In this episode of The Last 10%, host Dallas Burnett interviews retired Army Colonel Ken Allard, who rose from draftee to dean of the National War College and later became a TV military analyst and author. Allard reflects on celebrating America’s 250th anniversary and shares pivotal moments shaping his life, including being moved by the Declaration of Independence while studying in Edinburgh during the Vietnam era, his induction into the Army, his OCS experience, and a childhood health crisis amid a polio epidemic that he believes ended through answered prayer. He discusses leadership lessons—clarifying the mission and building trust by learning from the lowest levels of an organization—and describes advising senior leaders during major events like the Gulf War. Allard also speaks candidly about fame, divorce, returning to faith, and his upcoming book, God Kept His Promises, which is centered on his wife, Betsy, ahead of its August release.
What's up, Last 10% listeners?
Speaker:Just wanted to say, I bet you're wondering why we are releasing
Speaker:not on Tuesday this week.
Speaker:Well, it's a special week.
Speaker:I mean, let's just be real.
Speaker:It's America's 250th anniversary, so we thought we would make a
Speaker:special release, on the Fourth of July for the 250th anniversary.
Speaker:And so that's exactly what we did, and we have a great episode today.
Speaker:Our guest today is a former military colonel.
Speaker:we'll get into all his credentials in the episode.
Speaker:But before we get into that, just wanted to tell you, for all those
Speaker:who have served in the military, for all you veterans out there, we just
Speaker:are so thankful for your service.
Speaker:We're so thankful for your sacrifice, and that is the reason that we can
Speaker:celebrate this week, 250 years.
Speaker:So thank you again, veterans.
Speaker:Thank you for your sacrifice.
Speaker:Hope you enjoy the show today.
Speaker:Uh, Ken is so gracious, and he was so vulnerable about some things that
Speaker:he's experienced, not only in the military, but in his career as a host
Speaker:and, and television, commentator.
Speaker:And so we just, I just think you'll enjoy this.
Speaker:he's in his 80s now, and he's coming out with another book.
Speaker:I hope when I'm in my 80s I can actually come out and say that
Speaker:I've got a book coming out.
Speaker:So enjoy the show
Dallas Burnett:Hey, everybody.
Dallas Burnett:We're talking to Colonel Ken Allard today.
Dallas Burnett:What an amazing guy.
Dallas Burnett:He is a retired Army colonel who rose from draftee to dean of the
Dallas Burnett:National War College, served as a military analyst on NBC, MSNBC, and
Dallas Burnett:CNBC, explaining wars in two minutes or less.
Dallas Burnett:He's written powerful books like Warheads: Cable News in the Fog
Dallas Burnett:of War, and Business As War.
Dallas Burnett:He's got some incredible stories from protesting the Vietnam War as a
Dallas Burnett:college kid, to rushing to the studio on 9/11, seeing the Pentagon burn,
Dallas Burnett:to volunteering in Bosnia, distilling hard lessons from Somalia, and most
Dallas Burnett:importantly, he says, he's a Texan.
Dallas Burnett:So great new friend of mine.
Dallas Burnett:You don't want to miss this incredible conversation
Ken Allard:a pleasure.
Ken Allard:Thank you so much
Dallas Burnett:Welcome, welcome, welcome.
Dallas Burnett:I am Dallas Burnett sitting in my 1905 Koch Brothers barber
Dallas Burnett:chair in Thrive Studios.
Dallas Burnett:But more importantly today, we have a great guest, a true soldier scholar,
Dallas Burnett:leadership expert, and one of the sharpest minds on strategy, command under pressure,
Dallas Burnett:and what it takes to finish strong.
Dallas Burnett:Welcome to the show, Colonel Ken Allard
Ken Allard:God bless you for doing this.
Ken Allard:Appreciate it very much
Dallas Burnett:That's absolutely, man.
Dallas Burnett:This is such a cool episode.
Dallas Burnett:I love, I, you know, we'll, we'll get into, you got a new book coming out.
Dallas Burnett:and we're just so excited to be a part of that launch and release, and we'll
Dallas Burnett:talk more about that in a minute.
Dallas Burnett:But, we just are excited because it's the 250th anniversary of our country,
Dallas Burnett:and not only that, but it's the week of the 4th, so everybody's getting
Dallas Burnett:ready to go burn some chicken on the grill and shoot some fireworks off.
Dallas Burnett:And so what better time than to have Colonel Ken Allen on the show?
Dallas Burnett:So first of all, thank you for your service.
Dallas Burnett:And, what is it like, for you, 'cause obviously with all that you've done and
Dallas Burnett:seen all over the world, your service, what is it like to celebrate 250 and
Dallas Burnett:the week of the 4th this year for you?
Ken Allard:this week is very special because we just recently had the,
Ken Allard:coming to America of the Tartan Army.
Ken Allard:Scots coming to watch the World Cup.
Ken Allard:And you know what?
Ken Allard:They're reminded of how great a country we really have.
Ken Allard:to see all those guys come here and be absolutely amazed and enthralled,
Ken Allard:love everything about America, love everything about, Boston, Massachusetts,
Ken Allard:including the Red Sox, all that stuff was fantastic because they
Ken Allard:realize how special we really are.
Ken Allard:We tend to take that for granted a lot of times, but in this last couple of weeks,
Ken Allard:we've been reminded of how great this country is, how unique our history is, and
Ken Allard:what a privilege it is to be an American.
Ken Allard:that simple.
Dallas Burnett:I agree with that.
Dallas Burnett:I think it's been a cool phenomenon.
Dallas Burnett:I've been seeing that online as well.
Dallas Burnett:And, it was kind of surprising because, a lot of the Europeans coming over
Dallas Burnett:for, the World Cup have been so vocal about all the funny things.
Dallas Burnett:I saw one that just cracked me up.
Dallas Burnett:It said, it was these two people from England, and it was a husband
Dallas Burnett:and wife, and they're standing out front, of this, station.
Dallas Burnett:They said, "Only America can make coming to gas station an experience." And
Dallas Burnett:they're standing in front of a Buc-ee's.
Dallas Burnett:They're like,
Ken Allard:We do gas
Dallas Burnett:"It's incredible."
Ken Allard:anyone else in the whole world.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah.
Ken Allard:Come on down
Dallas Burnett:I said, "That's so funny that we're gonna be known for
Dallas Burnett:how well we, we do our gas stations in America." I said, "But hey, listen,
Dallas Burnett:I'll take it 'cause that's great." But it's a true phenomenon that's been
Dallas Burnett:really fun to watch, and I'm very glad that everybody that I've seen, or most
Dallas Burnett:people that I've seen online have felt very welcomed, in our country, which
Dallas Burnett:is what you wanna be, is a great host.
Dallas Burnett:So these, folks that are coming in for this World Cup all over
Dallas Burnett:the world, it's cool that it's all timing at the same time.
Dallas Burnett:It's 250th anniversary and July the 4th, and then we've got World Cup
Dallas Burnett:people coming in, and so they're experiencing… What a time to
Dallas Burnett:experience, our culture and our country.
