Advice, Misc., Special DINARRECAPS8 Advice, Misc., Special DINARRECAPS8

10 Powerful Quotes That Made Me A Millionaire

.10 Powerful Quotes That Made Me A Millionaire

Post From StartupCamp By Dale-Partridge

Make Your Passion Your Profession

With an overwhelming access to knowledge, this generation often finds itself ten feet wide and one inch deep. Knowing a little about everything but never enough about one thing to matter. We have no shortage of words; rather, we have a shortage of the right words.

Poetry has been defined as the best words in the best order. But I believe it goes beyond a poem.

The right words listed in concert and color can articulate a comprehensive and deep meaning in just a few characters. A meaning that can fasten your fears to the floor and allow you to step into progress.

Anchors that keep us straight and hold us tight – almost like an injection of clarity and control for our most uncertain of times.

Ultimately, words are the stones that bridge the gap to our furthest destinations. From incomprehension and overcoming indifference to closing a sale and believing in God.

 Words make up how we think, what we know, and who we become.

But the right words change your life. They can change your story.

10 Powerful Quotes That Made Me A Millionaire

Post From StartupCamp By Dale-Partridge

Make Your Passion Your Profession

With an overwhelming access to knowledge, this generation often finds itself ten feet wide and one inch deep. Knowing a little about everything but never enough about one thing to matter. We have no shortage of words; rather, we have a shortage of the right words.

Poetry has been defined as the best words in the best order. But I believe it goes beyond a poem.

The right words listed in concert and color can articulate a comprehensive and deep meaning in just a few characters. A meaning that can fasten your fears to the floor and allow you to step into progress.

Anchors that keep us straight and hold us tight – almost like an injection of clarity and control for our most uncertain of times.

Ultimately, words are the stones that bridge the gap to our furthest destinations. From incomprehension and overcoming indifference to closing a sale and believing in God.

 Words make up how we think, what we know, and who we become.

But the right words change your life. They can change your story.

Here are the words that have changed mine.

1. "Never get too busy making a living that you forget to make a life."

Who Said It?: My Grandmother

How It Has Helped Me:  Getting lost in something you love often results in getting lost in general. We live in a culture that measures our success by how much money we make rather than the fullness of our lives.

Over the 13 years I've spent building businesses, I've learned the months that feel weighted to one side typically follow a season spent living in the absence of this quote.

2. "Speak to people how they need to hear it, not how you want to say it."

Who Said It?: My Mentor

How It Has Helped Me:  Empathy is a difficult virtue to master. As an entrepreneur, the best marketing is performed by those who can step into the customer's pain. To put words to their emotions and to create products that solve their most trying problems. As leaders, we must not forget that thoughtfulness is the most effective form of communication.

3. "Your greatest weakness is often the overextension of your greatest strength."

Who Said It?: Jason Benham

How It Has Helped Me:  I'm a natural teacher. Speaking, selling, and convincing others is almost instinctive to me. But far too many times I've been kicked in the leg by my wife for not shutting my mouth.

As I've matured, I'm learning that the overuse of our inherent gifting can backfire. The secret is learning to take it to the very edge, and stop.

4. "A designer knows he has achieved perfection not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away."

Who Said It?: Antoine de Saint-Exupery

How It Has Helped Me:  A designer is someone who can make something more beautiful than someone else with the same tools at the same cost. Beauty is my secret weapon. But the more I practice design, the more I realize its purpose is not to draw our eyes to many things, but one thing.

So whenever I dislike the aesthetics of something I'm working on, whether it's landscaping my backyard or designing a new website, my first step is to take something away.

 

To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://startupcamp.com/10-powerful-quotes-made-successful/

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16 Of The Most Expensive Mistakes In History

.16 Of The Most Expensive Mistakes In History

 A Regretful Sellout For Ronald Wayne

Alongside Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, Ronald Wayne was instrumental during the formative years of Apple. Afraid of past experiences and skeptical about the future, Wayne sold his share in Apple for just $800 (£516), 11 days after Apple was formed. According to reports, Wayne would have been worth more than £25 billion today had he kept his stock.

Toshihide Iguchi's Prolonged Miscalculation

Japanese bank executive Toshihide Iguchi converted a US $70,000 debt (£45,000) into a loss of $1.1 billion (£709 million) for the Daiwa Bank after he failed to recover a bet made on U.S. government bonds in 1983. Though Iguchi managed to dodge authorities for over a decade, FBI agents finally caught up with him after 12 years.

Rogue Trader Nick Leeson

Seldom does an individual bring about the downfall of an entire financial institution, but “Rogue Trader” Nick Leeson managed to do so by causing the collapse of the oldest investment bank in the United Kingdom—Barings Bank—in the mid '90s.

