I have always been a big fan of David from the David and Goliath story in the Bible. A little shepherd is taking lunch to his brothers in the middle of a war when the Philistine giant challenges the Israelites to a one-on-one winner-take-all grudge match. Let's see, in this corner a giant with a hundred pounds of armor, massive weapons, and a bad attitude and in that corner a little shepherd boy with a staff and a sling and five rocks. I'm taking the giant and giving 20 points on this one, right?
"Sucker's bet," says Malcolm Gladwell in his book, "David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits and the Art of Battling Giants." Goliath never stood a chance. I had read about Julius Caesar's use of his Syrian troops and their deadly slings over a thousand years after David to attest to the power of this simple weapon. The author concludes the poor Philistine was essentially armed with a spear and sword facing a confident marksman packing the foot-pound equivalent of a .45 auto.