Dallas Burnett:So yeah, that's awesome.
Ken Allard:me tell, let me tell you one
Dallas Burnett:I,
Ken Allard:because I had the great privilege in
Dallas Burnett:Yeah
Ken Allard:junior year of spending the entire year at the
Ken Allard:University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
Ken Allard:And to be there in midst of the Vietnam War, all the unrest that was going on
Ken Allard:in Europe at that time, forget, I was then facing the likelihood of going
Ken Allard:in the draft, then going to Vietnam.
Ken Allard:I had no idea what was gonna happen next my whole life.
Ken Allard:we all faced those issues.
Ken Allard:Everyone went through the, the, the incredible questioning that you had
Ken Allard:to ask, "Am I willing to go? will I serve?" And I thought I was going
Ken Allard:to, come down the right side of that question, but you don't know.
Ken Allard:one day in my class, I had the great privilege of studying
Ken Allard:with Professor H.V. Acton.
Ken Allard:He was a classic Oxford don.
Ken Allard:He lectured in gowns and the cap, the whole thing.
Ken Allard:he said-- I'd taken very careful notes of everything the guy had talked
Ken Allard:about the whole year, both semesters.
Ken Allard:And finally, we're approaching the last several weeks of the course, he says,
Ken Allard:"I'm saving the best till last because I want to read you something which
Ken Allard:is the best statement of human rights ever designed by modern man." He began
Ken Allard:reading the Declaration of Independence.
Ken Allard:And I sat there-… I sat there in my
Dallas Burnett:Wow
Ken Allard:Scotland classroom, and came to my cheeks because
Ken Allard:I thought, you know what?
Ken Allard:is gonna happen here, I've got to go and do this.
Ken Allard:I've got to go home.
Ken Allard:I've got to meet the test.
Ken Allard:Whatever that test is gonna be, I'm gonna meet
Dallas Burnett:Wow.
Dallas Burnett:that's so amazing that you were inspired.
Dallas Burnett:you're in a situation where, it's obviously a tough time in our
Dallas Burnett:country, and there's a lot of people asking a lot of different questions.
Dallas Burnett:I've talked to my dad about it as well and, and family
Dallas Burnett:members about that time period.
Dallas Burnett:And the, and like you said, there's some questions that, people had to
Dallas Burnett:ask and answer and, it was just a complicated time in our country.
Dallas Burnett:And so to be over in Edinburgh in a classroom and then be so moved by
Dallas Burnett:your own, Declaration of Independence and be inspired, it's awesome
Dallas Burnett:that, even in Edinburgh, you could, you could feel that inspiration.
Dallas Burnett:So was it at that time after that experience in Edinburgh, that you
Dallas Burnett:came back to the States, did you
Ken Allard:The, uh, by the way, the draft deferral will then be up,
Ken Allard:whatever's gonna happen is gonna happen.
Ken Allard:so I get to the last desk at Fort Holabird.
Ken Allard:The s- the, the physician looks at me and says, "All your wounds apparently
Ken Allard:healed fine. Good luck." Stamp my papers.
Ken Allard:He says, "You're now inducted." The next desk to his was a sergeant sitting
Ken Allard:right behind the me over, up one side, down the other, says, "You know what?
Ken Allard:a, a smart-looking young man like you, you probably ought to to
Ken Allard:think." Says, "Well, get him now.
Ken Allard:should I do the best job for myself?
Ken Allard:I can offer you that.
Ken Allard:not sign up for an additional year to go to OCS, Candidate School?" I looked at
Ken Allard:him and I said, "You know what, Sarge?
Ken Allard:right.
Ken Allard:me that paper." And so I signed, and only the Army could come
Ken Allard:up with a term like this.
Ken Allard:I became an obligated volunteer.
Dallas Burnett:An obligated volunteer.
Dallas Burnett:How about that?
Dallas Burnett:That's amazing
Ken Allard:So you things.
Ken Allard:the first of many contradictions.
Ken Allard:But at that moment, all I could do was say, "Thank you, Lord. Whatever's
Ken Allard:gonna happen is gonna happen."
Ken Allard:You make,
Dallas Burnett:you don't know.
Ken Allard:The best but that's it.
Ken Allard:You really
Dallas Burnett:You make
Ken Allard:what you're doing.
Dallas Burnett:Wow.
Dallas Burnett:so you kind of started out by g- you were given, you know, a, a couple choices.
Dallas Burnett:It was either, I don't know, if you were looking at the Vietnam War, it
Dallas Burnett:was, like, bad or worse, you know?
Dallas Burnett:It wasn't, it wasn't like you had the optimal decision
Dallas Burnett:that was presented to you.
Dallas Burnett:and, but then you had a way that you could do, uh, OCS I think that is so
Dallas Burnett:true that sometimes it's easy for us to look at other people in other situations,
Dallas Burnett:and we can say, "Hey, I wish I was doing that," or, "How did they get that right?"
Dallas Burnett:And it'll, at the end of the day, it's like you say, control does, there,
Dallas Burnett:a certain amount of control is an illusion, is that we exert ourselves
Dallas Burnett:by making decisions and moving through opportunities that are presented,
Dallas Burnett:and hopefully we respond really well.
Dallas Burnett:but a lot of times there's some things that happen we just don't
Dallas Burnett:have control over, and some people don't like to accept that.
Dallas Burnett:They wanna feel like we have this control over not only our
Dallas Burnett:life, but our surroundings, and a lot of it is adjusting, right?
Ken Allard:illusions I did not have.
Dallas Burnett:Hmm.
Ken Allard:I point out in
Ken Allard:I went to some length to write this because this happened to
Ken Allard:me when I was five years old.
Ken Allard:a preacher's d- my, my father was a storefront preacher, the
Ken Allard:bottom chain of the food chain.
Ken Allard:so we're there.
Ken Allard:He's running this little tiny storefront church, Boston, Massachusetts.
Ken Allard:And at age five, I suddenly am noticing I was having pains in my
Ken Allard:legs, the pains began to get worse.
Ken Allard:And, oh, by the way, there was a… They not dare talk about it, but there was
Ken Allard:an epidemic going around poliomyelitis.
Ken Allard:Mm. This is before the Salk vaccine.
Ken Allard:So here I am, a young preacher's kid, thinking I'm, "Hey, listen, whatever
Ken Allard:is my relationship with God's gonna be good because my father's a preacher."
Dallas Burnett:Right.
Ken Allard:All of a sudden, all of
Ken Allard:these pains in my legs, and they took me to the hospital,
Ken Allard:Boston Children's Hospital.
Ken Allard:you've seen that in some movies.
Ken Allard:Uh, and it's really kind of amazing because to me, walking into that
Ken Allard:place, that was 73 years ago.
Ken Allard:I'm now an old guy.
Ken Allard:I remember that vividly.
Ken Allard:It's impressed in my mind it w- like it, it happened yesterday.
Ken Allard:There were all these kids in iron lungs, Mm …in crutches, these
Ken Allard:things, in pain, all of a sudden, is this the cadre I'm gonna My Lord.
Ken Allard:Mm. Scared me to death.