His unauthorized speculative trading brought him success at first, but in the end, disaster struck as losses ballooned to over £190 million. He fled to Singapore, where he was arrested and sentenced to six years in prison.

16 Of The Most Expensive Mistakes In History

 A Regretful Sellout For Ronald Wayne

Alongside Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, Ronald Wayne was instrumental during the formative years of Apple. Afraid of past experiences and skeptical about the future, Wayne sold his share in Apple for just $800 (£516), 11 days after Apple was formed. According to reports, Wayne would have been worth more than £25 billion today had he kept his stock.

Toshihide Iguchi's Prolonged Miscalculation

Japanese bank executive Toshihide Iguchi converted a US $70,000 debt (£45,000) into a loss of $1.1 billion (£709 million) for the Daiwa Bank after he failed to recover a bet made on U.S. government bonds in 1983. Though Iguchi managed to dodge authorities for over a decade, FBI agents finally caught up with him after 12 years.

Rogue Trader Nick Leeson

Seldom does an individual bring about the downfall of an entire financial institution, but “Rogue Trader” Nick Leeson managed to do so by causing the collapse of the oldest investment bank in the United Kingdom—Barings Bank—in the mid '90s.

His unauthorized speculative trading brought him success at first, but in the end, disaster struck as losses ballooned to over £190 million. He fled to Singapore, where he was arrested and sentenced to six years in prison.

Mathematical Error Ends £80-Million NASA Mars Probe

NASA spent around £80 million on the Mars Climate Orbiter, which was originally designed to study the climate on Mars. However, a small mathematical error proved to be the orbiter’s undoing as NASA lost contact with the probe, and it was eventually destroyed over the planet in 1999.

Sar Alexander II Sells Off Alaska For Just £4.6 Million

During the late 19th century, Russian emperor Tsar Alexander II was unable to look at Alaska as something other than a land with a lot of ice cover. Fearful of a forceful takeover of Alaska by the United States, the Tsar decided to sell the vast territory to the United States for just £4.6 million in March 1867.

Since the values of ruble and dollar at the time were almost similar, Russia gained little in cash and lost natural resources worth billions of dollars.

A £116 Million Jackpot That Went Unclaimed

A British couple lost a fortune of around £116 million in 2010. A woman’s ticket for the Euro Millions lottery won the jackpot, but her husband threw it in the trash, which meant that they could not claim the prize money.

Equipment Fault Causes A £230 Billion Nuclear Disaster

A tragedy that still send shivers down the spines of many around the world, the Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster was caused by an equipment failure in four reactors that went out of control during a test.

The entire 1986 disaster cost around a massive £230 billion in cleanup and in the value of lost farmland. The loss at today's inflated rate stands at around a staggering £464 billion!

To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/news/16-of-the-most-expensive-mistakes-in-history/ss-BBjZkVx#image=2

The Most Expensive Mistakes In All History

To err is human. There is nothing wrong about making mistakes from time to time, unless, of course, we're talking about some kind of "oops" near a nuclear reactor. Yes, some mistakes are too expensive, and we are gonna tell you all about them today https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXelZriTubU

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The Underrated Skill For You To Succeed

.Three Billionaires Reveal the Underrated Skill You Really Need to Succeed (and It’s Not Intelligence)

By  Brooke Nelson

And you don't need an expensive degree to learn it either.

Turns out, your mom was totally wrong. There IS a secret to success! So forget everything you’ve been told about meditation, exercise, or productivity. The real answer is way simpler than you originally thought.

According to billionaires Bill Gates, Richard Branson, and Warren Buffett, there’s just one essential skill you need to be successful: communication.

That’s it! Easy, right?

Three Billionaires Reveal the Underrated Skill You Really Need to Succeed (and It’s Not Intelligence)

By  Brooke Nelson

And you don't need an expensive degree to learn it either.

Turns out, your mom was totally wrong. There IS a secret to success! So forget everything you’ve been told about meditation, exercise, or productivity. The real answer is way simpler than you originally thought.

According to billionaires Bill Gates, Richard Branson, and Warren Buffett, there’s just one essential skill you need to be successful: communication.

That’s it! Easy, right?

Well, maybe not. Communication issues are common in any group setting, and that goes for lots of different mediums: interpersonal, organizational, and even nonverbal. (Don’t miss these signs you can’t trust your co-worker.)

But being a good communicator is essential if you want to get ahead; research by the Carnegie Institute of Technology shows that only 15 percent of financial success comes from knowledge or skills, while the other whopping 85 percent comes from the ability to effectively communicate, negotiate, and lead.

Plus, if the world’s most successful billionaire entrepreneurs have already confirmed the importance of communication, we should take heed!

