economics are structured in the opposite direction, to promote the growth of production and consumption regardless of their negative impact. How do we surmount this dilemma?
The Solution:
Obviously what's needed is for us, collectively, to stop and think about what we're doing …and to restructure our economics and politics. This is surprisingly easy to do. The Wisdom Council provides a way that a few people can facilitate all the people into the necessary "We the People" conversation. This social invention provides an amazingly simple path with no identifiable risk. But the benefits are immense, including the prospect of:
Involving ordinary people in facing the issues, building their understanding, creating a new shared vision of what "We" want, and designing a widely supported way to get there.
Establishing a new system of thinking … where We the People engage one another respectfully and creatively and provide leadership to governments.
Avoiding wars and international conflicts.
Celebrating and supporting individual and cultural diversity and building the spirit of global community.
Living by human values like trust and service, instead of corporate values like profits and maximizing personal wealth
Dramatically improving the systems by which we live, including education, health care, finance, taxes, justice, and democracy
…
rocess of OPENING THE DOOR !!!
Together Everyone Achieves More. A T.E.A.M. whose value-set [NOW] comprises…. SERVICE and SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY PARTNERSHIPS and COLLABORATION • COMMITMENT and TRUST • EMPOWERMENT and INNOVATION • PERFORMANCE and EFFICIENCY • LOYALTY and RELATIONSHIPS • PROFIT and SAFETY • SUCCESS has indeed many parents & FAILURE as an option, [IS] in[DEED] an orphan.
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Added by Michael Grove at 12:38 on November 16, 2021
ny,
many changes are in store. Although there will be challenges, it is a
wonderful time for humanity. Instead of being led like sheep in a
drug-induced stupor, people throughout the world are awakening to
their inherent power as spiritual beings capable of connecting with the
universal intelligence and using it to manifest [IT]self in this 3D/4D/5D
(multi-dimensional) world. As more people recognise and become
comfortable using this ability everything will change rapidly. You will
have the ability to manifest a world of cooperation and abundance with
ease and grace. Life will no longer be the struggle it once was.
Challenges will be accepted as opportunities to grow, and trust in
connection with source will replace allegiance to any governments or
religious belief structures. It will enable each person to take responsibility for their own wellbeing as well as cooperating to make the lives of everyone else better as well.
Embrace these wonderful changes and be prepared
for an amazing time of turmoil and transformation. Ted Murray
…
choolboy.
Having made it, he was in East Germany when that state collapsed, nervously trying to face off against a crowd besieging the KGB offices in Dresden. Then, he returned to the Soviet Union just in time for that country to dissolve, and found himself no longer a member of a sinisterly powerful elite but desperately looking for work. He seems to have internalised the belief that to be weak is to be vulnerable; to trust is to be weak. He was presumably reminded of this in January.
Nursultan Nazarbayev, the dictator of neighbouring Kazakhstan, had granted himself a position that gave him status and immunity from prosecution for life, while he handed over the actual running of the country to a hand-picked successor, who then turned on him, forcing him to step down. That was a lesson Putin would hardly have failed to notice.
There is also the question of legacy, something that seems now to obsess Putin. His public appearances, like this week’s television address announcing the recognition, are larded with simplistic and often downright inaccurate historical parallels, all intended not only to justify his actions but to place him within a pantheon of Russian ‘greats’.
Yet even he must know that this is a hard sell now.
…
e last night published an online Telegraph article entitled -
Even I’m starting to wonder: what do this lot know about anything?
The state of play of the "dysfunctional " UK Government Coalition and Opposition - so to speak - can best be described in Charles Moore's own words from the above article ...
"So this gerrymandering with jerry cans, along with the rows about pasties, dinners for donors and granny taxes, sheds light on the present discontent. People detect selfishness.
As modernisers such as Mr Maude rightly never tire of pointing out, voters judge politicians more on motive than on policy. It may sound an odd thing to say on the day after George Galloway got back into Parliament, but what people crave is authenticity. They do not need to like their leaders, or agree with them, but they do want to understand why they are doing what they are doing, whether they care about the country they govern.
It was Tony Blair who seemed to answer so brilliantly this longing for authenticity, and the disappointment which voters later came to feel about him still affects everything. Inauthenticity hangs over British politics like smog."
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