Ken Allard:My father kept saying, "Don't worry. God's gonna take care of us. You'll
Ken Allard:see." looking at all these other kids who he had not taken care of at all.
Ken Allard:"Wow." The next day they did a spinal tap.
Ken Allard:And Dallas, there are lots of things you forget about being a kid.
Ken Allard:I remember every point of that thing vividly This was a
Ken Allard:spinal tap without anesthesia.
Ken Allard:I remember the cold table, nurse who tapped me on the shoulder and said, "Be
Ken Allard:brave, bud." I still remember that stab.
Ken Allard:Boom.
Ken Allard:And there it was.
Ken Allard:They drew off the the spinal fluid.
Ken Allard:Said, "Okay, well, we'll see what we're gonna… Come back tomorrow,
Ken Allard:we'll give you the test results." night was the worst pain of my life.
Ken Allard:I don't know what happened, but all of a sudden, the only relief
Ken Allard:I could have, I had my sh- my, I had my knees up around my elbows.
Ken Allard:You
Ken Allard:know what?
Ken Allard:There's a phrase in Texas that somebody's praying you through.
Ken Allard:It's a good friend, it's a parent, it's a family member.
Ken Allard:But a good friend is someone who prays you through something, and
Ken Allard:I got prayed through that night.
Ken Allard:Because it was so intense, that pain, I couldn't sleep,
Ken Allard:couldn't even relax my legs.
Ken Allard:And the more I prayed to God, the the louder my father prayed.
Dallas Burnett:Wow
Ken Allard:screamed, and there it was.
Ken Allard:And all of a sudden, Dallas, you need to take my word for this,
Ken Allard:there were no lights, no angels, no heavenly host, none of that.
Ken Allard:What happened next was a lot better.
Ken Allard:The pain stopped if a light switch had been turned off.
Ken Allard:All of a sudden,
Dallas Burnett:Really?
Ken Allard:of a sudden, I relaxed.
Ken Allard:My parents were scared to death.
Ken Allard:They could not imagine what was happening.
Ken Allard:I simply said, "Hey, you heard Dad praying. God answered
Ken Allard:prayer. What's the big deal?"
Dallas Burnett:Wow
Ken Allard:I was not, I was not, uh, up by all this excess knowledge.
Ken Allard:All I knew was the f- such faith as I had, it had proven to be what it was.
Ken Allard:That there was a God who intervened in human events as he
Ken Allard:chose or not to, there it was.
Ken Allard:I was one of the lucky ones.
Ken Allard:And so I walked through that
Dallas Burnett:Gracious
Ken Allard:next day, the doctors were honestly shocked.
Ken Allard:And to me, watching all these eminent people, these doctors, so educated, so
Ken Allard:knowledgeable about everything, unable to understand what had just happened to
Ken Allard:me, I've never forgotten that feeling.
Ken Allard:all of a sudden, you what had happened, did it, and why.
Ken Allard:why.
Dallas Burnett:Wow
Ken Allard:why, who had done it.
Ken Allard:so all of a sudden, there it was.
Ken Allard:And this is long before a Salk vaccine ever came out.
Ken Allard:I was miraculously healed at age five.
Ken Allard:And from that point on, I knew there was a God.
Ken Allard:I knew he intervened in human events or chose not to, depending on whatever
Ken Allard:it was that he felt was his will.
Ken Allard:it was.
Dallas Burnett:And you had that experience at five years old.
Dallas Burnett:and so, I mean, I can only imagine.
Dallas Burnett:There's so many things when you're telling that story.
Dallas Burnett:first of all, it makes me think, 'cause I had a friend, we've had friends that
Dallas Burnett:had, even epidurals, not even spinal taps, but they'll, hit something and
Dallas Burnett:they'll have the s- spinal fluid.
Dallas Burnett:If it's draining, they just say it's the most excruciating pain
Dallas Burnett:that they've ever experienced.
Dallas Burnett:It's just similar to what you're describing now.
Dallas Burnett:I just wonder if they didn't hit it when they pulled that out.
Dallas Burnett:you had this leakage of whatever, and it's just causing all this.
Dallas Burnett:And then for a five-year-old.
Dallas Burnett:And not only that, they're on, epidurals, and they're still complaining about
Dallas Burnett:it being so bad, and you're going on a cold table with no epidural,
Dallas Burnett:no kind of deadening, no nothing, and just getting a spinal tap, bro.
Dallas Burnett:that's hard living right there.
Dallas Burnett:There is no doubt that is…
Dallas Burnett:That's rough.
Dallas Burnett:Especially when the nurse is "All right, son, be brave," and it's
Dallas Burnett:"Oh, man, here we go." So I mean,
Dallas Burnett:was your…
Ken Allard:in the the bravery that that moment demanded.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah.
Dallas Burnett:At five years old, I mean, you do.
Dallas Burnett:You have no choice.
Dallas Burnett:You're, it, this is wheels in motion, and you're gonna experience it, you
Dallas Burnett:better, you better pull it together.
Dallas Burnett:That's incredible,
Dallas Burnett:man
Ken Allard:bet you
Ken Allard:good kid from that point on." Wrong.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah.
Ken Allard:Wrong.
Ken Allard:Oh, everything they tell you about preacher's kids is true.
Ken Allard:I was
Dallas Burnett:oh, that's so funny
Ken Allard:survive you-- I don't know what I thought, but all I was
Ken Allard:aware of fact that, uh, there's a special relationship with God.
Ken Allard:I knew that was there, but I didn't really take it all that
Ken Allard:seriously from that point on.
Ken Allard:Miracles
Dallas Burnett:Mm-hmm.
Ken Allard:The effects didn't with I never had anything remotely
Ken Allard:like that I mean, I got drafted.
Ken Allard:my physical.
Ken Allard:I went in.
Ken Allard:I did all these amazing things to go through OCS.
Ken Allard:You would run for miles with five pounds of gear in your hands.
Ken Allard:That's your rifle.
Ken Allard:There's 50 pounds of gear on your back, and you're running until
Ken Allard:the drill sergeant gets tired.
Ken Allard:So we did all
Dallas Burnett:Golly
Ken Allard:did it, and did it very well.
Ken Allard:But thank God for that.
Ken Allard:My destiny was not to be, thank God, in a wheelchair for the
Ken Allard:rest of my life, and I thank
Dallas Burnett:Man, that's, uh, that's amazing.
Dallas Burnett:Now, how was that for your parents?
Dallas Burnett:You initially the, when dad's, you praying and you're, you know, excruciating
Dallas Burnett:pain, you're screaming and then all of a sudden you just said you just
Dallas Burnett:kind of relaxed and just went cold.
Dallas Burnett:I mean, just like, not cold, but just laid flat, you just spread
Dallas Burnett:out and you're like, "It's gone."
Dallas Burnett:Yeah.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah.
Dallas Burnett:So praise God and somebody … Like, what was your parents?
Dallas Burnett:Were they as quick to, come to that as you were?