Here’s the scoop: Ten years ago, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates said in a BBC News interview, “Communication skills and the ability to work well with different types of people are very important … software innovation, like almost every other kind of innovation, requires the ability to collaborate and share ideas with other people, and to sit down and talk with customers and get their feedback and understand their needs.”

One decade later, that advice still holds true today. As Richard Branson wrote on his Virgin blog,

To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://www.rd.com/advice/work-career/secret-to-success-billionaires/

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The 10 Attributes of Wildly Successful People

.The 10 Attributes of Wildly Successful People

Lambeth Hochwald

You know those people who seem to ace everything in life? Researchers have uncovered their secrets to success.

Secrets Of Success

We all know people who seem to be accomplished in their every pursuit. So it’s especially interesting to read a new British study that drills into the 10 attributes that make people extra good at what they do.

And they all have a few things in common. For starters, they identify and understand their strengths when pursuing a goal, says Amanda Potter, the lead researcher, founder, and managing director at Zircon Management Consulting, a business psychology company in England.

High achievers also tend to be motivated by a negative or positive life event, and they credit their success to having someone in their life who believed in them.

The 10 Attributes of Wildly Successful People

Lambeth Hochwald

You know those people who seem to ace everything in life? Researchers have uncovered their secrets to success.

Secrets Of Success

We all know people who seem to be accomplished in their every pursuit. So it’s especially interesting to read a new British study that drills into the 10 attributes that make people extra good at what they do.

And they all have a few things in common. For starters, they identify and understand their strengths when pursuing a goal, says Amanda Potter, the lead researcher, founder, and managing director at Zircon Management Consulting, a business psychology company in England.

High achievers also tend to be motivated by a negative or positive life event, and they credit their success to having someone in their life who believed in them.

After conducting interviews with 42 high-achievers, including a range of CEOs, entrepreneurs, sports stars, and media personalities, Potter concluded that we all have a different combination of winning attributes—in other words, no two winners are exactly the same—however, all successful people have some or all of 10 specific attributes.

“For example, it may be your single-minded focus and determination or it might be your curiosity and willingness to disrupt the current situation that makes you successful,” she says. Read on as our two experts explain why the qualities that engender success and why they’re so key.

Burning Ambition

Successful people are driven to achieve their goals, but for the ultra-successful there’s an even bigger mandate, says Isaura Gonzalez, PsyD, a licensed clinical psychologist in New York City.

“Burning ambition takes into account the desire to hit your mark each and every time as well as an unrelenting desire to be the best of the best.” Say these mantras every day to reach your goals.

Dogged Determination

Being doggedly determined means that obstacles are not deal-breakers, but mere inconveniences that need to be overcome. “There is no hesitation, just action, when it comes to success,” Gonzalez says.

“Success comes when you have hit your mark, and determination is the road on which you travel to hit that mark.” Get ready to troubleshoot with this guide to handling tricky interpersonal situations.

Realistic Optimism

Optimism is important, but you can’t expect that the sun will shine 100 percent of the time. “It’s imperative to focus on maintaining positivity while acknowledging the realistic obstacles that can deter us from achieving our goals,” Gonzalez says.

“It’s not thinking that nothing will ever go wrong. Rather, it’s about thinking that we can achieve what we set out for ourselves even if there are setbacks.” Here’s what optimistic people do every day to see the glass half-full.

 

To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://www.rd.com/advice/work-career/attributes-of-super-successful-people/

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Why Successful People Have Hobbies

.Why Successful People Have Hobbies

Ryan Holiday  October 1, 2019

My new book Stillness is the Key just debuted at #1 on the New York Times and Wall Street Journal Bestseller lists. The piece below is based on some of the ideas in it. Check out the book, and please leave an Amazon review—it helps a lot!

Winston Churchill was a mediocre painter and a worse bricklayer, but to these two hobbies, the world owes a great debt.

“It is a pushing age,” Churchill wrote his mother as a young man, “and we must shove with the rest.” His ambition was legendary. Multiple times, he shoved his way to the top of British politics, when Britain was the world’s dominant power. Once he was there, he did not let up. During war-time, it was not uncommon for him to work 110-hour weeks. Between 1940 and 1943, he traveled something like 110,000 miles by air and sea and car. A bodyguard once said that Churchill kept “less schedule than a forest fire and had less peace than a hurricane.”

It’s this exhausting workload that is worth examination in a time of “millennial burnout,” and digital distraction. More and more people fear that taking their foot off the gas for even a second will only cause them to fall further and further behind in a rigged economy that cares little for individual happiness. Certainly, it’s something I’ve wrestled with as I look back on my very busy twenties (six books and three careers) and look forward towards my thirties with children.

So how did Churchill manage? How did he not burn out and die early?

