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Will You Add? - Philosophy and Ideas - Pathways to Peace?
What to Look for in Bill Consolidation Programs e in which the international system finds itself."Nowadays, many people turn to bill consolidation programs in order to help them make their financial lives a bit easier.The number of bill consolidation programs available out there just tells you about how much America needs to control spending.People nowadays depend on debts and credit to maintain their lifestyle. That's just sad, considering the fact that they can live comfortably without having to resort to credit.But hey, we are only human. Part of our humanity is the need to acquire more and more.The number of bill consolidation programs out there also tells you another thing: competition is strong in the market of bill consolidation programs.This means that you would have the opportunity and the option to look for the best bill consolidation program for you.After all, with the many bill consolidation programs in existence, you are empowered by choice.And choice is one thing that all humans desire. Choice gives us power over our destinies, no matter how small a power that may seem like.Just being able to choose how to handle your problems assures you that you are still in control.And control is still very important to people, although the lack of it is valued by some.Anyway, let's go back to the issue at hand. How do you choose the bill consolidation program for you?Well, you need to know what to look for first.Here are some things you should look for in a bill consolidation program:1. Dedication - a good bill consolidation program should be dedicated to getting you out of THE CENTRAL ISSUE At the root of the idealist-realist debate is a truth that never goes away and that neither side ignores--they just approach it from different perspectives: Human nature is the fly in the ointment. Realists hold an essentially pessimistic view of human nature. Idealists share a belief in its essential goodness. Henry Kissinger would say that's exactly why idealistic notions of peace through morality will fail. You just can't expect humans, and therefore the nations they represent, to be anything but self-interested. The idealist Robert McNamara would say that without imposing a moral curb on human nature we will see more people killed in the 21st century than in the overwhelmingly violent 20th, when multiple millions died in war, most of them civilians. So we must pursue prescriptions for peace based on the morality of avoiding such catastrophic wars. If human nature is the problem, how to deal with it is the issue. The history of society's attempts to do so does not give much cause for hope. We must admit that no method of taming human nature has yet been found. According to one source, in the past 6,000 years humanity has experienced only 300 years of global peace. Albert Einstein famously said that it is easier to denature plutonium than to change human nature. Could it be that we are seeking an answer that cannot come from the human level? Can human nature be curbed from our own resources? What exactly is human nature, and what is its origin? THE TRUTH ABOUT US In religion and the Bible, a relevant question can be answered from the New Testament: "Do you know where your fights and arguments come from?" The answer in the apostle James's words: Different Ways To Have 100% Financing Work For You There are different ways of looking at the state of the world. Accordingly when it comes to international affairs, leaders propose differing foreign policies to make and preserve peace for their nations.Mortgage FinancingYour mortgage lender may be able to offer you 100% financing.This is much more common now, with many different mortgage lenders offering 100% financing even to borrowers with challenging credit.Why This May Make SenseYou can determine what your monthly payment will be by using a free online mortgage calculator.You can use the mortgage calculator to compare different down payments.You can compare a 100% financing deal with a different loan that you put 10% down.On a $500,000 loan this is a $50,000 down payment. This is a significant sum of money.If you compare the monthly payment between the two options you will see that a 10% down payment does not lower your monthly payment substantially.Keep this in mind when you are deciding how much, if any, or a down payment you will make.Closing CostsKeep in mind that you may have costs even if you get 100% financing.These are usually the mortgage loan closing costs. This consists of lender fees, title fees, escrow fees, insurance, taxes, and other charges.This can easily add up to several thousand dollars or more.One option to avoid this is to have your loan cover your closing costs. Many mortgage lenders will allow up to 6% of the purchase price of a property to be used to cover closing costs.Check with your mortgage lender in advance to see if they offer this option. It can end up saving you thousands of dollars. The two most common approach of ideas are idealism and realism, and their offspring, neoliberalism and neorealism, are illustrated by two former Harvard professors and leaders in U.S. government, Henry Kissinger and Robert McNamara. As secretary of defense in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, McNamara was in the forefront of America's involvement in Vietnam. By 1966, however, he was beginning to question America's role, and in his later years he has repudiated the support he gave to the war effort, believing that the disastrous conflict escalated largely as the result of misperception on both sides. In other words, in his opinion, America need not have intervened in the way that she did. If he could turn back the clock, he would seek peace on different terms. He would not make the costly