Sun Tzu, Adam Smith, & Hippocrates Walk In…

Sun Tzu, Adam Smith, and Hippocrates walk into Whole Foods. By chance, each goes to the cheesemonger’s counter. The woman says, “Thanks guys for wearing masks and keeping social distance.”

Sun Tzu rips off his mask and growls, “I only wear this thing because my wife makes me. President Trump has said that we are at war against Covid 19. Fighting an enemy while wearing masks is foolhardy.”

Hippocrates frowns. “Mr. Tzu, we’re not fighting a war. We’re dealing with a colossal medical emergency. The World Health Organization was correct stating that we cannot return to normal until health systems can detect, test, isolate, and treat every case and trace every contact.”

As she worked on their orders, the cheesemonger listened.

Sun Tzu snaps at Hippocrates, “If we use WHO’s guidance, the world will never return to normal. There’s no instance of a nation benefitting from prolonged warfare.”

“Both of you make good points,” Adam Smith said. “But, the worst thing is the loss of jobs. By June, New Mexico’s unemployment rate will be over 25 percent. The invisible hand of a free market can resolve the crisis.”

Hippocrates responded, “Mr. Smith, you’re delusional. Your idea will result in massive levels of sickness and death. I agree with Governor Grisham’s orders, but she should make them even more stringent.”

Smith retorted. “The presence of disease kills people, and the absence of livelihood also kills people. Closing businesses, because they are deemed nonessential, is arbitrary and takes away people’s means of support.”

“Smith, you’re moving in the right direction, but your approach works too slowly,” Sun Tze said. “A timid army never won a war.”

“I don’t believe what I’m hearing,” Hippocrates snarled, “Your approach, Tze, will kill 300,000 people.”

Demeaning Hippocrates by mocking his name, Sun Tzu replied, “Hippo, 300,000 deaths are less than the United States sustained in World War II, and less than half the number killed in the Civil War.”

With things getting heated, the men looked to the cheesemonger for help. She said, “Gentlemen, you are seeing the problem through narrow focusing lenses. We face a situation in which the stakes are high and even science-based information is ambiguous. Trade-offs must be made between saving lives and saving livelihoods. To make this judgment call, use the principle of multi-frame superiority. Employ the best ideas from the military, economic, and medical perspectives. Also, consider ethics. Use Aristotle’s doctrine of the mean. Identify the extremes of positions and make a choice that resides close to the middle. Hopefully, Governor Grisham and President Trump will do this. Future generations depend upon it.”

Smith, Zhu, and Hippocrates took their packages and left. They wondered how a simple cheesemonger could out-think them all.

Death Benefit$: A New Novel by JC Mowen on Amazon in Paperbook & on Kindle

A beloved wife is killed in a murder-for-profit scheme. A criminology professor seeks revenge.

While investigating his wife’s murder, Rud Gordon uncovers a firm that kills clients after buying their life insurance policies. The motive—increase profits by securing the death-benefit payouts, fast. The hunter becomes the hunted, when an old nemesis and a super-model assassin act to stop the ex-Army Ranger.

Mysteries blend in a novel for mature readers. Can Rud stay alive long enough to eliminate those who killed his spouse and threaten his daughter? Why does the military hero join a heroin trafficking ring? How does his long-ago romance in Burma come back to haunt him? Will he fall for the exotic assassin sent to kill him?

The thrilling page-turner is set primarily in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It features two original, quirky characters. Rudyard Gordon is a decorated ex-Army Ranger, a respected criminology professor, and a criminal. A flawed hero avenging his wife’s murder, he becomes a mixture of Jack Reacher and Walter White. Born in Burma, Pema Greene is kidnapped by the Chinese and trained as an undercover asset. The exotic woman becomes a successful Parisian model. She and Gordon cross paths when her foster parents are killed after selling their insurance policies. Death and mayhem follow in their footsteps. A surprise ending teases the reader.

In his debut work of fiction, JC builds upon experiences as a business professor, social psychologist, and decorated Ranger-qualified Army officer to write a thrilling page-turner. He has published non-fiction books on high-stakes decision-making with Simon & Schuster and John Wiley, as well as works on consumer behavior with Macmillan, Prentice-Hall, and Cengage.