Why Successful People Have Hobbies

Ryan Holiday  October 1, 2019

My new book Stillness is the Key just debuted at #1 on the New York Times and Wall Street Journal Bestseller lists. The piece below is based on some of the ideas in it. Check out the book, and please leave an Amazon review—it helps a lot!

Winston Churchill was a mediocre painter and a worse bricklayer, but to these two hobbies, the world owes a great debt.

“It is a pushing age,” Churchill wrote his mother as a young man, “and we must shove with the rest.” His ambition was legendary. Multiple times, he shoved his way to the top of British politics, when Britain was the world’s dominant power. Once he was there, he did not let up. During war-time, it was not uncommon for him to work 110-hour weeks. Between 1940 and 1943, he traveled something like 110,000 miles by air and sea and car. A bodyguard once said that Churchill kept “less schedule than a forest fire and had less peace than a hurricane.”

It’s this exhausting workload that is worth examination in a time of “millennial burnout,” and digital distraction. More and more people fear that taking their foot off the gas for even a second will only cause them to fall further and further behind in a rigged economy that cares little for individual happiness. Certainly, it’s something I’ve wrestled with as I look back on my very busy twenties (six books and three careers) and look forward towards my thirties with children.

So how did Churchill manage? How did he not burn out and die early?

How did a man with so many responsibilities that on a piece of notepaper he once sketched himself a pig, loaded down with a twenty thousand-pound weight, not only survive the workload of two wars, five kids, 10 million written words and live into his 80s, but do so without ever losing his trademark joie de vivre?

The answer is simple: The restorative power of a good hobby.

As it happens, Churchill believed in the power of hobbies almost as much as he believed in British exceptionalism. He was an avid practitioner too. Writing in one of his lesser known books, "Painting as a Pastime," Churchill explained that, “The cultivation of a hobby and new forms of interest is...a policy of first importance to a public man. To be really happy and really safe, one ought to have at least two or three hobbies, and they must all be real.”

A few centuries before Churchill, Aristotle said that this was in fact the main question of life: What do we fill our non-working hours with? What do we do for leisure?

Churchill knew the power of cultivating a good hobby, because painting saved his life. In 1915, reeling from the failure of the Gallipoli campaign, which he had championed and then watched helplessly as it cost some 46,000 men their lives, Churchill had what might appear to be a nervous breakdown.

Blamed for unspeakable tragedy, his competency questioned, his name suddenly radioactive, Churchill described feeling like a “sea-beast fished up from the depths, or a diver too suddenly hoisted, my veins threatened to burst from the fall in pressure.

I had great anxiety and no means of relieving it; I had vehement convictions and small power to give effect to them.” It was in this moment of crisis that his sister-in-law handed him a toy set of oil paints. They had given her children much fun, she said. Maybe they could help him.

Churchill, and indeed Western Civilization, reaped the fruits of this sweet offer. A few years ago, a study conducted by professors at Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh and published in the Psychosomatic Medicine Journal, found that people who made time for leisurely activities — defined as “activities that individuals engage in voluntarily when they are free from the demands of work or other responsibilities” — experiences increased life expectancy and life engagement.

It improved them physically, mentally and spiritually — as anyone who has pursued a hobby has experienced first hand. The research is even clearer when those hobbies are related to art in some way or another. Studies show that even just looking at art helps produce psychological resilience, but creating it is even better.

A 2016 study of 700 adults conducted by Dr. Christina Davies published in the BMC Public Health Journal found that those who recreationally engaged in some form of art (even just two hours per week) experienced significantly better mental well-being.

To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://www.salon.com/2019/10/01/why-ambitious-people-have-unrelated-hobbies/

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Columbus Day / Indigenous Peoples Day

.Columbus Day is a national holiday in many countries of the Americas and elsewhere which officially celebrates the anniversary of Christopher Columbus's arrival in the Americas on October 12, 1492 (Julian Calendar; it would have been October 21, 1492 on the Gregorian Proleptic Calendar, which extends the Gregorian Calendar to dates prior to its adoption in 1582).

Christopher Columbus was an Italian explorer who set sail across the Atlantic Ocean in search of a faster route to the Far East only to land at the New World. His first voyage to the New World on the Spanish ships Santa María, Niña, and La Pinta took approximately three months.

Columbus and his crew's arrival to the New World initiated the Columbian Exchange which introduced the transfer of plants, animals, culture, human populations, and technology (but also invasive species, including communicable diseases) between the new world and the old.

The landing is celebrated as "Columbus Day" in the United States but the name varies on the international spectrum. In some Latin American countries, October 12 is known as "Día de la Raza" or (Day of the Race).

