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Things of Concern presents both opinions on contemporary relevant
topics, and in-depth analysis and solutions; it addresses
everything from terrorism to the war and more.
Providing an analysis of the US economy, its current situation and
downward trend, and surprisingly, offering solutions. The United
States is based on free enterprise and a capitalist system, and its
strength has always been that with hard work, anyone with
aspiration can achieve. Well, right now, due to both financial and
social pressures, our economy is in a state of distress. Because
this condition is the accumulation of myriad imposed conditions and
trends, there is no one single thing that can pluck victory from
the jaws of defeat. As a result, the basic tenets of our culture
are challenged as we are being marginalized. But looking at the
issues it can be seen that a synergistic approach will bring
together the right actions to restore direction and resolve. Our
economy is bottomed out, and our country's spokespersons, the two
major political parties, are so ideologically imbedded within their
platforms, that we have reached a stagnated-standoff. By looking at
job availability, outsourcing, immigration policy, fiscal
responsibility, entitlements, government charter and services, and
education, and properly defining each element as to how it affects
both the economy and its direction, a clear and workable solution
can be crafted and implemented.
So look at the development of segmented mankind, and I do mean
segmented, in that various societies have developed from physically
isolated and culturally different people and therefore molded
socially different people. No one person can say with impunity that
they themselves are right, because you have to believe that right
is relative, unless you are omnipotent and absolute and know that
everything you pass judgment on is a flawed version of your own
ideal. And that means all of us. So the quandary is quite real that
some of the realities just don't fit together. Rodney King said:
"Can't we all just get along," and Ayn Rand and Andrew J. Galambos
answer that unless we all agree to a structure for society which is
the same for all, where we all respect each other's property, both
physical and intellectual, we really can't "just get along." We
sort of used to, it sort of worked many years ago, before the globe
became so much a community, when we were all physically separated,
before technology put all of us easily within reach of each other
and offered us force multipliers in terms of power levels and reach
that we just never had before.
About the Author
Joe Goldstein was born in 1938 in New York City and currently
resides in Los Angeles, California with his wife, Donna. He worked
in aerospace for 42 years, with specialties in analysis, system
engineering, and project management. Amongst his passions is
sensitivity to the sanctity of personal property.
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