commitment to bloodshed that occurred on all sides. He would find the opening to promote a moral commitment to end the war quickly. Today McNamara, having been president of the World Bank in the interim, is devoted to the cause of reducing the risk of conflict, killing and catastrophe in the 21st century. His new book, coauthored with international relations professor James Blight, is titled Wilson's Ghost in reference to the prescriptions for peace of America's First World War president. Woodrow Wilson was an idealist who believed that moral issues should dominate in policy making. Essentially it was the president's efforts at peacemaking that provided the way out for Germany in a peace without victory. Wilson's subsequent tireless work aimed at establishing the League of Nations inspires McNamara and Blight; in it they see the only way ahead to a peaceful future for a planet still living in the nuclear shadow. Like Blight, Kissinger also has a background in political science. In the 1960s he was a professor of government at Harvard. Best known for his years as Richard Nixon's assistant for National Security Affairs and subsequently as secretary of state, he was inevitably also embroiled in the Vietnam War. At first a hard-liner in the prosecution of the war, he went on to win the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize along with North Vietnamese negotiator Le Duc Tho (who refused the award) in recognition of the cease-fire agreement they reached. Nevertheless, Kissinger is a realist in the tradition of another U.S. president, Theodore Roosevelt (see "Mentors of Modern Men"). PRAGMATICS AND PRINCIPLES In their efforts to ensure security for all society, realists pursue policy options based on the ebb and flow of power within the international system of nations. In his new book, Does America Need a Foreign Policy? Kissinger says it's vitally important that, as the only superpower, America decide on its interests and also on where it should and should not intervene. This is an approach driven by pragmatics first and foremost. For Kissinger, it's not so much a question of universal moral and ethical principles; it is primarily a question of taking care of America's national interests in a world compromised by human nature's inherent pursuit of power. Idealism, on the other hand, believes that mutual interest creates a natural harmony between nations. Its proponents support the development of international structures and organizations to limit any nation-state's irresponsible quest for power. In neoliberal fashion, the idealist McNamara adds that the world is more interdependent than the old European world of independent nation-states. Modern idealists point to the Internet, the mass media, the shared environment, and globalized trade and investment as evidence of a different and more integrated world--a world anxious to promote peace by nonmilitary means. The power politician acknowledges these contemporary realities but does not believe they are the fundamental keys to peace. For the idealist, on the other hand, it's not just about national interest and "power-balancing" between nations. McNamara points to the ability of nations to cooperate at times for their mutual benefit. This, he believes, proves that peace can be achieved without war. Only as a last resort does the idealist use force, and even then, in most cases, it is by multilateral agreement in the international sphere. CAUSES FOR CONCERN McNamara's fears of the future arise from the catastrophic loss of life that occurred in the century just past. Wilson's Ghost calls up the specter of the moralist president in the role of prophet. Following the war in 1919, Wilson said: "Liberalism must be more liberal than ever before, it must even be radical, if civilization is to escape the typhoon. . . . I do not hesitate to say that the war we have just been through, though it was shot through with terror of every kind, is not to be compared with the war we would have to face the next time." Wilson's words were eerily prescient. The succeeding 1939-45 world conflict and its atomic conclusion massively eclipsed the First World War, unfathomable as it was in its carnage. The international wars that followed only served to demonstrate the apparently uncontrollable human capacity for technological development in delivering death. The threat of nuclear holocaust looms large in McNamara's 21st-century scenario. Accordingly he believes that two imperatives, moral and multilateral, must guide U.S. foreign and defense policy in this century. The moral imperative requires that the U.S. government establish as a major goal of foreign policy "the avoidance in this century of the carnage--160 million dead--caused by conflict in the 20th century." The corresponding multilateral imperative requires that the United States recognize that it "must provide leadership to achieve the objective of reduced carnage but, in doing so, it will not apply its economic, political, or military power unilaterally, other than in the unlikely circumstances of a defense of the continental United States, Hawaii, and Alaska." Further, he believes that foreign policies across the globe should adopt the same moral imperative, as is currently the case in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. In the classic idealist-realist debate, neither side normally accords the other much space. In his new analysis, however, Kissinger notes that "in relations between the United States and Western Europe and within the Western Hemisphere, America's historic ideals have considerable applicability. Here the idealist version of peace based on democracy and economic progress demonstrates its relevance." He also notes that the current complexity of the international system "renders much of the traditional American debate about the nature of