Dallas Burnett:Or they were like, "Well, I'm glad it's, you're not hurting, but we, you
Dallas Burnett:know, well, go to the doctor and kind of make sure on all this stuff." I mean,
Dallas Burnett:did they respond to that situation?
Ken Allard:I think we told we told family and and friends
Ken Allard:about that, but that was it.
Ken Allard:And so for, for years after that, it was like it never
Dallas Burnett:Wow
Ken Allard:happened.
Ken Allard:I knew it had.
Dallas Burnett:Really?
Ken Allard:it had.
Ken Allard:And so, now the, I'm now-- My father by that point was an elder in a new church
Ken Allard:that we went back to in Baltimore.
Ken Allard:And so I'm a a normal regular kid other than being a preacher's kid.
Ken Allard:so all these when you're, when you're on the inside of a church
Ken Allard:relationship, you do all the things that other church people do.
Ken Allard:And so in due course, learned the books of the Bible.
Ken Allard:I can still recite them rapid fire, Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers,
Ken Allard:Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges, Ruth, First and Second Samuel, First and Second Kings,
Ken Allard:First and Second Chronicles, Ezra, and on and on and on through the New Testament.
Ken Allard:you know what?
Ken Allard:It was not really reaching me as a as a person.
Ken Allard:And it got even worse when later on in life, I began to see things
Ken Allard:differently than my parents.
Dallas Burnett:Hmm.
Ken Allard:Mm. My young-- my
Ken Allard:as a young kid were John F. Kennedy, Douglas MacArthur, um, and Martin
Ken Allard:Luther conservative Christians did not think much of any of those guys.
Ken Allard:And they did MacArthur, of course, but not John, John Kennedy, and
Ken Allard:certainly not Martin Luther King.
Ken Allard:to me it was obvious, particularly Martin Luther King, who was
Ken Allard:a prophet on this earth.
Ken Allard:Y- I knew that even in the '60s.
Ken Allard:Mm-hmm.
Ken Allard:To, to me, that was
Ken Allard:Mm-hmm.
Dallas Burnett:嗯。
Ken Allard:see all those things,
Ken Allard:became a d-differentiation point between my parents and myself.
Ken Allard:And so it was all too easy for me to walk on my own path.
Ken Allard:And gradually, by the time I'm ready to go to college, I'm on my own.
Dallas Burnett:yeah, you were ready to go.
Dallas Burnett:And so it's time to spread the wings and, uh, leave home so,
Dallas Burnett:so interesting
Ken Allard:at The best sermon I ever heard preached, I heard
Ken Allard:preached from the pulpit of St.
Ken Allard:Giles Cathedral in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Ken Allard:Malcolm Muggeridge, a very famous, would I describe him?
Ken Allard:was a combination of a savant, a wise man.
Dallas Burnett:Hmm
Ken Allard:And so he
Ken Allard:a, a very controversial figure in Great Britain, but also very well known.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah
Ken Allard:And
Ken Allard:I heard him preach from the, from the St.
Ken Allard:Giles Cathedral in Edinburgh.
Ken Allard:He was also the university rector for the University of Edinburgh,
Ken Allard:and he took great umbrage when the students wanted him to do something
Ken Allard:which he objected to on moral grounds.
Ken Allard:And so he resigned from the pulpit on that day.
Ken Allard:It was a huge story in Great Britain overshadowed exactly
Ken Allard:what he was talking about.
Ken Allard:He was actually talking about how he had come back to faith, how he
Ken Allard:had said, "For me, there's only Jesus Christ," and that's it.
Ken Allard:Mm.
Dallas Burnett:Wow
Ken Allard:the newspapers, they
Ken Allard:and created, "Malcolm Muggeridge resigned from the University of Edinburgh.
Ken Allard:Isn't that amazing?" And they missed the larger point, and so did I.
Dallas Burnett:Wow.
Dallas Burnett:So you heard, d- were you there that, was that the day that you were
Dallas Burnett:there and listening to his sermons?
Ken Allard:50 in the pews of St. Charles.
Dallas Burnett:Good gracious day
Ken Allard:during Queen Elizabeth's
Dallas Burnett:Oh, yeah.
Dallas Burnett:I totally, yeah, I've been there.
Dallas Burnett:I've been to, I've been to Edinburgh a couple times and actually been
Dallas Burnett:to that place, so that's amazing.
Dallas Burnett:It's a beautiful…
Dallas Burnett:Yeah, beautiful.
Ken Allard:that too
Dallas Burnett:yes.
Dallas Burnett:That's amazing.
Dallas Burnett:That's really amazing.
Dallas Burnett:let's talk about this because I think this is a fascinating… So
Dallas Burnett:you've kind of had this religious upbringing, then you get, life happens,
Dallas Burnett:you find yourself in the military.
Dallas Burnett:Was that a difficult transition for you to make when you go through and
Dallas Burnett:you get through the training and stuff?
Dallas Burnett:Because I like you've had to wrestle with these ideas of Vietnam
Dallas Burnett:and then, but then you're in it.
Dallas Burnett:So that difficult, a negative way?
Dallas Burnett:Or was it difficult and you found yourself kind falling in love with it
Dallas Burnett:like, "Oh, I'm finding my rhythm here.
Dallas Burnett:I, this this is, these are my people," kind of thing.
Dallas Burnett:Which one was it?
Ken Allard:the war, was not at all shy about voicing his opinions, I got
Ken Allard:in the military and I found out to my amazement, I'm pretty good at this stuff.
Ken Allard:I can do these.
Ken Allard:I can march, I can command, I've got a loud As a young draftee, my platoon
Ken Allard:sergeant said, "You're my training platoon guy. what your job is." his assistant
Ken Allard:the whole eight weeks of basic training.
Ken Allard:it was amazing to see that stuff because all of a sudden you realize, I'm now
Ken Allard:in this and Actually, they recognize I'm really kind of good at this.
Ken Allard:Wow, amazing was that?
Ken Allard:"Well, I'm, uh, listen, sign me up for OCS." And I say even more
Ken Allard:of a surprise, I survived OCS.
Ken Allard:That was the toughest thing I've ever done in my life, ever.
Ken Allard:Because every couple of weeks, we would do what were called bayonet ratings.
Ken Allard:You would rate every other member of your platoon from one to 50,
Ken Allard:you had to assign a rank one to 50.
Ken Allard:They're either very good or very bad.
Ken Allard:And guess what?
Ken Allard:When those ratings were complete, two days, the bottom 10% were gone.
Ken Allard:where?
Ken Allard:Vietnam.
Ken Allard:Mm. So that was instinct
Dallas Burnett:if you didn't, if you didn't perform at OCS, you went to
Dallas Burnett:Vietnam, so the the bottom 10% was gone, and they were going to Vietnam.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah, so you wanted to perform well.
Dallas Burnett:So that was like, "I gotta get through this. This is, serious."
Dallas Burnett:so I… that's very interesting.
Dallas Burnett:What… As your career in the military progressed, 'cause you had,
Dallas Burnett:you just obviously had a very long, successful career in the military.
Dallas Burnett:If, you got a lot of listeners to The Last 10% that are leading
Dallas Burnett:companies, organizations, leading teams, leading themselves.