Columbus Day / Indigenous Peoples Day

Columbus Day is a national holiday in many countries of the Americas and elsewhere which officially celebrates the anniversary of Christopher Columbus's arrival in the Americas on October 12, 1492 (Julian Calendar; it would have been October 21, 1492 on the Gregorian Proleptic Calendar, which extends the Gregorian Calendar to dates prior to its adoption in 1582).

Christopher Columbus was an Italian explorer who set sail across the Atlantic Ocean in search of a faster route to the Far East only to land at the New World. His first voyage to the New World on the Spanish ships Santa María, Niña, and La Pinta took approximately three months.

Columbus and his crew's arrival to the New World initiated the Columbian Exchange which introduced the transfer of plants, animals, culture, human populations, and technology (but also invasive species, including communicable diseases) between the new world and the old.

The landing is celebrated as "Columbus Day" in the United States but the name varies on the international spectrum. In some Latin American countries, October 12 is known as "Día de la Raza" or (Day of the Race).

330px-Portrait_of_a_Man,_Said_to_be_Christopher_Columbus[1].jpg

This is the case for Mexico, which inspired Jose Vasconcelos's book celebrating the Day of the Iberoamerican Race. Some countries such as Spain refer the holiday as "Día de la Hispanidad" and "Fiesta Nacional de España" where it is also the religious festivity of la Virgen del Pilar.

Peru celebrates since 2009 the "Day of the original peoples and intercultural dialogue". Belize and Uruguay celebrate it as Día de las Américas (Day of the Americas). Since Argentina's former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner officially adopted "Día del Respeto a la Diversidad Cultural" (Day of Respect for Cultural Diversity) November 3, 2010. "Giornata Nazionale di Cristoforo Colombo or Festa Nazionale di Cristoforo Colombo" is the formal name of Italy's celebration as well as in Little Italys around the world.

Celebration of Christopher Columbus's voyage in the early United States is recorded from as early as 1792. The Tammany Society in New York City  (for whom it became an annual tradition) and the Massachusetts Historical Society in Boston celebrated the 300th anniversary of Columbus' landing in the New World.

President Benjamin Harrison called upon the people of the United States to celebrate Columbus's landing in the New World on the 400th anniversary of the event.

President Benjamin Harrison proclaimed it as a one-time national celebration in 1892 — in the wake of a bloody New Orleans lynching that took the lives of 11 Italian immigrants. The proclamation was part of a broader attempt to quiet outrage among Italian-Americans, and a diplomatic blowup over the murders that brought Italy and the United States to the brink of war.

During the anniversary in 1892, teachers, preachers, poets and politicians used rituals to teach ideals of patriotism. These rituals took themes such as citizenship boundaries, the importance of loyalty to the nation, and the celebration of social progress.

Many Italian-Americans observe Columbus Day as a celebration of their heritage, and the first such celebration was held in New York City on October 12, 1866. The day was first enshrined as a legal holiday in the United States through the lobbying of Angelo Noce, a first generation Italian, in Denver.

 The first statewide holiday was proclaimed by Colorado governor Jesse F. McDonald in 1905, and it was made a statutory holiday in 1907.

In April 1934, as a result of lobbying by the Knights of Columbus and New York City Italian leader Generoso Pope, Congress and President Franklin Delano Roosevelt proclaimed October 12 be a federal holiday under the name Columbus Day.

 

To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbus_Day

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The Truth Explained About Columbus Day

.The Truth Explained About Columbus Day

Matthew Rozsa  October 14, 2019

Christopher Columbus is a historical figure celebrated as a mythical hero in spite of his genocidal and racist past.  There are many good reasons as to why Columbus Day is such a controversial holiday.

Like Andrew Jackson, Christopher Columbus is a historical figure who is celebrated as a mythical hero in the U.S. in spite of his genocidal, racist and pro-slavery legacy. As a result, a movement exists to replace the national holiday known as Columbus Day with Indigenous People’s Day.

Here is the truth about Columbus Day, explained:

1. Christopher Columbus enslaved the Taínos he encountered in the present-day Bahamas

When Columbus “discovered” the American continents in 1492 — millions lived there long before Europeans learned of their existence — he encountered a civilization of people known as the Taínos.

The Truth Explained About Columbus Day

Matthew Rozsa  October 14, 2019

Christopher Columbus is a historical figure celebrated as a mythical hero in spite of his genocidal and racist past.  There are many good reasons as to why Columbus Day is such a controversial holiday.

Like Andrew Jackson, Christopher Columbus is a historical figure who is celebrated as a mythical hero in the U.S. in spite of his genocidal, racist and pro-slavery legacy. As a result, a movement exists to replace the national holiday known as Columbus Day with Indigenous People’s Day.