international politics somewhat irrelevant. Whether it is values or power, ideology or raison d'?tat that are the key determinants of foreign policy, in fact depends on the historical stage in which the international system finds itself." THE CENTRAL ISSUE At the root of the idealist-realist debate is a truth that never goes away and that neither side ignores--they just approach it from different perspectives: Human nature is the fly in the ointment. Realists hold an essentially pessimistic view of human nature. Idealists share a belief in its essential goodness. Henry Kissinger would say that's exactly why idealistic notions of peace through morality will fail. You just can't expect humans, and therefore the nations they represent, to be anything but self-interested. The idealist Robert McNamara would say that without imposing a moral curb on human nature we will see more people killed in the 21st century than in the overwhelmingly violent 20th, when multiple millions died in war, most of them civilians. So we must pursue prescriptions for peace based on the morality of avoiding such catastrophic wars. If human nature is the problem, how to deal with it is the issue. The history of society's attempts to do so does not give much cause for hope. We must admit that no method of taming human nature has yet been found. According to one source, in the past 6,000 years humanity has experienced only 300 years of global peace. Albert Einstein famously said that it is easier to denature plutonium than to change human nature. Could it be that we are seeking an answer that cannot come from the human level? Can human nature be curbed from our own resources? What exactly is human nature, and what is its origin? THE TRUTH ABOUT US In religion and the Bible, a relevant question can be answered from the New Testament: "Do you know where your fights and arguments come from?" The answer in the apostle James's words: 10 Reasons a Young Family Should Have an Ebay Business ishing the League of Nations inspires McNamara and Blight; in it they see the only way ahead to a peaceful future for a planet still living in the nuclear shadow.Many young families are looking for ways to earn Extra Money. Even 2 income families often find themselves strapped for cash. Ebay is the Perfect Solution for the young Growing family.1 - Low Start Up Cost'sYou can get started selling on EBay with virtually no out of pocket money. Many people just sell their 2nd hand Junk. Cloths Children outgrew Toys your children never play with That old laptop computer. That ugly bridesmaid dress that you still can't belive she made you wear Ebay truly is the world's largest garage sale 2 - Risk FreeSince you don't need a large investment and you can start off by selling your old junk and then perhaps things you buy at closeout sales their is no risk.3 - Very Easy to StartYou can take a class online at EBay University that teaches you everything you need to know to get started selling on Ebay.4 - Very Easy to RunYou can list an item for sale on Ebay in less then 15 Minutes. At the close of auction after you have been paid You can then go to a package stores like 'the UPS Store' or 'Fedex Kinkos' and they will pack and Ship the item for you.As you get more sophisticated you can use a drop shipper. You just Fax or e-mail them your customer information and they do all the shipping.5 - Start TodayYou can literally be in busy today if you want.6 - Flexible HoursYou can work your Ebay Business any time of the night or day. You can work your Ebay Business Full Ti Like Blight, Kissinger also has a background in political science. In the 1960s he was a professor of government at Harvard. Best known for his years as Richard Nixon's assistant for National Security Affairs and subsequently as secretary of state, he was inevitably also embroiled in the Vietnam War. At first a hard-liner in the prosecution of the war, he went on to win the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize along with North Vietnamese negotiator Le Duc Tho (who refused the award) in recognition of the cease-fire agreement they reached. Nevertheless, Kissinger is a realist in the tradition of another U.S. president, Theodore Roosevelt (see "Mentors of Modern Men"). PRAGMATICS AND PRINCIPLES In their efforts to ensure security for all society, realists pursue policy options based on the ebb and flow of power within the international system of nations. In his new book, Does America Need a Foreign Policy? Kissinger says it's vitally important that, as the only superpower, America decide on its interests and also on where it should and should not intervene. This is an approach driven by pragmatics first and foremost. For Kissinger, it's not so much a question of universal moral and ethical principles; it is primarily a question of taking care of America's national interests in a world compromised by human nature's inherent pursuit of power. Idealism, on the other hand, believes that mutual interest creates a natural harmony between nations. Its proponents support the development of international structures and organizations to limit any nation-state's irresponsible quest for power. In neoliberal fashion, the idealist McNamara adds that the world is more interdependent than the old European world of independent nation-states. Modern idealists point to the Internet, the mass media, the shared environment, and globalized trade and investment as evidence of a different and more integrated world--a world anxious to promote peace by nonmilitary means. The power politician acknowledges these contemporary realities but does not believe they are the fundamental keys to peace. For the idealist, on the other hand, it's not just about national interest and "power-balancing" between nations. McNamara points to the ability of nations to cooperate at times for their mutual