Give Peace a Deadline: What Ordinary People Can Do to Cause World Peace in Five Years by Nathan Otto and Amber Lupton - Presentation Transcript
Give Peace a Deadline: What
Ordinary People Can Do to Cause
World Peace in Five Years by Nathan
Otto and Amber Lupton
Doing The Impossible
For many, peace is an elusive dream; true advances toward this
communal goal have been few. But Give Peace a Deadline bursts through
the barrier of apathy to show individual readers how they can actually help
achieve world peace in just five years. By adopting action through access,
a trailblazing approach to activism, the authors build on technological
advances in both communication and collaboration to present a well-
defined plan to end global conflict. By applying business disciplines, such
as professional management and result measurement, to the peace-
making process, Nathan Otto and Amber Lupton have ignited a revolution
for global peace that will attract a broad range of peace seekers ready for
immediate action and real results. Otto and Lupton don t just offer theories
and concepts. Through connections with world leaders, major
corporations, leading peace activists, and international media, the authors
have developed a broad marketing platform for their peace program. And
for readers who are ready to take responsibility for achieving peace, Give
Peace a Deadline is a beacon of hope in tumultuous times.
Personal Review: Give Peace a Deadline: What Ordinary People
Can Do to Cause World Peace in Five Years by Nathan Otto and
Amber Lupton
As I've traveled from country to country, often hitchhiking and living off of
the good will of others, it has amazed me time and again how genuinely
good the people are of each country. What amazed me even more was
how often I was expecting the people to be killers or racists... then was
promptly proved otherwise. What I like most about "Give Peace a
Deadline" is that it directly talks to the citizens, organizations and
corporations of each country far more than it does their governments, and
bringing them in to a conversation that has not taken place like this before.
World peace has a deadline. By February 14th, 2014, there will be an end
to politically organized violence. The book offers ways that a person could
bring about world peace from their sofa, or how they could organize teams
to create even greater change. With modern technology, such as
networking applications and text-messaging, the citizens of each country
can cross borders that their governments would not dare cross... and, by
the power of their spending, create a message with fiscal power to back it.
I should note quickly that I have not been fully swayed--that my first
reaction was to think of flower wearing hippies and commies. I have built
up such a hate of these two things that the associations are hard to
overcome... yet this is the modern business-plan of peace, not the passive
ideals of those that waved the peace flag before it. This peace declares
firmly that it is one only: "an end to politically organized violence." A new
world of possibilities opens up for me just thinking about a free market
within a world without war. It is a world worth speaking out for.
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As I've traveled from country to country, often hit more
As I've traveled from country to country, often hitchhiking and living off of the good will of others, it has amazed me time and again how genuinely good the people are of each country. What amazed me even more was how often I was expecting the people to be killers or racists... then was promptly proved otherwise. What I like most about "Give Peace a Deadline" is that it directly talks to the citizens, organizations and corporations of each country far more than it does their governments, and bringing them in to a conversation that has not taken place like this before.
World peace has a deadline. By February 14th, 2014, there will be an end to politically organized violence. The book offers ways that a person could bring about world peace from their sofa, or how they could organize teams to create even greater change. With modern technology, such as networking applications and text-messaging, the citizens of each country can cross borders that their governments would not dare cross... and, by the power of their spending, create a message with fiscal power to back it.
I should note quickly that I have not been fully swayed--that my first reaction was to think of flower wearing hippies and commies. I have built up such a hate of these two things that the associations are hard to overcome... yet this is the modern business-plan of peace, not the passive ideals of those that waved the peace flag before it. This peace declares firmly that it is one only: "an end to politically organized violence." A new world of possibilities opens up for me just thinking about a free market within a world without war. It is a world worth speaking out for. less
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