Question & Thought for Halloween 2014!!!

Good Friday Morning?
1. Questions – Do you like today’s political adds? To you like the trajectory your country is on? Do you like the future? Are politicians careerists? If you could suggest an amendment to the United States Constitution – What would you suggest to change our Constitutional Law?douglas-vermeeren-wisdom-from-a-millionaire-20[1]
2. Thought – My proposed Amendment is to change:
  • Change Senate terms to 4 years in lieu of 6 and one can only serve 2 terms. (Total 8 years of service)
  • Change Congress terms 3 years in lieu of 2 and one can only serve 2 terms. (Total 6 years of service)
  • Change Presidential term to one 6 year term.
  • Eliminate campaign (party) fund raising by the Senators, Congressional Elected & President.
  • Supreme Court appointees will serve no more than 10 years.

 

​3. Reasoning – No one should ever be a life long politician. He/She should be a statesmen who represents their respective district, county, state, or country and then go back to their career profession. You are only re-elected on how well you represented your district, county, or state. I have seen our elected officials spend crazy money, time, and get into the frenzy of degrading each other in such a non-professional way that I am often embarrassed to speak about politics in the classroom. Our children see this and it’s difficult to defend America.imagesAQ37QHO3

 

Don’t Text and Drive! Drink Water! America is Hope! Britain owned the 19th century, we owned the 20th century. Why? Economic powerhouses! Don’t allow us to slip in the 21st century. Why? Because of our kids!

 

Proverbs: Chapter 2! Read it!

 

 

Mark

Question & Thought & ANDs…

 

Question & Thought for 30 October 2014!!!

Good Thursday Morning! I so respect Walter Williams and his principles and consistency!
1. Question – Is there hope for Africa?
2. Thought –

A MINORITY VIEW

BY WALTER E. WILLIAMS

RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2014

 

Africa:  A Tragic Continent

 

            Here’s how my Aug. 11, 2003, column began: “Anyone who believes President Bush’s Africa initiative, including sending U.S. troops to Liberia, will amount to more than a hill of beans is whistling Dixie. Maybe it’s overly pessimistic, but most of Africa is a continent without much hope for its people.” More than a decade has passed since that assessment, and little has changed to suggest a more optimistic outlook. Now Ebola threatens the very existence of the West African nations Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. Moreover, the deadly disease is likely to spread to neighboring nations.

            Each year, The Wall Street Journal and The Heritage Foundation publish an “Index of Economic Freedom,” which measures economic liberty around the world. Mauritius is the only one of the 48 countries in sub-Saharan Africa to rank among the 10 freest economies in the world. Botswana is the second-freest African country, followed by Cape Verde. South Africa used to be near the top but has since declined. Of the other sub-Saharan countries, 11 are rated as “repressed” and 26 are “mostly unfree.” Eight of the world’s 20 least free economies are in Africa’s sub-Saharan region.

            Poverty is not a cause but a result of Africa’s problems. What African countries need the West cannot provide. They need personal liberty. That means a political system in which there are guarantees of private property rights, free markets, honest government and the rule of law. Africa’s poverty is, for the most part, self-inflicted. Some people might disagree because their college professors taught them that the legacy of colonialism explains Third World poverty. That’s nonsense. Canada was a colony. So were Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong. In fact, the richest country in the world, the United States, was once a colony. By contrast, Third World countries such as Ethiopia, Liberia, Nepal and Bhutan were never colonies, yet they are home to some of the world’s poorest people.

            There’s no complete explanation for why some countries are affluent while others are poor, but there are some leads. Rank countries according to whether they are closer to being a free market economy or whether they’re closer to having a socialist or planned economy. Then rank countries by per capita income. Doing so, we will find a general, though not perfect, pattern whereby those having a larger measure of economic freedom find their citizens enjoying a higher standard of living. Also, if we ranked countries according to how Freedom House or Amnesty International rates human rights protections, we’d find that citizens of freer market economies enjoy a greater measure of human rights protections. You can bet the rent money that the correlation among free markets, wealth and human rights protections is not coincidental.

            With but few exceptions, most African countries are worse off now than they were during colonialism, both in terms of standard of living and in terms of human rights protections. Once a food-exporting country, Zimbabwe recently stood near the brink of starvation. Sierra Leone is rich in minerals — especially diamonds — has highly fertile land and is the best port site in West Africa, but it has declined into a state of utter despair. Africa is the world’s most natural-resources-rich continent. It has 50 percent of the world’s gold, most of the world’s diamonds and chromium, 90 percent of the cobalt, 40 percent of the world’s potential hydroelectric power, 65 percent of the manganese, and millions of acres of untilled farmland, as well as other natural resources. Before independence, every African country was self-sufficient in food production; today many depend on imports, and others stand at the brink of famine.

            Though there’s a strong case for us to help with the Ebola crisis, the worst thing Westerners could do to Africa would be to send more foreign aid. Foreign aid provides the financial resources that enable Africa’s grossly corrupt and incompetent regimes to buy military equipment, pay off cronies and continue to oppress their people. It also provides resources for the leaders to live lavishly and set up “retirement” accounts in foreign banks.

            Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2014 CREATORS.COM

Mark

Question & Thought & ANDs…

Question & Thought for October 29th, 2014!!!

Good Wednesday Morning!
1. Have you ever been wrong about the meaning of a title of a book?
2. Thought – Work Less is not just about learning how to better manage your time. Yes, many of you want to spend less time at the office, and this book will help you do that. What Work Less also means is that you find so much joy in what you do every day that you come home energized and renewed rather than exhausted.
The other part of this book is Make More. There’s an important thing you need to know. Making more is not just about making more money. I know, that’s probably what you thought when you read the title and bought this book. Making more is also about making more of your life. Isn’t that why you want more time and more money? So you can have the freedom to do what you want to do when you want to do it. In other words, making more of your life. (Work Less, Make More by Jennifer White)
Great book & ideas!

Mark

Question & Thought & ANDs…

Questions & Thought for October 28th, 2014!!!

Good Tuesday Morning!
1. Questions – Are you busy? Do you stay busy because you don’t want to look at your relationships that aren’t working?
2. Thought – After working with many clients, I know one of the reasons you keep your life so busy may because you’re afraid to address your internal issues. This doesn’t apply to everyone, but it may explain why you aren’t able to slow down. Why you’re moving so fast.
You stay busy because you don’t want to look at your relationships that aren’t working.  You stay busy because you don’t want to address problems with your kids. Busy because you don’t want to admit your career isn’t satisfying. Busy because you don’t want to face the fact that you’ve lost touch with the important people in your life. Most of all, you stay busy because you don’t want to admit you have lost touch with yourself. And you’re afraid that if you slowed down, the world would go on without you and what you did would not have mattered.
A consultant I know recently said it best. ” I know if my desk is piled high with work and my calendar is full, I’m important. All the work proves it to me.” Being so busy creates the illusion that you’re someone important. Ultimately that busyness keeps you from living your life. (Work Less, Make More by Jennifer White)

Mark

Question & Thought & ANDs…