benefit. This, he believes, proves that peace can be achieved without war. Only as a last resort does the idealist use force, and even then, in most cases, it is by multilateral agreement in the international sphere. CAUSES FOR CONCERN McNamara's fears of the future arise from the catastrophic loss of life that occurred in the century just past. Wilson's Ghost calls up the specter of the moralist president in the role of prophet. Following the war in 1919, Wilson said: "Liberalism must be more liberal than ever before, it must even be radical, if civilization is to escape the typhoon. . . . I do not hesitate to say that the war we have just been through, though it was shot through with terror of every kind, is not to be compared with the war we would have to face the next time." Wilson's words were eerily prescient. The succeeding 1939-45 world conflict and its atomic conclusion massively eclipsed the First World War, unfathomable as it was in its carnage. The international wars that followed only served to demonstrate the apparently uncontrollable human capacity for technological development in delivering death. The threat of nuclear holocaust looms large in McNamara's 21st-century scenario. Accordingly he believes that two imperatives, moral and multilateral, must guide U.S. foreign and defense policy in this century. The moral imperative requires that the U.S. government establish as a major goal of foreign policy "the avoidance in this century of the carnage--160 million dead--caused by conflict in the 20th century." The corresponding multilateral imperative requires that the United States recognize that it "must provide leadership to achieve the objective of reduced carnage but, in doing so, it will not apply its economic, political, or military power unilaterally, other than in the unlikely circumstances of a defense of the continental United States, Hawaii, and Alaska." Further, he believes that foreign policies across the globe should adopt the same moral imperative, as is currently the case in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. In the classic idealist-realist debate, neither side normally accords the other much space. In his new analysis, however, Kissinger notes that "in relations between the United States and Western Europe and within the Western Hemisphere, America's historic ideals have considerable applicability. Here the idealist version of peace based on democracy and economic progress demonstrates its relevance." He also notes that the current complexity of the international system "renders much of the traditional American debate about the nature of international politics somewhat irrelevant. Whether it is values or power, ideology or raison d'?tat that are the key determinants of foreign policy, in fact depends on the historical stage in which the international system finds itself." THE CENTRAL ISSUE At the root of the idealist-realist debate is a truth that never goes away and that neither side ignores--they just approach it from different perspectives: Human nature is the fly in the ointment. Realists hold an essentially pessimistic view of human nature. Idealists share a belief in its essential goodness. Henry Kissinger would say that's exactly why idealistic notions of peace through morality will fail. You just can't expect humans, and therefore the nations they represent, to be anything but self-interested. The idealist Robert McNamara would say that without imposing a moral curb on human nature we will see more people killed in the 21st century than in the overwhelmingly violent 20th, when multiple millions died in war, most of them civilians. So we must pursue prescriptions for peace based on the morality of avoiding such catastrophic wars. If human nature is the problem, how to deal with it is the issue. The history of society's attempts to do so does not give much cause for hope. We must admit that no method of taming human nature has yet been found. According to one source, in the past 6,000 years humanity has experienced only 300 years of global peace. Albert Einstein famously said that it is easier to denature plutonium than to change human nature. Could it be that we are seeking an answer that cannot come from the human level? Can human nature be curbed from our own resources? What exactly is human nature, and what is its origin? THE TRUTH ABOUT US In religion and the Bible, a relevant question can be answered from the New Testament: "Do you know where your fights and arguments come from?" The answer in the apostle James's words: Home Equity Loan Information - How to Use One Wisely oliberal fashion, the idealist McNamara adds that the world is more interdependent than the old European world of independent nation-states. Modern idealists point to the Internet, the mass media, the shared environment, and globalized trade and investment as evidence of a different and more integrated world--a world anxious to promote peace by nonmilitary means.Using a home equity loan to get out of debt or make improvements to your home is usually a smart move. You have earned the equity, so it only makes sense that you put it to good use. Usually this type of loan offers a lower interest rate than credit cards or traditional loans, so it is a wise move for many circumstances. Perhaps one of the smartest uses of a home equity loan is for home improvements. You can take a $10,000 dollar loan, put it towards a new kitchen, and then turn around and sell your home for a profit. There are a few tips to getting the most out of your home equity loan. Use your head and ask questions, and you should have no trouble making the right decision.First, you need to do your homework. We cannot stress this enough! The more you know about the process and your lender, the better prepared you will be come closing time. Get quotes from several lenders, which