We are given on job— LIVE!

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This week we read about a women named Yesil Magdalena and her entrepreneurial career in technologic development, as well as the importance of ethics and morals in business. I am happy to see this being taught to so many as the lack of ethics in the world of business today is downright shameful, and is something that inspired me to take up this course in hopes of correcting the course in human history from one of greed and deprivation to one of humble servitude and observation of noble obligations.

Yesil was inspiring to me because she immigrated here for college from a family that had never yet attended college in Turkey. She broke out of that mold in a spectacular way and I am encouraged that breaking these molds may actually be possible, as opposed to a suicide mission of sorts.

I enjoyed the conversations she inspired amongst my class mates in the public forum as well, and though I did not take the time to respond to as many of them this week I found myself reading all of their remarks with captivation and vigor. Doing what she did in the 70’s when civil rights and women’s rights were issues in the forefront of the mind of Americans, and with such conviction clearly roused in them inspiration and determination to be just as successful today and in their own ways.

I’m looking forward to what we will be learning about next. We have thus far focused on the goals and determination that are vital to success. Peeking ahead I can see I will not be disappointed. But I’ll leave you in suspense for now, dear reader. Because what play ends an act in absolutes? what story finishes a chapter with all questions answered and the final mystery solved? So it will be the same with this blog.. never the less I bid you be well dear reader, until next week..

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