Dallas Burnett:You talk about, living well and finishing strong.
Dallas Burnett:What… If you were to boil down, 'cause you've written multiple
Dallas Burnett:books and much of that is, is military and leadership focused.
Dallas Burnett:If you were to boil down a couple principles that you took away, either that
Dallas Burnett:were given to you, or you distilled from your time in the military as it relates
Dallas Burnett:to leadership and developing people, what would you say was the most valuable
Dallas Burnett:things that you were able to glean from that time and, uh, would think would be,
Dallas Burnett:valuable to others?
Ken Allard:Number one, make sure you know what the mission is.
Ken Allard:Make sure you understand that personally.
Ken Allard:What does it mean to you?
Ken Allard:Because if you can't explain that to yourself, you will not be able
Ken Allard:to explain it to anyone else either.
Ken Allard:Second thing,
Dallas Burnett:That's great
Ken Allard:to make friends with the lowest possible level of any tr- any
Ken Allard:organization I was pr- I was in charge of.
Ken Allard:down and talked the guys at the very very bottom.
Ken Allard:The bottom, the lowest rank, foreman, whoever that was.
Ken Allard:And guess what?
Ken Allard:you talk to those people "I'm interested in what you do.
Ken Allard:Would you explain that to What-- When you're weapon or you're, or you're zeroing
Ken Allard:that weapon in, how do you do that?
Ken Allard:Look, I'm I'm really kinda dumb, so put that in dumb nut talk
Ken Allard:for me." And they were always,
Ken Allard:how amazing to see a young officer to say those incredible things to
Ken Allard:me. I'll take you under my wing."
Dallas Burnett:Yes.
Ken Allard:so
Dallas Burnett:Yeah
Ken Allard:at the
Ken Allard:level.
Ken Allard:Mm. learned early on, guess what?
Ken Allard:If you take care of them, they will take care of you.
Ken Allard:And guess what?
Ken Allard:I taught those same skills, not only the units that I commanded, but when
Ken Allard:I got out, at West Point, Georgetown.
Ken Allard:Oh, by the way, UTSA here in San Antonio.
Ken Allard:I taught those same lessons to those kids.
Ken Allard:I said, "Look, when you get out of here, go back to your companies,
Ken Allard:and you make friends with the lowest-ranking foreman on the job to
Ken Allard:him, your help." They'll be shocked.
Ken Allard:by the way, once you-- once they give you that help, you take care
Dallas Burnett:think that's think that's so true on both levels.
Dallas Burnett:I mean, number one, I think knowing the mission is so important, and I think
Dallas Burnett:sometimes, have friends, I have a lot of friends that's in the military, family
Dallas Burnett:that's been in the military, and it is, it's interesting to see them transition
Dallas Burnett:from the military to private life.
Dallas Burnett:And some of the conversations that I've had, especially with men, I
Dallas Burnett:don't know why, but like, there's a, there seems to be a real struggle a
Dallas Burnett:lot of times, specifically for men.
Dallas Burnett:It can be for anybody.
Dallas Burnett:It's not just men, but definitely for men that find this loss of the spirit
Dallas Burnett:of the Corps and this mission thing.
Dallas Burnett:And so it's like it takes a little bit of a time for them to reengage in a way that
Dallas Burnett:they feel like they have this mission.
Dallas Burnett:Because it's there in the military, at least at some level, if you
Dallas Burnett:just need to understand it.
Dallas Burnett:And I think sometimes in the private sector, we gloss over that.
Dallas Burnett:love the you know, I love the vision, mission, values.
Dallas Burnett:I even go back and say purpose.
Dallas Burnett:Like, why does this organization exist?
Dallas Burnett:What is it here to do?
Dallas Burnett:How is it gonna do it well?
Dallas Burnett:And let's really dial that in.
Dallas Burnett:'Cause just like you say, if you're leading a team,
Dallas Burnett:you've gotta be contagious.
Dallas Burnett:You gotta be the one that sharing this a way that able to be caught by
Dallas Burnett:others, and you can't be contagious if you ain't infected, right?
Dallas Burnett:And so I think that, your point of that, if you're leading a team, you're leading
Dallas Burnett:an organization, leading kind how well, not only do you… are you able to repeat
Dallas Burnett:and regurgitate the mission statement on the wall, but how well are you living
Dallas Burnett:it and how many ripples are i- impacting those people around you, or how strong are
Dallas Burnett:you able to pull that, and push that out of your being to the rest of the people?
Dallas Burnett:And I think that's, I think that's a great point.
Dallas Burnett:I think that leaders, that's challenging leaders, all over with.
Dallas Burnett:And the second thing is, you were talking about, being able go down
Dallas Burnett:to the absolute bottom of the hierarchy and gain information.
Dallas Burnett:But what you're doing, I love it because there's so many organizations that you're
Dallas Burnett:just going one step down, and you're talking and just getting reports, and
Dallas Burnett:you're just saying, "Well, you know, what is this?" like the game of telephone.
Dallas Burnett:The larger the organization, the more bureaucratic the organization, less
Dallas Burnett:accurate that information is going to be.
Dallas Burnett:Just play a game of telephone.
Dallas Burnett:You get four people down, you're done.
Dallas Burnett:You're done.
Dallas Burnett:yeah.
Ken Allard:it shapes the way you do any task.
Ken Allard:So when I get to West Point, I'm now a professor, I'm now teaching cadets.
Ken Allard:By purely the luck of the draw, I have a West Point quarterback
Ken Allard:in my class, Rob Haven.
Dallas Burnett:Oh, wow
Ken Allard:so season goes on, and I feign him with that.
Ken Allard:We would always talk, 'cause I love football, talk a great game.
Ken Allard:But I got the kids in when they're all sitting in the position of
Ken Allard:I want, I wanna say something.
Ken Allard:As you folks know, I didn't go here for an undergraduate degree.
Ken Allard:So frankly, Army-Navy leaves me a little bit cold.
Ken Allard:But Mr. Haley, play Harvard on Saturday.
Ken Allard:I did go to Harvard.
Ken Allard:If you lose to them, don't even bother coming in here And we beat Harvard to six.
Ken Allard:I'm really proud of Rob Rob comes in and says, "Surge a life at?"
Ken Allard:"Oh, yeah, I did." Boy, fantastic.
Ken Allard:Well done.
Ken Allard:Good job.
Ken Allard:So
Dallas Burnett:Good.
Dallas Burnett:That's so good
Ken Allard:in handy, and some of the weirdest times
Dallas Burnett:Yeah.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah, no, I love that, and I think that,
Ken Allard:show, took Army to a bowl game as the quarterback, not go to the pros.
Ken Allard:He flew guns in he he
Dallas Burnett:Wow
Ken Allard:Amazing guy.
Ken Allard:I'm
Dallas Burnett:Wow.
Dallas Burnett:Good for him.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah, that's awesome.
Dallas Burnett:think that's so true, and I love that, and I love that motivation that you were able
Dallas Burnett:to give your students to, to be Harvard.
