
But people, they'll, they'll view or, you know, whatever, consume.
the speech.
And they will be satisfied because they see the speech.
And they don't take action.
And here's the thing.
The next speech that comes into town or the next motivational video on YouTube,
you know, how does the next one?
Or the next time, whoever the person is, I don't know, Tony Robbins or whoever,
next time they're coming to town, they're going to go for that good stuff that they got last time.
They left real satisfied with, you know, hearing that, you know, viewing that speech.
They go, they do it again.
They get that satisfaction.
Action still taking no action by the way
Not good
So it's like it's a weird
It's a messed up cycle
Well I think the big difference there is
And that's is that those
Literally you're watching
Yeah
And you're spectating
Yeah as opposed to
Getting in the game
Yeah and see
That's a big difference
That was really my whole point
Where
You know I'm gonna listen to you
You're not saying
Like
I mean you are saying
Get After but you're not saying
You can do it
You're not saying that kind of stuff
You know like
And I know I'm not
know it goes I'm actually I'm actually not saying you can do it I'm actually saying do it yeah
exactly right but that's the thing so really the whole message whatever it may be you know I don't
don't eat donuts all this stuff is the big message here is don't eat donuts I think 100% right
there's a bunch of messages but the key there to the the whole message is you got to do it it's not
like you can do it you know and you're like yeah I can do it I feel good about that fact I'm good
but this is like you got to do you got to go out and do that you know you can't just watch you can't just watch
okay I think I'm convinced you know I'm ready to get the game I'm saying that's the difference
and so you're saying that Amazon free d Amazon shopping click through the website
jocco podcast dot com little Amazon link it definitely helps and also we're all going to be all up on
Amazon for Christmas yeah for the holiday season for whatever it is you're going to celebrate when
school's off for two weeks and you got to buy a bunch of people presents yet during that time
period that's a good time to support the podcast doesn't cost anything you click through amazon
and you make your purchases the key there is to remember it like you need some kind of cue
put in your bookmarks or something like that some kind of cue that's good that's the key right
there i think the rest is just it just kind of you know takes care of itself anyway and then
you can subscribe of course on iTunes and youtube and stitch
Google Play.
Yep.
Yeah.
Wherever you might get your podcast from, subscribe.
Yeah, just subscribe.
Write a review.
Write a review, yeah.
Yeah, those are good, man.
The reviews.
Yeah, those are solid.
I like when people get creative.
I encourage that.
For sure.
For sure.
And then, of course, of course,
look, if you wear t-shirts,
if you wear hoodies,
drink coffee or tea
of any kind
or white tea
anyway
jocco store.com you can buy some cool shirts
if you think they're cool
look at them
there's going to be more to them than meets the eye
just looking at them but if you like how they look
maybe look into that one
but here's the thing though I'm making
like it's so mysterious like oh there's all these layers
how I always say it's on the hoodie
one side says discipline
other side says freedom if you look
if you pay attention there's a little equal
Yeah.
And it's a barcode.
Yeah.
That's made into equal sign.
Someone hit me on Twitter said,
hey, you're talking about the layers.
Is this equal sign a layer?
You know?
Yeah.
Like, is this a little hidden thing.
Hey, you're going to leave us here in suspense?
Yeah, it is a hidden thing.
It's not that big of a deal.
But it's a small deal.
It's like a double, like, okay, here it is.
So the font, right?
Yes.
Joko chose the font.
Yes.
Before any of this thing started, Jocko,
I chose the fun.
Yeah, because I made the Jocko podcast, despite you being a massive, you know, skills with all those programs that do all the design and you have a great graphics mind and all that stuff.
Despite all that, I just made the little thing, the little Jocko podcast symbol.
And I made it on PowerPoint.
And when it came time to pick the font, I chose this font called OCR.
optical something recognition yeah optical because for in my mind I'm always like okay
part machine right I'm part machine so this font can be read by machines yep that is why
that is why I use this font yeah so yeah and you can look at that I think I don't know if
you told me to look it up but you said it you're like oh yeah it's cool it's like oh dang
so I looked it up and yeah sure enough it's it's the first font that they made that
computers can yes that's right that is what it is why I chose it I'm like
guys deep. So I'm like, all right. So the barcode is just kind of yet another thing. Like
the computer is going to be reading your shirt kind of thing. You're a machine. Yeah. Well,
you're wearing them. You're a machine readable thing. You're a machine. Yes, yes. You're wearing it.