Here is the truth about Columbus Day, explained:

1. Christopher Columbus enslaved the Taínos he encountered in the present-day Bahamas

When Columbus “discovered” the American continents in 1492 — millions lived there long before Europeans learned of their existence — he encountered a civilization of people known as the Taínos.

255px-Columbus-day[1].jpg

By his own description, they were curious and friendly, eager to help the new group of people who had landed on their shores. 

Over time, Columbus enslaved and exploited them, thereby establishing a precedent wherein Europeans would come to the American continents, exploit natives and steal their land.

His actions also laid the foundations for the Europeans to introduce African slavery to the American continents, and Columbus is known to have had an African slave with him on his so-called voyages of discovery.

2. Columbus Was Also A Tyrant, Generally Speaking

After becoming governor and viceroy of the Indies, Columbus let the power to go to his head, becoming a brutal autocrat who was eventually loathed by his own followers. When one man was caught stealing corn, Columbus responded by having his nose and ears cut off before selling him into slavery.

When a woman claimed that Columbus was of lowly birth, his brother Bartolomé cut out her tongue, stripped her naked and had her paraded around the colony on the back of a mule.

And these are just two examples of many. Eventually, the Spanish monarchs realized that Columbus had become power mad and ordered him and his brothers to return to Spain. He never regained his power, although his freedom was eventually restored.

 

To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://www.salon.com/2019/10/14/the-truth-about-columbus-day-explained/

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Don't Stop Believin' By Dr. Dinar

.Don't Stop Believin'   by Dr. Dinar

Welcome to the middle of October, 2019. The year that should've never been.

The year this GCR rollout would never see the beginning of Summer.

Let alone the end of Summer, rolling into Fall.

No way... no how.

Sure, we heard it was gonna be a slow rollout but c'mon, this is beyond ridiculous.

This slowwwwww rollout is rolling slower than a snail moonwalking backwards, uphill, in the snow.

Slow to the point of thinking it's not actually happening at all.

Don't Stop Believin'   by Dr. Dinar

Welcome to the middle of October, 2019. The year that should've never been.

The year this GCR rollout would never see the beginning of Summer.

Let alone the end of Summer, rolling into Fall.

No way... no how.

Sure, we heard it was gonna be a slow rollout but c'mon, this is beyond ridiculous.

This slowwwwww rollout is rolling slower than a snail moonwalking backwards, uphill, in the snow.

Slow to the point of thinking it's not actually happening at all.

,a dr dinar tidbit.jpg

And for many among us, like it's never gonna happen.

Yeah, we continually hear rumors of all the things supposedly going on behind the scenes and yet, never actually seeing the results of any of those things actually taking place in real life, only adds to the feeling of nothing happening.

I recently received an email update of current going's on in Dinarland and despite one or two keywords here and there, it very well could've been posted in 2009.

Same redundant rumors reimagined for a new-ish crop of currency holders.

And honestly, it kinda freaked me out for a second.

Why on earth would they think we'd still fall for that stuff.

Do they really believe we haven't learned anything whatsoever. I certainly hope not.

I mean, I'd hate to think we haven't gained any ground on the knowledge front in all this time.

After all, we've all had plenty of time to review our notes.

Yes, the landscape has changed, as well as the overall mission.

But the basic game... not so much.

C'mon, don't we deserve better. A little somethin' for the effort.

The least they could do is add a little more trickery, a bit more color to the smoke they're constantly blowin' our way, helping to keep us mushrooms slightly more entertained while we attempt to stumble our way around in the dark..

I'd like to think that they think that we think we've learned something along the way.

They were regurgitating old articles a decade ago. Rinse and repeat.

Isn't it about time they came up with something new.

We've been through more than enough Blue Moons and 3 day weekends and Ramadan's and Black Friday's and ends of quarters and Crazy 8's than even the most superstitious among us can handle. And still nothing.

Nothing tangible. Nothing we can use as a "See, I told you this was real." for all of our doubting family and friends to see.

Not that we need to prove anything to them.

Nope. We did our homework and we know it's real.

Or at least we think we know it's real.

Okay, let's just say we still believe it's real-ish, with a good chance that it very well could be real.

And maybe that's all we get.

Maybe that's all we have to hang on to. Our beliefs.

Our belief in the unseen. The unprovable.

Looking back, that's pretty much the same feeling I had when I first got involved in this made for TV journey.

I really hoped it was real.

Although I must admit that I was a heckuva lot more excited way back when than I am now.

Hearing the screeching brakes of the Fed Ex truck as it pulled up in front of the house totally gave me the warm 'n fuzzies.

The sheer relief I felt knowing my recently ordered dinar arrived just in time to beat the pending last minute RV deadline was a big time rush to say the least.

Unfortunately, after a decade of being imminently ever so close, my excitement level has dropped considerably.

Same with my expectation level. It's dropped accordingly.