will give you a bargaining chip when it comes time to secure a loan. If you have found other lenders that can offer you a better deal, use that to your advantage. Always get it in writing.Second, understand what the market is doing at the moment. Research the current interest rates available as well as the government prime rate. This will help give you a picture of where the economy is headed. Understanding the value of your neighborhood will also come into play during the process. For instance, if a golf course or park is in the process of being built, you may find that the value of your home will skyrocket once the feature is in place. Consider waiting until t The power politician acknowledges these contemporary realities but does not believe they are the fundamental keys to peace. For the idealist, on the other hand, it's not just about national interest and "power-balancing" between nations. McNamara points to the ability of nations to cooperate at times for their mutual benefit. This, he believes, proves that peace can be achieved without war. Only as a last resort does the idealist use force, and even then, in most cases, it is by multilateral agreement in the international sphere. CAUSES FOR CONCERN McNamara's fears of the future arise from the catastrophic loss of life that occurred in the century just past. Wilson's Ghost calls up the specter of the moralist president in the role of prophet. Following the war in 1919, Wilson said: "Liberalism must be more liberal than ever before, it must even be radical, if civilization is to escape the typhoon. . . . I do not hesitate to say that the war we have just been through, though it was shot through with terror of every kind, is not to be compared with the war we would have to face the next time." Wilson's words were eerily prescient. The succeeding 1939-45 world conflict and its atomic conclusion massively eclipsed the First World War, unfathomable as it was in its carnage. The international wars that followed only served to demonstrate the apparently uncontrollable human capacity for technological development in delivering death. The threat of nuclear holocaust looms large in McNamara's 21st-century scenario. Accordingly he believes that two imperatives, moral and multilateral, must guide U.S. foreign and defense policy in this century. The moral imperative requires that the U.S. government establish as a major goal of foreign policy "the avoidance in this century of the carnage--160 million dead--caused by conflict in the 20th century." The corresponding multilateral imperative requires that the United States recognize that it "must provide leadership to achieve the objective of reduced carnage but, in doing so, it will not apply its economic, political, or military power unilaterally, other than in the unlikely circumstances of a defense of the continental United States, Hawaii, and Alaska." Further, he believes that foreign policies across the globe should adopt the same moral imperative, as is currently the case in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. In the classic idealist-realist debate, neither side normally accords the other much space. In his new analysis, however, Kissinger notes that "in relations between the United States and Western Europe and within the Western Hemisphere, America's historic ideals have considerable applicability. Here the idealist version of peace based on democracy and economic progress demonstrates its relevance." He also notes that the current complexity of the international system "renders much of the traditional American debate about the nature of international politics somewhat irrelevant. Whether it is values or power, ideology or raison d'?tat that are the key determinants of foreign policy, in fact depends on the historical stage in which the international system finds itself." THE CENTRAL ISSUE At the root of the idealist-realist debate is a truth that never goes away and that neither side ignores--they just approach it from different perspectives: Human nature is the fly in the ointment. Realists hold an essentially pessimistic view of human nature. Idealists share a belief in its essential goodness. Henry Kissinger would say that's exactly why idealistic notions of peace through morality will fail. You just can't expect humans, and therefore the nations they represent, to be anything but self-interested. The idealist Robert McNamara would say that without imposing a moral curb on human nature we will see more people killed in the 21st century than in the overwhelmingly violent 20th, when multiple millions died in war, most of them civilians. So we must pursue prescriptions for peace based on the morality of avoiding such catastrophic wars. If human nature is the problem, how to deal with it is the issue. The history of society's attempts to do so does not give much cause for hope. We must admit that no method of taming human nature has yet been found. According to one source, in the past 6,000 years humanity has experienced only 300 years of global peace. Albert Einstein famously said that it is easier to denature plutonium than to change human nature. Could it be that we are seeking an answer that cannot come from the human level? Can human nature be curbed from our own resources? What exactly is human nature, and what is its origin? THE TRUTH ABOUT US In religion and the Bible, a relevant question can be answered from the New Testament: "Do you know where your fights and arguments come from?" The answer in the apostle James's words: Spicing Up Your Mystery Story technological development in delivering death.Mystery stories sometimes are a dime a dozen, often following the same basic outline: the murder, discovery of the body, clues found, and killer caught. The stories are usually told in third or first person point of view, with one character as the