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  • Hi there. This is my message to Millennials about how to change the world and I would say how to change the world properly

  • [of] course the question, then is well exactly what do you mean by properly and of course that's the fundamental issue

  • So I'm going to walk through that little bit

  • So I'm gonna and I've also got an offer to make to any millennials that are willing to watch this so

  • This was triggered in [part] by something I read recently by Jonathan hate and Jonathan haidt is the professor of ethical leadership at the nyu

  • Stern school of business, and he's been a very astute

  • Commentator recently on some of the political battles that have been going on in the social sciences

  • [noting] for example that there is very little political diversity in the views of social scientists and perhaps even less on

  • the part of the people in the humanities

  • And hate recently wrote something which all all what are you linked to in the and the description of this video?

  • Where he claimed that universities have to decide between Social justice and truth and on the side of truth he puts

  • Philosopher call named John Stuart Mill an English Philosopher who said

  • He who knows only his side of the case knows little of that

  • His reasons may be good and no one may have been able to refute them

  • But if he is equally unable to refute the reasons on the opposite side if he does not

  • Does not so much as know what they are he has no ground for preferring either opinion

  • And then he juxtaposes

  • John Stuart Mill with Karl Marx who said the Philosopher's have only interpreted the world in various ways the point is to [change] it

  • He considers Marx the Patron Saint of Social justice

  • University which is oriented around changing the world in part by overthrowing power structures and privilege

  • It sees political diversity as an obstacle to action

  • male on the other hand according to hate is the Patron saint [of] what he calls truth you which sees truth as a

  • Process in which flawed individuals challenge each other's biased and incomplete reasoning and in the process all become smarter

  • Hate points out the truth university dies when it becomes intellectually uniform or politically, orthodox

  • So I guess this video is in part my call along with Jonathan haidt for young people to join

  • Truth universe versity, but there's a problem with that because the university is where the truth is being sought

  • That's the university, but there's a problem

  • and that is that young people want to change the world and it's part of what Piaget the

  • developmental psychologist piaget called the Messianic stage and there's some real utility in that because we're social creatures and

  • As we construct ourselves and formulate ourselves and bring our own character into being predicated on our on our

  • biological

  • Platform our biological being we also simultaneously have to integrate

  • Adjust to integrate with and negotiate with Society which sometimes needs to be changed

  • The structure of [Society] has to be preserved

  • But it has to be [updated] and proved as it moves forward and so part of the problem is how to update and improve it

  • without

  • doing [that] so rapidly that you destroy everything of any value, so

  • The problem I have with the marxist perspective, and I've had this problem with it for a long time

  • Is that I don't think [that] you should trust people whose primary goal?

  • when when

  • when they're attempting to change the world for the better is to change other people and you can tell who those people are because they're

  • always blaming other people and they're looking for victims they're looking for perpetrators and victims and then they're going off to stop the

  • perpetrators, and I think that's wrong because as

  • Alexander solzhenitsyn said he's a great Russian writer who helped bring down the soviet union

  • He said the line between good and Evil runs down every every [humans] heart

  • So that so the real battle as far as I'm concerned

  • And I think this goes along with the true tradition in [which] John stuart mill is is firmly placed in is that?

  • to overcome Tyranny and malevolence and

  • Chaos and Nihilism and the Desire to bring everything to a halt you have to repair the fissures

  • And-And-and the rift that's in your own soul, basically and that means that you have to confront

  • the the Evil that lives in your own heart

  • and there's a there's a statement from the new testament [that] I think is very much apropos with regards to this particular idea and

  • this is

  • This is part of the sermon on the mount which is a central text in in western in the western tradition

  • I would say [obviously] central to Christianity but central to everything that western civilization has built and so christ says to his followers

  • Why be holdest thou?

