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‘What I did today, I waited until my nearby market opened and I bought couple of English grammar books first thing in the morning and started learning and practicing how to write better English.’
Quite funny though but it’s actually true. I guess my writing has greatly improved since I started trying out my hand with writing posts on this blog.
I appreciate your experience and it is something that one needs to learn from.
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First I would like to applaud you on your positive attitude that you will be writing some good posts sometime and that you will surprise is. That’s the spirit no one ever has the will to do stuff and they don’t make it, like we were taught where there is a will there is a way so keep up and you will be the best that you wanna be
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I believe that getting more views is a lot about what people at a certain time feel linked to rather than the quality everytime. Quality does helps though, and I think that one needs to sometimes, use simpler language to make more people notice.
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Cybersecurity issues have become front page news virtually every week – breaches, fraud, theft and a whole host of other cyber crime events read like the police blotter from a large metropolitan city where criminals run rampant.
At the same time, regular reporting on increased cyber defense spending, more info-sharing and collaboration, new technical solutions, businesses getting serious about cybersecurity, governments legislating cyber safety through governance and regulation, and a flurry of other recent activities designed to keep us all safer have also made their way to the front of our everyday news.
It would seem to be something of a contradiction. Each week, new stories of cyber woe. Each week new reports of improved diligence in the fight.
This contradiction brings on the kind of cognitive dissonance that won’t go away until you’re able to fully analyze what’s happening between what’s being done to combat cybercrime and what we’re all seeing each week in the news. What it comes down to is that sooner or later, we’re all victims of cybercrime and it seems obvious that what we’re doing now isn’t working perfectly.
Having spent the bulk of my career working in and around cybersecurity and intelligence domains, I realized recently that I’d never really looked at the problem from the perspective of businesses that are the chief consumers of cybersecurity solutions.
So, with a few years of fresh data on hand collected from meeting each week with companies and their cyber teams to exchange info and talk about security functions inside their businesses, I set out to comb through the info I’ve collected in an attempt to at least shed some light on the dilemma.
What follows below are just a few observations gleaned from my experiences that, for me at least, help lay the foundation for an explanation or two – and maybe a way for us to help ourselves. Be warned, though! Not all of it is particularly pretty. But, then again, neither is the cyber problem itself.
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Yes most of the politicians coming into power misuse the power of people against the people who supported them in election. It is our nation evil fate that every politician use his power misuse against country and its people. This situation is all over the world.
In every country misuse of power is made but especially against the poor not against the rich because the persons elect the candidate behind the scene that is why the powerful politicians cannot make laws against them at any cast.
If we are going to resolve the closed-heartedness of our politics and our politicians, we need to find the root. And we need to really understand it so we can do something truly constructive with it and about it.
I say that Politicians who cynically misuse the power of the state for personal or political benefit are a far greater threat to democracy than criminals, even organised gangs, write Gary W Crooke and Tony Fitzgerald, who were responsible for the Fitzgerald Inquiry.
I see law and order crisis in all countries as one writer has said that “Law and order” is a favourite issue for ambitious Queensland politicians seeking publicity and political advantage.
The community wants to be safe, and is understandably angry at violent thugs, organised criminal gangs, the sexual abuse of children, murder, rape and a wide range of other anti-social behaviours. A perceived “law and order” crisis allows a government to bolster its electoral support through tough talk, a feigned macho image and extreme laws.
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The importance of the work of teachers in our daily lives cannot be overemphasized.
No matter how much the government tries to avoid or relegate the issue of teachers and their welfare to the background, it doesn’t conceal the Fact that they are doing a great job and need to be seriously appreciated.
But we need to still look more on science and encourage it and its teachers
Perhaps we need a balance between the tough, logical and scientific approach and a Humane approach based on emotions and feelings. A great and thought-provoking post indeed. Sharing ahead too.
For me, the true virtue in life is know your creator which is God, live your life to the fullest knowing all the essential truths about your own salvation, and to give love and hope for everyone who go astray inspite all the many trials in life that will come our way. Very often, when studying religious matters is very contradicted with science. For science is only rational for human mind. Religious matters is beyond our human understanding for it is supernaturally solemnly defined by the church which can never fail for it was revealed by God himself to teach his law to all of his people.