Dallas Burnett:Also, I think that other point that you were making, it really goes
Dallas Burnett:beyond just getting information.
Dallas Burnett:I think if you're listening to The Last 10 Percent, don't gloss
Dallas Burnett:over what the practical realities of what, Ken just said is.
Dallas Burnett:Number one, going to the lowest person on the hierarchy is going to get you
Dallas Burnett:granular information and give you that, literally, transparency to the bottom
Dallas Burnett:of the, where the data's coming from.
Dallas Burnett:Good, bad or ugly, you're gonna get it from that.
Dallas Burnett:the second thing, I think, and it's to your point, Ken, you, made a comment.
Dallas Burnett:You're like, "Hey, me exactly how you do this.
Dallas Burnett:Like, I'm, you trying to learn.
Dallas Burnett:I'm not the smartest.
Dallas Burnett:You know what?" that right there, that shows such humility that I think that
Dallas Burnett:people that are just working and doing their craft, whatever that is, appreciate
Dallas Burnett:because it's putting you not on the same plane, it's actually putting you
Dallas Burnett:below them when you're approaching them.
Dallas Burnett:And I think, number one, it shows that you're putting them on a
Dallas Burnett:pedestal of being an expert, so that makes them feel really great.
Dallas Burnett:And number two, you're actually having humility, and they can see
Dallas Burnett:that if you're being honest and, you're being authentic with that.
Dallas Burnett:and you should be because you may not know how to do that machine, so why go
Dallas Burnett:in there and act like you do, right?
Dallas Burnett:So you can show that humility, you instantly do a couple things.
Dallas Burnett:You not only show the humility, but you start building trust because the more
Dallas Burnett:they talk to you and the more you actively listen, you just get that trust from them.
Dallas Burnett:And man, it's this it's this like perfect reinforcing positive loop, you cycle where
Dallas Burnett:you've instilled this, trust in them.
Dallas Burnett:They give you back that trust in return.
Dallas Burnett:You're getting data from them where you can make good decisions and changes which
Dallas Burnett:impact them in a positive way, so they continue to give you that information.
Dallas Burnett:So it's this positive loop.
Dallas Burnett:So just in those, just in that one single piece of advice, go go to the
Dallas Burnett:bottom of the hierarchy and insert yourself in a way with humility and
Dallas Burnett:with time and listening and all.
Dallas Burnett:Just that is gonna create a positive loop.
Dallas Burnett:I think that's so packful, so impactful
Ken Allard:Be-- again, you've done answered the question, how does a draftee
Ken Allard:get to be special assistant to the Army Chief of Staff, dean of the National War
Ken Allard:Because of the ability to go to those lower levels, make friends with the
Ken Allard:people, and get them to tell you things.
Ken Allard:that became a lifelong Mm. When I was working for General Carl Vuono as the
Ken Allard:Army Chief of Staff, I was telling him things which no one else would tell him.
Ken Allard:And guess who he was?
Ken Allard:was the four-star general, the Army's CEO, maybe you haven't heard of Carl Vuono,
Ken Allard:but I'll tell you who you have heard of.
Ken Allard:You've heard of Norman Schwarzkopf.
Ken Allard:You've heard of General Colin Powell.
Ken Allard:put them in their jobs.
Ken Allard:Yeah.
Dallas Burnett:Wow.
Ken Allard:And
Ken Allard:With General Vuono, what I did for him, mostly, my most important
Ken Allard:job was telling him things that no one else would tell Hmm.
Ken Allard:Because, A, I was stupid, B, I was a bruiser, I didn't have-- I did not
Ken Allard:have the tact gene to say, "Sir, I shouldn't tell you this," 'cause he knew
Ken Allard:I was gonna tell him the story anyway.
Ken Allard:He was living with a barn roof.
Dallas Burnett:Wow.
Ken Allard:what
Dallas Burnett:That's awesome
Ken Allard:All of a
Ken Allard:we did not know that Saddam Hussein was going to invade Kuwait, yet he did.
Ken Allard:suddenly that army was tasked at this incredible moment in history
Ken Allard:to come across-- Oh, by the way, this is not a pretend war.
Ken Allard:This is the real thing.
Ken Allard:You're going to have to go over to Iraq.
Ken Allard:You're gonna have to invade the country.
Ken Allard:You're going to beat their armed forces, and by the way, do that
Ken Allard:without killing a whole bunch of folks.
Ken Allard:And so there was,
Ken Allard:my amazement, that's what we-- exactly what we did.
Ken Allard:And I mentioned Schwarzkopf and Powell.
Ken Allard:As Powell said, gonna go there, we're gonna cut them off, and
Ken Allard:kill them." That's what we did.
Dallas Burnett:That's what Powell said?
Dallas Burnett:That's what Powell said?
Ken Allard:a press conference.
Ken Allard:Best press conference I've ever seen.
Ken Allard:Amazing.
Ken Allard:And by the way,
Dallas Burnett:How about that?
Ken Allard:became and I often tease him about that comment.
Ken Allard:I said, "That was the most politically incorrect statement
Ken Allard:you've ever made, far the best."
Dallas Burnett:That's, that's very interesting.
Dallas Burnett:that's so cool.
Dallas Burnett:I were friends with… That, that's some amazing, that's amazing
Dallas Burnett:company to keep to be in the room and having conversations with,
Dallas Burnett:those,
Dallas Burnett:those people
Ken Allard:other.
Ken Allard:knew what I was doing, and I think he respected that, and I sure
Ken Allard:respected everything he ever did.
Ken Allard:was a friend to me when a lot of other people were not.
Ken Allard:remembered me, counseled me, kept me in the loop, all the things you do
Ken Allard:with a general officer if you've got So he was he was practicing on me
Ken Allard:what
Dallas Burnett:That's cool.
Dallas Burnett:That's cool.
Dallas Burnett:Man, that's so cool s-
Dallas Burnett:Y- y- oh, s- say that again Oh, right.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah, yeah.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Dallas Burnett:I mean, that's, uh… I mean, yeah, he definitely… I, wonder,
Dallas Burnett:I don't know if he considered it or not, but, I mean, that was,
Dallas Burnett:he did.
Dallas Burnett:Okay.
Dallas Burnett:That's interesting.
Dallas Burnett:Oh, wow.
Dallas Burnett:I didn't know that.
Dallas Burnett:Oh, that's interesting.
Dallas Burnett:Oh.
Dallas Burnett:Well, I hey, she gets a vote, right?
Dallas Burnett:You We're not moving, buddy.
Dallas Burnett:We're not moving.
Ken Allard:gives it good.
Dallas Burnett:that's really funny.
Dallas Burnett:Well, that's, uh, that's so interesting.
Dallas Burnett:So if you were to say, 'cause I, I do think your experience, I
Dallas Burnett:taught at West Point, you've taught at the National co- War College.
Dallas Burnett:I what… If you were to look back on, uh, history, 'cause, you you're a student
Dallas Burnett:of war, you're a student of the military.
Dallas Burnett:ob- obviously, have had tremendous experience in that
Dallas Burnett:and been a commentator on that.