teller.When you decide to write a mystery, there are many things to think about before putting words to paper. What is your story about? What are some of the things that come to mind when you think about your story? Some stories work well with a regular style of storytelling. Others will blossom if told in a more unique manner.Once you have decided on a point of view, you should think about how you want to tell your story. Do you want to write it as a standard story, one like most mysteries? Or do you want to try some things to spice your story up and take it to a new level? Personal Written Records can be used to draw your readers into your story by letting them have a peek into the detective's or killer's mind. There are several ways to do this. A diary or journal - your killer or detective's diary can be a great way to show his/her personality and inner thoughts. Writing your story in diary format, with each entry dated and even letting the character have a special greeting and signature to his diary. Letters - telling your mystery through letters written to a friend or confidant either by the detective, killer, or someone close to either one, is another wonderful plot tool. While it would be difficult for the detective and killer to write each other in this manner, having one of The threat of nuclear holocaust looms large in McNamara's 21st-century scenario. Accordingly he believes that two imperatives, moral and multilateral, must guide U.S. foreign and defense policy in this century. The moral imperative requires that the U.S. government establish as a major goal of foreign policy "the avoidance in this century of the carnage--160 million dead--caused by conflict in the 20th century." The corresponding multilateral imperative requires that the United States recognize that it "must provide leadership to achieve the objective of reduced carnage but, in doing so, it will not apply its economic, political, or military power unilaterally, other than in the unlikely circumstances of a defense of the continental United States, Hawaii, and Alaska." Further, he believes that foreign policies across the globe should adopt the same moral imperative, as is currently the case in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. In the classic idealist-realist debate, neither side normally accords the other much space. In his new analysis, however, Kissinger notes that "in relations between the United States and Western Europe and within the Western Hemisphere, America's historic ideals have considerable applicability. Here the idealist version of peace based on democracy and economic progress demonstrates its relevance." He also notes that the current complexity of the international system "renders much of the traditional American debate about the nature of international politics somewhat irrelevant. Whether it is values or power, ideology or raison d'?tat that are the key determinants of foreign policy, in fact depends on the historical stage in which the international system finds itself." THE CENTRAL ISSUE At the root of the idealist-realist debate is a truth that never goes away and that neither side ignores--they just approach it from different perspectives: Human nature is the fly in the ointment. Realists hold an essentially pessimistic view of human nature. Idealists share a belief in its essential goodness. Henry Kissinger would say that's exactly why idealistic notions of peace through morality will fail. You just can't expect humans, and therefore the nations they represent, to be anything but self-interested. The idealist Robert McNamara would say that without imposing a moral curb on human nature we will see more people killed in the 21st century than in the overwhelmingly violent 20th, when multiple millions died in war, most of them civilians. So we must pursue prescriptions for peace based on the morality of avoiding such catastrophic wars. If human nature is the problem, how to deal with it is the issue. The history of society's attempts to do so does not give much cause for hope. We must admit that no method of taming human nature has yet been found. According to one source, in the past 6,000 years humanity has experienced only 300 years of global peace. Albert Einstein famously said that it is easier to denature plutonium than to change human nature. Could it be that we are seeking an answer that cannot come from the human level? Can human nature be curbed from our own resources? What exactly is human nature, and what is its origin? THE TRUTH ABOUT US In religion and the Bible, a relevant question can be answered from the New Testament: "Do you know where your fights and arguments come from?" The answer in the apostle James's words: Mold - Something To Watch For e in which the international system finds itself."These days everyone is paying more attention to their health. So the question is: why not take the same care in selecting your living area? There are all kinds of health concerns in the home, some are easy to deal with, some are not so simple. One of the more controversial health hazards in the home is the presence of mold. Mold is a naturally occurring fungus that requires a dark, damp atmosphere in which to grow. Mold grows on organic materials such as wood. This means that there are quite a few spots in your home that mold could likely grow on. Now, if your home is watertight, as it should be, then mold will not be a huge concern. The presence of mold is usually an indication that there is a leak of some kind, somewhere in the home. Ideal places for mold to grow are in the attic and in the basement.Another place that mold can find a foothold is in appliances such an indoor vented dryers or humidifiers. What you should look for is locations in your home that are moist on a regular basis. Mold is most likely to aggravate those who are