When I first bought in the rampant rumors of a $0.10 IQD RV emanating throughout Dinarland was a dream come true.

Sounds insanely lame now but think about it.

I'd just lost everything I owned in the R.E. market crash and somehow the Universe saw fit to introduce me to the RV of the IQD.

Talk about timing, you couldn't have scripted it any better.

Matter of fact, I'd lost more than everything because I still owed on things I no longer owned.

Call it desperation but at that point I really had next to no hope of resurrecting my life otherwise. Not any time soon anyway.

However you choose to look at it, the possibility of renting a Condo and leasing a new car post RV were simply impossible to ignore.

After all, I no longer had either, so let's just say the timing was pretty much spot on.

And with that foundation of hope, I gratefully jumped in with every last nickle I had.

Combined with the belief that I would be there at the finish line when the RV was released in the next couple weeks, guaranteed I'd be one of the lucky few.

The few believers that took a chance on that too good to be true so called scam known as the RV of the Iraqi dinar.

Yes, over the years, armed with much more knowledge in the form of a GCR, I've come to believe in a much higher rate.

Along with that, the size of my dreams have increased as well. To the point of allowing myself to dream of a large home, fully paid off, along with helping family and friends fulfill some of their needs as well.

But as time has gone on I've been subjected to situations that have forced me to sell back most of my currency, all in the name of survival.

After all, if I'm not there at the finish line, then nobody wins.

But one thing I will never do is give up and sell out completely.

Doing that only ensures that neither I nor the ones I hope to help will ever reap the rewards of this seemingly never ending journey.

Please remember that no matter how long you've been involved, and how brutal this journey can be at times, you're still one of the fortunate few.

The few lucky enough to even know about this once in a lifetime life changing event.

Whether it happens next week, next month or next year, the one thing we know for certain is that eventually it will happen.

It has to. Many countries, including ours, are depending on it.

Eventually Iraq will be released from the program rate and those of us holding dinar will finally go on to do all of our long dreamed of good deeds.

I've come too far to turn back now and I can only hope you feel the same way.

Hang in there folks, we're getting closer with each passing day.

Sincerely,

Dr. Dinar

 

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Funny, Short and Inspirational Retirement Quotes:

.Funny, Short and Inspirational Retirement Quotes:

I have compiled a good number of words of wisdom or better, what I like to call the best retirement quotes that will brighten your day.

This list of retirement quotes has been compiled from various people whose words of wisdom couldn’t go unnoticed.

Inspirational Retirement Quotes

Here are some of the most popular inspirational quotes on retirement that you should read before retiring as well as after.

1. “Just because you are getting older and have retired doesn’t mean that you should have less confidence in your abilities. Think about the experience and knowledge that you have gained by all the years you have worked” -Theodore W. Higginsworth

2. “Retirement: It’s nice to get out of the rat race, but you have to learn to get along with less cheese.” – Gene Perret

3. “Planning to retire? Before you do, find your hidden passion. Do the thing that you have always wanted to do.” – Catherine Pulsifer

4. “Age is only a number, a cipher for the records. A man can’t retire his experience. He must use it. Experience achieves more with less energy and time.” – Bernard Baruch

5. “Every new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end.” – Lyrics from “Closing Time” by Semisonic

Funny, Short and Inspirational Retirement Quotes:

I have compiled a good number of words of wisdom or better, what I like to call the best retirement quotes that will brighten your day.

This list of retirement quotes has been compiled from various people whose words of wisdom couldn’t go unnoticed.

Inspirational Retirement Quotes

Here are some of the most popular inspirational quotes on retirement that you should read before retiring as well as after.

1. “Just because you are getting older and have retired doesn’t mean that you should have less confidence in your abilities. Think about the experience and knowledge that you have gained by all the years you have worked” -Theodore W. Higginsworth

2. “Retirement: It’s nice to get out of the rat race, but you have to learn to get along with less cheese.” – Gene Perret

3. “Planning to retire? Before you do, find your hidden passion. Do the thing that you have always wanted to do.” – Catherine Pulsifer

4. “Age is only a number, a cipher for the records. A man can’t retire his experience. He must use it. Experience achieves more with less energy and time.” – Bernard Baruch

5. “Every new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end.” – Lyrics from “Closing Time” by Semisonic

6. “What does retirement mean now that there are so many opportunities for learning, for caring, for serving? We can redefine aging.” – Rachel Cowan, Wise Aging

7. “Retirement is a new beginning, and that means closing the book on one chapter to begin the next.” Sid Miramontes, Retirement: Your New Beginning

8. “Retirement gives you the time literally to recreate yourself through a sport, game, or hobby that you always wanted to try or that you haven’t done in years.” – Price, Stephen D.