Dallas Burnett:Who would you say is the m- the person, it can be any time in military
Dallas Burnett:history, that is most intriguing to you, that you find most fascinating?
Dallas Burnett:Like, you could sit down and have a conversation with this
Dallas Burnett:military personality, you would just be just blown away.
Dallas Burnett:Is there anybody that comes to mind for you, prot- p- personally?
Ken Allard:from that I, I really, really love and respect, uh,
Ken Allard:is George Washington, because he was a man of character if
Ken Allard:ever was one, and a man of character that we needed that successfully at that time.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah
Ken Allard:the if you will, would be George Washington.
Ken Allard:But
Dallas Burnett:Yes
Ken Allard:you someone known to, uh, your audiences because
Ken Allard:they're more familiar with him.
Ken Allard:Uh, fact, he's just go- he's just done something really remarkable.
Ken Allard:That's Mike Co- Governor Mike Huckabee, our ambassador to Israel.
Ken Allard:gave a speech in Israel this
Ken Allard:which reminded Americans of why do Americans have a stake
Ken Allard:in what happens in Israel?
Ken Allard:Mike stood up and told them.
Ken Allard:if you think the Judeo-Christian ethic is important, right.
Ken Allard:It is.
Ken Allard:It's fundamental." And where was the Judeo-Christian ethic invented?
Ken Allard:Israel.
Ken Allard:where it took place.
Ken Allard:That's
Ken Allard:us.
Ken Allard:every one of our forefathers.
Ken Allard:if you look back at the
Ken Allard:again, we don't teach history all that well anymore, but if we did, you'd
Ken Allard:realize what really happened back then.
Ken Allard:were shaped by, guess what?
Ken Allard:What happened in their Bibles or what they were literate in reading those things.
Ken Allard:And because the Bible shapes you, if you read it, you make better
Ken Allard:decisions than if you don't.
Ken Allard:You live a better life than if you don't.
Ken Allard:by the way, as I've proven many times, you ignore what the Bible says,
Ken Allard:you're simply writing for a fall.
Ken Allard:simply a
Dallas Burnett:That's right.
Dallas Burnett:That's right.
Dallas Burnett:That's right
Ken Allard:growing kid, when I got on TV, I ignored all that stuff.
Ken Allard:One, you ignore those basic things, not long before have cause for regret.
Ken Allard:And so all of a sudden, I'm on TV, I'm recognized going in airports.
Ken Allard:People see me on TV and, "Oh, he's ex-governor." Suddenly
Ken Allard:I was no longer anonymous.
Ken Allard:And all of a sudden I began to believe my own publicity.
Ken Allard:What, more destructive fate can you face than doing that?
Ken Allard:And all of a sudden I began to realize every mistake I
Ken Allard:knew not to make, I'd made.
Ken Allard:the only mistake I'd not made was coming back to Christ and saying,
Ken Allard:doing what every sinner does.
Ken Allard:You're a great sinner, you need a great savior.
Ken Allard:that's where it begins from, that's where it ends up.
Ken Allard:And so what happened was I went through divorces.
Ken Allard:I was very lucky to survive that whole experience.
Ken Allard:And all of a sudden, today, coming up on 20 years of , my anniversary with my wife
Ken Allard:Betsy, and she's my hero of the book.
Ken Allard:is the heroine who you're gonna read about if you pick up that book.
Ken Allard:You read a lot about Ken Ott.
Ken Allard:You won't-- you might have heard about before, but you've not heard about Betsy.
Ken Allard:You read that book, you'll know why.
Dallas Burnett:so I just, uh, that's very fascinating because,
Dallas Burnett:uh, I appreciate your, vulnerability in, in really, talking about your
Dallas Burnett:time while you were, on television, recognized as a, national person on
Dallas Burnett:TV and the news things like that.
Dallas Burnett:It's interesting because I think when people see people, they're a analyst
Dallas Burnett:on the news or, influencer on social media, they just automatically put
Dallas Burnett:this kind of, don't know, they have assumptions that they make about them
Dallas Burnett:that they're living a certain type of life and that they've kind made it.
Dallas Burnett:It's movie stars or, recording artists or whatever.
Dallas Burnett:you, you alluded to that, that what may not have been the best time, you you in
Dallas Burnett:terms of whether it was, you personal life, it wasn't as, it wasn't quite as, it
Dallas Burnett:was quite where you wanted it to be, like, your professional, you image, you know?
Dallas Burnett:So I think that I appreciate your honesty on that.
Ken Allard:you something, okay?
Ken Allard:The one thing, you might think that those people you're seeing on TV,
Ken Allard:they're up in-- Uh, they have all kinds of money, they have all kinds
Ken Allard:of prominence, honors, all this stuff.
Ken Allard:The only thing you have in common with them, that they have in common with
Ken Allard:you, is we're both living this earth
Ken Allard:at
Dallas Burnett:That's true
Ken Allard:time.
Ken Allard:You will then stand before this
Ken Allard:Jew give an account for your life and whether or not you listened
Ken Allard:to Him and did what He said.
Ken Allard:Not whether you did it on TV.
Ken Allard:Did you do what He said to do?
Ken Allard:Did you read that book?
Ken Allard:Did that make any sense to you?
Ken Allard:Do you-- More to the
Dallas Burnett:Yeah
Ken Allard:apply And so I have 20 years record
Ken Allard:that in my life.
Ken Allard:What a huge difference it makes.
Ken Allard:I I don't have to make these If you read the book, you'll see all those adventures,
Ken Allard:Betsy's adventures, my adventures.
Ken Allard:And Betsy's a hero of mine because she did this thing as a very young lady who
Ken Allard:had no ties at all to the educational establishment beyond high school.
Ken Allard:At age 40-something, she went back to Abilene Christian University, three
Ken Allard:years, summa cum laude, both Victorian.
Ken Allard:Amazing.
Dallas Burnett:Wow.
Dallas Burnett:Wow.
Dallas Burnett:So now let's talk about your new book because it's coming out.
Dallas Burnett:When is the book, when is your new book coming out?
Ken Allard:uh, middle part of August
Dallas Burnett:Middle part of August.
Dallas Burnett:So we're just a few weeks away from the launch of your new book, and I'll say
Dallas Burnett:that we have taken it, we have taken… You, supplied a copy and we've taken a
Dallas Burnett:look at it, and man, you start off the book, it's just a, it's an amazing story.
Dallas Burnett:think one of the things is that you're You share about, you your experience
Dallas Burnett:early on, a health emergency that you had and how Betsy comes in.
Dallas Burnett:I us a little bit about that because I mean, that was a, that's
Dallas Burnett:a s- that's life-changing for you, especially being on television.
Dallas Burnett:You know, that's kind big deal.
Dallas Burnett:So tell the listeners kinda what you had to deal with, they can
Dallas Burnett:read about it more in your book.
Ken Allard:experience of dealing with polio, okay, where you have
Ken Allard:no hope, where there is no cure,
Dallas Burnett:Yeah
Ken Allard:absolutely
Ken Allard:This is before Salk vaccine.