  • the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye or

  • How wilt thou say to thy brother let me pull out the mote out of thine eye and behold a beam is in [thine] own

  • eye thou hypocrite first cast out [the] beam out of thine own eye and then

  • Shalt thou see clearly to cast the mote out of thy brother's eye

  • Well, I like that quote because it places the responsibility

  • For change at every level of being on the individual and obviously the individual interacts with society

  • But the idea here is that unless the individual straightens out his or her [own] soul

  • There's no possibility that the impact the individual can have on society can be anything, but [buts] a harmful in proportion to the harm

  • That's still in the soul. These are important [things] to know they're vitally important things to know

  • So okay, so but then we're faced with the conundrum that young people also want to change the world

  • but that's no problem because I [think] you can bring you could bring truth university together with the desire to

  • to make real change, but change

  • Change change has to start [at] the right place

  • so I'm going to tell you how I [think] you should change yourself so that you can change the world and

  • So that the world that you bring into being will be a better world and all the worst one

  • Remember remember you need to know about this that the world that the followers of Marx brought into being in the 20th century

  • Killed more than a hundred million people say in China and russia. [I] mean the soviet Union and [in] places like Cambodia and Vietnam

  • The world certainly changed as a consequence of Marxist doctrine

  • But it didn't [change] in in a good direction and of course the Marxist doctrine is

  • Making itself heard in a massive way across the west again now so all right

  • So what should you do about that? Well? Here's an idea?

  • The first thing you have to do is orient yourself now

  • You probably have all watched pinocchio and pinocchio is about how a marionette someone who's whose strings are being pulled by Forces Beyond his comprehension

  • [that's] the situation of the undeveloped individual

  • Geppetto who's a Benevolent father so a benevolent?

  • Symbol a symbol of benevolent culture makes a puppet his son

  • and then wishes on a star now a star is something that glitters up in the sky and it's and it's associated with the

  • Transcendent and Beyond and the divine and you know if you look up in the night, [sky]

  • And it's very dark [you] get a feeling of awe it's because you're confronting your soul

  • so to speak your individual soul is confronting the cosmos and you can feel a relationship between you and and and

  • and the totality so looking up into the sky is like a religious experience if it's a starry sky and

  • to wish upon a star is to find in a light that orient's you like the North star and

  • To pick a highest goal to pick the highest goal

  • You can conceive of and so that's what geppetto does he raises his eyes above his

  • his Day-To-day concerns and tries to establish a relationship with the highest of all possible values and

  • And and he has the most profound of wishes and the most profound of wishes is that the puppet that he's created

  • Could become a genuine individual genuinely fully fully developed human being and that's what you can wish for [yourself]

  • That's you can wish and and and and aim for that in yourself

  • and then

  • You see that's how you deal [with] the suffering that's attendant on life because life is suffering and because life is very hard and people

  • Get sick, and they become mentally ill and and and there's malevolence in the world

  • And there's tragedy and so life is very very hard

  • and if

  • you're not properly oriented with regards to life the fact that it's hard and the fact that it's full of suffering can can warp and

  • twist and Bend you until you become murderous and resentful and and

  • even go Beyond murderous and resentment to wish for for genocide and evil even to wish for [the] destruction of everything and

  • So you have to learn [how] to strengthen yourself as an individual [so] that you can bear?

  • the

  • Burden of being without becoming corrupt you have to decide that that is what you're aiming [for] is that you want to become [a] fully

  • developed human being and stop being a

  • Pathetic Marionette whose strings are being pulled by Horrible Forces behind the scenes

  • So I would say to wish on a stars to Aim at the highest good in the question, then is well

  • What what is the good?

  • well

  • We can answer that in two ways

  • We could say that the good is the opposite of evil

  • And I can tell you what evil is evil

  • is the conscious desire to produce suffering where suffering is not necessary and so if you read about

  • What happened in the NaZi Concentration?

  • camps for example or in the in the Russian concentration camps during the soviet time of the soviet union

  • you'll get a good flow favor for what constitutes evil and evil is the desire to exploit the vulnerability of other people to

  • self-consciously exploit the

  • Vulnerability of other people and to elevate their suffering beyond their or anyone's ability to tolerate and so the good is the opposite of that

  • Whatever the opposite of that is the good is harder to get a handle on but here's one hint

  • and I got this from reading jean Piaget partly who's a developmental pSychologist and

  • Piaget talked about the

  • Equilibrated state and in equilibrated state is like a game the children play

  • Where every child wants to play the game you have a little social group?

  • And that's the children's play group and any of us the individuals within it those are the individual children and the structure is the game

  • and it's a good game if everyone wants to play it and

  • And piaget noted that a game like that will outperform a game that people have to be terrorized to play because it doesn't entail it

  • doesn't require any enforcement cost and so I've sort of developed the idea of [nil] equilibrated state to think that if

  • If you're aiming at the good, then you want what's good for you?

