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GOOD ADVICE FOR EVERYONE
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ATTENTION, COLLEGE GRADUATES:
10 THINGS YOUR COMMENCEMENT
SPEAKER WON'T TELL YOU.
GOOD ADVICE FOR EVERYONE.
By Charles Wheelan, Wall Street Journal
TO THE CLASS OF 2012
 
    I became sick of commencement speeches at about your age.  My first
job out of college was writing speeches for the governor of Maine .  Every
spring, I would offer extraordinary tidbits of wisdom to 22-year-olds --
which was quite a feat given that I was 23 at the time.  In the decades
since, I've spent most of my career teaching economics and public policy.
 
    In particular, I've studied happiness and well-being, about which we
now know a great deal.  And I've found that the saccharine and
over-optimistic words of the typical commencement address hold few of the
lessons young people really need to hear about what lies ahead.  Here,
then, is what I wish someone had told the Class of 1988:
 
    1. Your time in fraternity basements was well spent.  The same goes
for the time you spent playing intramural sports, working on the school
newspaper or just hanging with friends.  Research tells us that one of
the most important causal factors associated with happiness and
well-being is your meaningful connections with other human beings.
 
    Look around today.  Certainly one benchmark of your postgraduation
success should be how many of these people are still your close friends
in 10 or 20 years.
 
    2. Some of your worst days lie ahead.  Graduation is a happy day.
But my job is to tell you that if you are going to do anything
worthwhile, you will face periods of grinding self-doubt and failure.  Be
prepared to work through them.
 
    I'll spare you my personal details, other than to say that one year
after college graduation I had no job, less than $500 in assets, and I
was living with an elderly retired couple.  The only difference between
when I graduated and today is that now no one can afford to retire.
 
    3. Don't make the world worse.  I know that I'm supposed to tell you
to aspire to great things.  But I'm going to lower the bar here: Just
don't use your prodigious talents to mess things up.  Too many smart
people are doing that already.
 
    And if you really want to cause social mayhem, it helps to have an
Ivy League degree.  You are smart and motivated and creative.  Everyone
will tell you that you can change the world.  They are right, but
remember that "changing the world" also can include things like skirting
financial regulations and selling unhealthy foods to increasingly obese
children.  I am not asking you to cure cancer.  I am just asking you not
to spread it.
 
    4. Marry someone smarter than you are.  When I was getting a Ph.D.,
my wife Leah had a steady income.  When she wanted to start a software
company, I had a job with health benefits.  (To clarify, having a "spouse
with benefits" is different from having a "friend with benefits.")
 
    You will do better in life if you have a second economic oar in the
water.  I also want to alert you to the fact that commencement is like
shooting smart fish in a barrel.  The Phi Beta Kappa members will have 
pink-and-blue ribbons on their gowns.  The summa cum laude graduates have 
their names printed in the program.  Seize the opportunity!
 
    5. Help stop the Little League arms race.  Kids' sports are becoming
ridiculously structured and competitive.  What happened to playing
baseball because it's fun?  We are systematically creating races out of
things that ought to be a journey.  We know that success isn't about
simply running faster than everyone else in some predetermined direction.
 
    Yet the message we are sending from birth is that if you don't make
the traveling soccer team or get into the "right" school, then you will
somehow finish life with fewer points than everyone else.  That's not
right.  You'll never read the following obituary: "Bob Smith died
yesterday at the age of 74.  He finished life in 186th place."
 
    6. Read obituaries.  They are just like biographies, only shorter.
They remind us that interesting, successful people rarely lead orderly,
linear lives.
 
    7. Your parents don't want what is best for you.  They want what is
good for you, which isn't always the same thing.  There is a natural
instinct to protect our children from risk and discomfort, and therefore
to urge safe choices.
 
    Theodore Roosevelt, soldier, explorer, president, once remarked, "It
is hard to fail, but it is worse never to have tried to succeed."  Great
quote, but I am willing to bet that Teddy's mother wanted him to be a
doctor or a lawyer.
 
    8. Don't model your life after a circus animal.  Performing animals
do tricks because their trainers throw them peanuts or small fish for
doing so.  You should aspire to do better.
 
    You will be a friend, a parent, a coach, an employee, and so on.  But
only in your job will you be explicitly evaluated and rewarded for your
performance.  Don't let your life decisions be distorted by the fact that
your boss is the only one tossing you peanuts.  If you leave a work task
undone in order to meet a friend for dinner, then you are "shirking" your
work.  But it's also true that if you cancel dinner to finish your work,
then you are shirking your friendship.  That's just not how we usually 
think of it.
 
    9. It's all borrowed time.  You shouldn't take anything for granted,
not even tomorrow.  I offer you the "hit by a bus" rule.  Would I regret
spending my life this way if I were to get hit by a bus next week or next
year?  And the important corollary: Does this path lead to a life I will
be happy with and proud of in 10 or 20 years if I don't get hit by a bus.
 
    10. Don't try to be great.  Being great involves luck and other
circumstances beyond your control.  The less you think about being great,
the more likely it is to happen.  And if it doesn't, there is absolutely
nothing wrong with being solid.
 
    Good luck and congratulations.
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Contact Your Govt
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Is the Constitution the Supreme Law of the Land or not?  
  
I GUESS THE SCOTUS HAS ANSWERED THAT QUESTION
   
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If a link above does not work, cut-and-paste to your browser. 
 
Did you ever wonder to what Rev Al Sharpton was referring to when he said, 
“Barack Obama didn't have any slave blood"?
http://aconservativelesbian.com/2009/07/13/obamas-kenyan-ancestors-sold-slaves/

  
We the People
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVAhr4hZDJE
  
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http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/bprelutsky/2009/07/05/im-mad-as-hell/
 
 
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