That's what it is. So you can't get rid by computer. So that's kind of the little layer. I mean,
that's just more of like a fun thing for sure. Small layer. But anyway, yeah, again, Jocco's
door. That's where all the stuff is. Cool rash guards.
Hey man, we made the claim 19% improvement.
That is yet to be refuted so far.
You know, as far as feedback that I've been getting,
anyway, if you want your improvement.
Because you know what, you know what, though?
I think that there is legitimacy.
Like, actually fully...
Somebody put an article on today
about how it compresses the muscle increases circulation,
so you actually get the legit improvement.
Hey, Brett, I don't know all the science behind it, you know?
But...
Bro science.
Yeah.
No, but you know what is?
You know how you're saying, you know, when you put on, like,
a uniform.
Oh yeah, you
or you get a little
this is a ritual,
back to the ritual
conversation.
Yeah,
kind of and it's like
almost like a,
it's weird like when I was young
when I played football is 11 years old
and we got new shoes.
Football season's here,
new shoes.
Oh, I couldn't wait to go to practice.
I'm gonna be faster.
After a few months,
man,
my shoes are dirty.
I hate practice,
but you get new shoes,
you want to go practice.
You get new workout gear.
You're like,
dang, I'm gonna go.
You get a new rash guard.
You want to go.
training your new guy you get a new guy you want to train yeah so that's kind of that's maybe a
factor as well there's a little placebo yeah placebo placebo sorry placebo factor yeah that's I call it
getting after it so yeah jocco store dot com with some women's stuff some women's t-shirts
coming out soon oh we now now that you say that they better be actually coming out I know I think
my my clock is counting down my Debbie
clock.
Debbie gave me like a countdown.
Oh, and the deadline.
A deadline.
A straight up deadline.
She gave me one month.
She's leading up the chain of command.
Yeah.
Yeah. Respect.
Respect on the.
You can also
get some jocco white tea.
If you want to drink some tea,
that tastes really good.
If you haven't tried it yet,
it doesn't taste like tea.
And it doesn't taste like anything else.
It tastes like something
really good.
So give it a shot.
And a lot of people
have replaced every
other beverage in their diet with jocco white tea and on top of that we got a little something new
coming out that can be used for tea or for coffee or for milk or for cream and it's a big old mug
so those are going to be on amazon and the mug it's just a big black mug and um then written on
the mug is it just says get after it so yep you can you can get one of those it also says approved
It was approved
In fact, by me
So you get those mugs
And they're pretty cool
And then also you get the book Extreme
Ownership which I wrote with my brother
Late Babin
And
Pick it up
You know what?
What I dig is when people buy it
For themselves and then
Three days later after they get done reading it
They buy four more for the people
That are on their team
And then they buy one for their boss
And then they buy one for the five people
That are in their peers
team and they just spread the word
because they want to make their life easier
by having people
getting after it all around them and taking extreme
ownership and if you
do want to kind of keep
cruising with
you know with Echo Charles and myself
you can find
us actually on the interwebs
on the interwebs
on Twitter
on also on
Instagram
and also
we are
Kind of all up on the Facebook.
Facebooky.
If you want to get that, Echo's at Echo Charles.
And I am at Jocko Willink.
And I guess finally, thanks for listening tonight.
Everybody that's out there in uniform, serving.
Work with some police this week.
I work with some fire departments this week.
Awesome.
Thanks for what you do.
Thanks for your service.
Thanks for protecting the homeland.
Folks that are overseas,
thank you for what you're doing.
Stay aggressive.
Stay ahead of the enemy.
Keep getting after it.
And then to all the troopers that I'm meeting all the time.
In every industry, every industry you could imagine,
that are out there making things happen,
turning and burning day to day.
crushing things whether it's some massive project that you are completely devoted to
doing and doing it perfectly or you know what there's plenty of people that hit me up and
they say hey you know what I got to do a bunch of stupid administrative tasks today and
guess what I'm gonna line them up and I'm gonna crush them so wherever you are on
today on that spectrum line them up and crush them
so until next time this is echo and jocco out
