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'I believe that I will make a better future,' is a popular notion of political, religious, educational and business leaders. To believe is to think that something is true or real. This does not mean it is true. Beliefs become opinions, which are fixed and non-negotiable. It is difficult to exchange ideas when a sentence starts with 'I believe' and there is no backup of fact. The belief is irrelevant and the behaviour will determine the state of the future. Western leadership drowns in greed, entitlement, belief and gross ignorance, while those who follow, scrabble for the remnants of bad…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
'I believe that I will make a better future,' is a popular notion of political, religious, educational and business leaders. To believe is to think that something is true or real. This does not mean it is true. Beliefs become opinions, which are fixed and non-negotiable. It is difficult to exchange ideas when a sentence starts with 'I believe' and there is no backup of fact. The belief is irrelevant and the behaviour will determine the state of the future. Western leadership drowns in greed, entitlement, belief and gross ignorance, while those who follow, scrabble for the remnants of bad behaviour. Zionism is a quasi Christian/Jewish belief that has distorted behaviour for 3000 years. Western leaders do not understand that unshared wealth is a crime against humanity.
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Autorenporträt
Alan R. Hall is a North Carolina columnist and theater critic who has plied his trade for over thirty years. He is also a published poet, essayist, short story author as well as a theater enthusiast. Mr. Hall is a graduate of Augusta State University of Georgia and studied literature for performance at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. He has won numerous awards for criticism from the North Carolina Press Association. This is his first full-length novel. Alan has lived in Chapel Hill since 1974. Always a lover of books, he began his career as a bookseller before switching gears and going to work for the University of North Carolina's Law Library. He went on to become Technical Librarian for the Central Carolina Bank (now Suntrust). He considers himself fortunate to be able to "call North Carolina Home."