allergy-prone or those with compromised immune system. The presence of Mold brings a host of allergy-like symptoms like itchy eyes, congestion, runny nose and sneezing. People who have existing respiratory conditions will likely to be sensitive to the growth of mold.The real concern with mold is that it can easily take hold in a home after a flood. This is why it is critical to ensure that your home is dried properly if a flood does happen. A lot of the time, mold can grow in little corners and in areas that never get look THE CENTRAL ISSUE At the root of the idealist-realist debate is a truth that never goes away and that neither side ignores--they just approach it from different perspectives: Human nature is the fly in the ointment. Realists hold an essentially pessimistic view of human nature. Idealists share a belief in its essential goodness. Henry Kissinger would say that's exactly why idealistic notions of peace through morality will fail. You just can't expect humans, and therefore the nations they represent, to be anything but self-interested. The idealist Robert McNamara would say that without imposing a moral curb on human nature we will see more people killed in the 21st century than in the overwhelmingly violent 20th, when multiple millions died in war, most of them civilians. So we must pursue prescriptions for peace based on the morality of avoiding such catastrophic wars. If human nature is the problem, how to deal with it is the issue. The history of society's attempts to do so does not give much cause for hope. We must admit that no method of taming human nature has yet been found. According to one source, in the past 6,000 years humanity has experienced only 300 years of global peace. Albert Einstein famously said that it is easier to denature plutonium than to change human nature. Could it be that we are seeking an answer that cannot come from the human level? Can human nature be curbed from our own resources? What exactly is human nature, and what is its origin? THE TRUTH ABOUT US In religion and the Bible, a relevant question can be answered from the New Testament: "Do you know where your fights and arguments come from?" The answer in the apostle James's words: "They come from the selfish desires that war within you. You want things, but you do not have them. So you are ready to kill and are jealous of other people, but you still cannot get what you want. So you argue and fight" (James 4:1-2, New Century Version). Here human nature is shown to be essentially selfish. Though it is sometimes able to do good for unrelated others, it is identified with the protection, preservation and extension of the self and its immediate world. Whatever is needed to accomplish these ends motivates humans from infancy on. We might say that at birth human beings are in a neutral condition, demonstrating neither good nor evil desires. While the newborn feebly seeks out food to survive, and has some drive to do so, it is ill-equipped to challenge anyone for that food or to share it. The aggressive and possessive impulse comes with time. A growing selfishness develops as we mature. Through socialization we may learn to control this selfishness, but it almost always reappears, given certain circumstances. The Western world has had the benefit of the Judeo-Christian tradition, which teaches what human nature is and how it can be changed. Jesus of Nazareth had this to say about our basic state of mind: "From within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries, fornications, murders, thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit, lewdness, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness. All these evil things come from within and defile a man" (Mark 7:21-23). From this biblical perspective, the achievable ideal is that nations put down their weapons of war while at the same time learning new ways of thinking. This prescription for peace is found in another prophetic passage from the book of Isaiah--words that are carved into the base of the familiar statue outside the UN building in New York: "He shall judge between the nations, and rebuke many people; they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore" (Isaiah 2:4). It is a confirmation of the philosophy and ideas of Woodrow Wilson that the successor to his League of Nations accepted the gift of a statue with the biblical prescription for peace. It is an ideal that recognizes the realist's fears and puts them to rest. TRANSFORM OR CONFORM The only way through the impasse created by human nature is by means of a change of heart. The change of heart religion and the Bible specifies is a fundamental transformation of mind and attitude set in motion by an outside source. Previous to his change of heart, the apostle Paul was by his own admission "a blasphemer and a persecutor and a violent man" (1 Timothy 1:13, New International Version). He came to see that even with religious zeal as his motivation, he was of the wrong spirit. It is with the deepest conviction that he writes, "To be carnally minded is death, but to be spiritually minded is life and peace" (Romans 8:6). That spiritual mind, he says, comes only from the influence of God at work in humans through His Holy Spirit. It is made available in part for the conquering of human nature's downward pull. He encourages us: "Be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God" (Romans 12:2). That renewal comes only from the Spirit of God. Are these philosophy and ideas of idealism and realism the pathway to peace? In fact, neither is. Peace will become the way of the nations only when Isaiah's prophecy of the cessation of weapons manufacture and of war itself comes to pass. In the meantime, lasting peace can come individually from within when the Spirit of God is active within.
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