Ken Allard:So all I knew was I'd been healed miraculously of polio, I was
Ken Allard:gonna do was try and enjoy life.
Ken Allard:Well, guess what?
Ken Allard:Eventually you learn to come back to where you began realize- Mm-hmm hey,
Dallas Burnett:Mm.
Ken Allard:God
Ken Allard:you about who you are.
Ken Allard:And oh, by the way, you can't ignore say.
Ken Allard:Mm-hmm.
Ken Allard:If you try to,
Dallas Burnett:Hmm.
Ken Allard:this is not gonna work.
Ken Allard:You eventually will find this is not the way to go.
Ken Allard:And all of a sudden I began to realize how true that was in my life, and I began to
Ken Allard:say, "Listen, you come with open hands."
Ken Allard:You say, "Listen, screwed this thing up as badly as I can.
Ken Allard:All I can do is surrender to you, but here it is.
Ken Allard:Mm-hmm.
Dallas Burnett:it.
Dallas Burnett:Yeah
Ken Allard:is the backdrop for that book, Mm-hmm.
Dallas Burnett:Hmm
Ken Allard:about and it's amazing to see steps that we took.
Ken Allard:We were two people-- We grew up 1,500 miles apart.
Ken Allard:She's a in Texas.
Ken Allard:Um, I lived in Towson, Maryland, we knew nothing about each other.
Ken Allard:When did we get together?
Ken Allard:We get together 50 years later Oak Hills Church in San Antonio, Texas.
Ken Allard:Bravest thing I've ever done was not in the Army.
Ken Allard:Was walking in the singles class at Oak Hills not knowing who was gonna be there.
Ken Allard:And I saw Betsy, and that's all there was to it.
Ken Allard:I saw her.
Ken Allard:We were together.
Ken Allard:And you know what?
Ken Allard:We've been together for 20 years, and it's been amazing.
Dallas Burnett:wow, that's- that's unbelievable.
Dallas Burnett:So it's- it's similar to your polio story where it's a definitely an interesting
Dallas Burnett:situation you find yourself in.
Dallas Burnett:So I'll let our le- listeners pick this up.
Dallas Burnett:we'll put a copy of it in the show notes in August when it releases, but it, the
Dallas Burnett:book is titled God Kept His Promises, I think for, it's interesting to me
Dallas Burnett:because as I've been, talking with you today and, and, uh, just experiencing,
Dallas Burnett:you book a- as well, it's interesting because, you have been on both sides.
Dallas Burnett:Y- you've kind of woven ideas from both sides of the political spectrum
Dallas Burnett:into the conversation today and, and I think that's very interesting
Dallas Burnett:because, you're, you've been in the military, you're a decorated soldier,
Dallas Burnett:you've been colonel, you've been…
Dallas Burnett:You only that, you're a f- a, a, a student of the, you know, the art of war.
Dallas Burnett:You've been teaching at the National War College in West Point.
Dallas Burnett:You've been steeped in this, and yet you've written multiple books about
Dallas Burnett:war and military and all these things.
Dallas Burnett:and yet this book, is, more, more of your personal perspective and
Dallas Burnett:personal story with you and your wife and, and it has that to it.
Dallas Burnett:I think it's really good because I think our culture right now has
Dallas Burnett:a hard time talking to each other.
Dallas Burnett:Like I, I appreciate, people on podcasts.
Dallas Burnett:is not a political podcast, but I do appreciate people on podcasts on either
Dallas Burnett:side of the political spectrum that can sit down and have a conversation
Dallas Burnett:'cause I feel like that's just something that's so lost in our culture right
Dallas Burnett:now, to be able to, be able to have a conversation and come to some
Dallas Burnett:agreement without getting violent.
Dallas Burnett:It's just crazy.
Dallas Burnett:. So I appreciate your, perspective on all of this and your advice and wisdom.
Dallas Burnett:And I just like your humility in sharing your story with vulnerability, especially
Dallas Burnett:in the book, and, having r- risen to the level of prominence you have in your
Dallas Burnett:career, whether that be in the military or on, commentating on TV, to still come out
Dallas Burnett:and say, "Hey look, I'm a guy just like everybody else and this is how, this this
Dallas Burnett:is what I've experienced and how I moved through that and what gives me hope."
Dallas Burnett:So appreciate you for that.
Dallas Burnett:Ken, we always ask our guests, number one, how can listeners, get in touch
Dallas Burnett:with you if you, if they want to have and find out more information on any
Dallas Burnett:of your books, any of your m- first books, uh, first I guess three or
Dallas Burnett:four books or this new one coming out?
Dallas Burnett:How can people find out more about Colonel Allen?
Ken Allard:gonna take full advantage of your position at uh, at the press and
Ken Allard:say to you that we'll have on the press site by the time that the new book comes
Ken Allard:out, have a site, we'll have a whole page
Ken Allard:me as an author.
Ken Allard:We'll see, make sure that happens so people can get in touch with me,
Ken Allard:get information about the books.
Ken Allard:the way, there are four previous ones, but this one's my favorite
Dallas Burnett:Oh, really?
Dallas Burnett:Wow, that's awesome.
Dallas Burnett:Well, know the readers will love it, and, uh, listeners will love it,
Dallas Burnett:and I just, just appreciate that.
Dallas Burnett:So the last… Oh, and it's funny, yeah.
Ken Allard:because you can't
Dallas Burnett:Oh, so we've-
Ken Allard:without value of humor.
Ken Allard:It's amazing.
Dallas Burnett:Ah,
Dallas Burnett:awesome.
Dallas Burnett:That's really good.
Dallas Burnett:know she's
Ken Allard:And the reason I wrote the book was all people said, "You've
Ken Allard:written all these other books and they're boring. wrote a book about
Ken Allard:Betsy, we'd love to read that."
Dallas Burnett:Oh, that's so funny.
Dallas Burnett:Well, she is an amazing woman, and so, last question, ask every guest on The
Dallas Burnett:Last Ten Percent, if there was one person that you would like to hear as a guest on
Dallas Burnett:The Last Ten Percent, who would that be?
Ken Allard:I would say now probably, uh, probably our Secretary of State.
Ken Allard:he's one of the more interesting people I've heard
Ken Allard:I've always admired and respected Marco, but these days it's him
Ken Allard:above almost everyone else.
Ken Allard:He's really an amazing guy.
Ken Allard:He's also Mike Huckabee's boss, so I respect that too.
Dallas Burnett:Oh.
Ken Allard:Secretary of State
Dallas Burnett:That's awesome.
Dallas Burnett:Well, I mean, he's definitely had his hands full, with, things going on
Dallas Burnett:all over the world at the same time.
Dallas Burnett:Thank you, Ken, for being on the show today.
Dallas Burnett:This has been great.
Dallas Burnett:I think you've shared some really great wisdom for our leaders
Dallas Burnett:that are listening out there.
Dallas Burnett:I appreciate you sharing, being , , vulnerable about
Dallas Burnett:your own story and experiences.
Dallas Burnett:And we just, man, we wish you the best in this book launch, and
Dallas Burnett:we'll be cheering for your success