9. “Shall the day of parting be the day of gathering? And shall it be said that my eve was in truth my dawn?” by Kahlil Gibran

10. “There is a whole new kind of life ahead, full of experiences just waiting to happen. Some call it ‘retirement.’ I call it ‘bliss.’” – Betty Sullivan

11. “Dare to live the life you have dreamed for yourself. Go forward and make your dreams come true” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

12. “Don’t simply retire from something; have something to retire to.” – Harry Emerson Fosdick

13. “Preparation for old age should begin not later than one’s teens. A life which is empty of purpose until 65 will not suddenly become filled on retirement.” – Arthur E. Morgan

14. “You are never too old to set a new goal or dream a new dream.” – C.S. Lewis

15. “What we call the beginning is often the end. And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from.” – T.S. Eliot

16. “Retirement is not a life without purpose; it is the on-going purpose that provides meaningfulness” – Robert Rivers

17. “Retirement is …. a time to experience a fulfilling life derived from many enjoyable and rewarding activities.” – Ernie J. Zelinski

18. “If we had no winter, the spring would not be so pleasant; if we did not sometimes taste of adversity, prosperity would not be so welcome.” – Anne Bradstreet

 

To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://millionairemob.com/retirement-quotes/

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What Are Special Drawing Rights (SDR)?

.Special Drawing Rights (SDR)

Reviewed By Will Kenton   Updated Apr 7, 2019

What Are Special Drawing Rights (SDR)?

Special drawing rights (SDR) refer to an international type of monetary reserve currency created by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 1969 that operates as a supplement to the existing money reserves of member countries.

Created in response to concerns about the limitations of gold and dollars as the sole means of settling international accounts, SDRs augment international liquidity by supplementing the standard reserve currencies.

An SDR is essentially an artificial currency instrument used by the IMF, and is built from a basket of important national currencies.

Special Drawing Rights (SDR)

Reviewed By Will Kenton   Updated Apr 7, 2019

What Are Special Drawing Rights (SDR)?

Special drawing rights (SDR) refer to an international type of monetary reserve currency created by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 1969 that operates as a supplement to the existing money reserves of member countries.

Created in response to concerns about the limitations of gold and dollars as the sole means of settling international accounts, SDRs augment international liquidity by supplementing the standard reserve currencies.

An SDR is essentially an artificial currency instrument used by the IMF, and is built from a basket of important national currencies.

The IMF uses SDRs for internal accounting purposes. SDRs are allocated by the IMF to its member countries and are backed by the full faith and credit of the member countries' governments. The makeup of the SDR is re-evaluated every five years. The current makeup on the SDR is represented by the following table:

Currency         Weights Determined in the 2015 Review   Fixed Number of Units of Currency  

                                                         5-Year Period Starting Oct 1, 2016                                                                                 

                                                                                    

U.S. Dollar                            41.73                                                       0.58252

Euro                                      30.93                                                       0 .38671

Chinese Yuan                       10.92                                                        1.0174

Japanese Yen                         8.33                                                      11.900

Pound Sterling                       8.09                                                       0.085946

 

Understanding SDR

 The SDR was formed with a vision of becoming a major element of international reserves, with gold and reserve currencies forming a minor incremental component of such reserves.

 To participate in this system, a country was required to have official reserves. This consisted of central bank or government reserves of gold and globally accepted foreign currencies that could be used to buy the local currency in foreign exchange markets to maintain a stable exchange rate.

Key Takeaways

 Special drawing rights, or SDR, are an artificial currency instrument created by the International Monetary Fund, which uses them for internal accounting purposes.

 The value of the SDR is calculated from a weighted basket of major currencies, including the U.S. dollar, the euro, Japanese yen, Chinese yuan, and British pound.

The SDR interest rate (SDRi) provides the basis for calculating the interest rate charged to member countries when they borrow from the IMF and paid to members for their remunerated creditor positions in the IMF.

 

To continue reading, please go to the original article here:

https://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/sdr.asp

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Misc. DINARRECAPS8 Misc. DINARRECAPS8

Email Newsletter Technical Difficulties

Good Evening Readers -- Due to technical difficulties there will not be a 6 PM email newsletter sent out to subscribers on FRIDAY October 4th  - We are very sorry  and do apologize  -- All of our posts can be accessed and enjoyed by just going to The Blog – Thank you for your understanding and we will resume sending on Saturday morning.

The Dinar Recaps Team

Good Evening Readers -- Due to technical difficulties there will not be a 6 PM email newsletter sent out to subscribers on FRIDAY October 4th  - We are very sorry  and do apologize  -- All of our posts can be accessed and enjoyed by just going to The Blog – Thank you for your understanding and we will resume sending on Saturday morning.

The Dinar Recaps Team

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