Yes
In the war of 1812
It didn't fail. By 1940 they had France and had taken over Paris.
War Plan Orange. The Orange plan was one of a number of war plans, collectively referred to as the Rainbow War Plans, developed to deal with a number of war scenarios in different parts of the world. These plans were written by the Joint Army-Navy Planning Board and not by the U.S. Naval War College. However, it is probable that many of the Navy writers incorporated ideas that they had learned while studying at the Naval War College. The annual Fleet Exercises were also important to developing the strategies incorporated into the Navy portions of War Plan Orange.
Contingency plans were drawn up for their use, and Westmoreland did discuss the matter with the Commander in Chief; it remained a contingency plan.
you should have a comma after "plan" and "fail" should have an "s" at the end. Irony FAIL!
That's true. Though after a few times failing, for lack of planning, I think it can be said that the very act of not planning is itself "planning to fail".
Yep.... Just that the phrase doesn't really make sense, you can't not plan (fail to plan) and plan to fail, i mean, what he hell
Sam tan
I think the quote is "by failing to plan, you're planning to fail" I could be wrong, and I think its by Abraham Lincoln, but I could be wrong. :]
There are no fail-proof exercise plans, as the success depends on the user. However, the following websites will supply you with exercise plans: www.fullfitness.net, www.freetrainers.com, and www.fitnessmagazine.com/workout/real-plan.
The quote "No one plans to fail, but many fail to plan" is often attributed to Benjamin Franklin, though its exact origin is unclear. It emphasizes the importance of preparation and strategic thinking in achieving success. The sentiment resonates in various contexts, underscoring that success typically requires careful planning and foresight.
There was no failure to pull out; it was done right the first time. Its just that the pull out didn't quite go according to plan (but what plan ever does)...but it worked.
Harvey Mackay said, "Failures don't plan to fail; they fail to plan."
win then
People fail to plan for a number of reasons. The most common is thinking they can do it at the last minute. Some people just forget.
I assume you are talking about the same instance- If I fail to plan my history project, then I planned to fail my history project" I do not agree- the way I look at this, if you have failed to plan, you must have already failed all together, because you cannot fail to plan until you have lost your ability to plan. This means you already had to do that "history project" on the last day, which means you failed to plan. You did not however, plan to fail, and if you did that was a conscious choice you made, and you are a complete and total idiot. In essence, unless you had reason to fail, wanted to fail, and planned on failing ahead of time, you did not plan to fail JUST BECAUSE you failed to plan. This is a very situational and very opinion based question... there is no definitive answer.