  • And I mean good [for] you as if you were taking care of yourself, and we're good to yourself

  • We were treating yourself like someone you loved

  • That was good for you in a way that [would] also be good for your family, and then it would be good for you

  • And your family in a way that was also good for society and then it would be

  • Good for you, and your family and society in a way that would [be] good for the world

  • And then it would be good now

  • And it would be good next week and the week after and a year from now and is long into the future [as] you can

  • See, so the good is something that's equilibrate across multiple levels of being in multiple time frames simultaneously

  • And it isn't necessarily that you know what that is going to be at any given moment, but you can orient yourself

  • So that's the state that you [want] to exist in and I can tell you

  • As far [as] I [can] tell when you exist in that state

  • even moment by Moment

  • Your life is imbued with a sense of meaning and that sense of meaning can help you transcend

  • Suffering the Philosopher Nietzsche said he who has a why

  • Can Bear [anyhow] he who has a why?

  • Can bear [anyhow] and so Nietzsche's idea was that if there was purpose in your life of sufficient grandeur that?

  • not only could the suffering in life be a

  • but maybe it even be

  • appreciated like it could be that you're willing to bear the burden of being because of

  • the

  • Exciting things that you can do with being the things you can build and the things that you can bring about and that might be

  • The highest imaginable state of being and that's that's a form of paradise, but it's not a paradise that you attain by transforming others

  • It's a paradise that you attain by transforming yourself

  • and

  • That's a very difficult thing to do and it's a very frightening thing to do because it means that you're you're

  • Retooling your soul, and that's that's a job for a real

  • That's the job for a forthright and honorable person and it's an exciting enough

  • Task so that it will keep you occupied for the rest of your life

  • and then magical things will happen to you well your

  • While you're doing it, and the world will arrange itself around you in the most wonderful way in a musical way

  • So that every part of what you're experiencing plays off

  • against every other part in a manner that has meaning

  • embedded in every aspect of it and you experience that by the way you experience that when you listen to a piece of [music] that

  • You love music represents that and that's why people it's why music

  • Nourishes the soul why it's the highest form of art at least in my opinion. So you have to live your life as if

  • Being is a symphony, and you're playing you're playing your instrumental part

  • Once you are it yourself. Then you have an [obligation]

  • I would say an obligation to the development of your soul to speak the truth you have to be oriented properly though

  • Because the truth is is something that

  • Exists in service to an ideal an ideal of sorts then you can imagine that you could use your [language] two ways you can use

  • your language to manipulate the world and

  • To extract from it what you want, so for example

  • Maybe you go out on a date with someone and you decide that the end goal of the date is to

  • Have a sexual partner for the night and then you can craft your language to manipulate

  • The person into providing you with you with what you want, and that's like an instrumental use of language

  • But the problem with [that]. There's many problems with that

  • But one of them is is that what if your idea about what you should want is wrong like maybe that's not the way to

  • treat someone that you're on a date with out on a date with maybe maybe you're

  • minimizing and reducing the interactions between you

  • from what could be a healthy and

  • Elevated state of interaction and discourse to something that's that

  • Basically the pursuit of impulsive pleasure and not maybe that's not good for you

  • Next week and the week after and a month down the road maybe orienting yourself towards impulsive pleasure is a very bad idea

  • Remember what happens in Pinocchio pinocchio goes to pleasure island and pleasure island is a place where impulsive pleasures can be had

  • at a moment's notice but what pinocchio discovers along with Jiminy cricket that pleasure island is run by

  • masked

  • Totalitarians there they're all dressed in black you remember. They're there turning the children and

  • Adolescents who are on Pleasure Island?

  • They're depriving about their voice turning them into brain

  • Jackasses and preparing to sell them as slaves to the salt mines and so there's an implication in that story that

  • the pursuit of Impulse of pleasure is

  • One route to totalitarianism and slavery, and I believe that so perhaps

  • Orienting your language towards the gathering of the impulsive pleasure is a miss is a misuse of your highest gift

  • You're the gift of logos the gift of communication

  • The alternative is to orient

  • Yourself towards the highest good as we already described and then speak the truth which and you can you can tell when you're doing that?

  • because or you can tell when you're not doing that because if you're if you're not telling the truth if you're using someone else's words

  • You're being

  • Elated into sense by forces that are behind the scenes. You're not using your own words

  • You're the puppet of an ideology or another thinker or your own impulsive desires

  • And you can tell when you're speaking like that because it makes you feel weak

  • It makes you feel weak and ashamed and you can localize that feeling

  • physiologically if you listen to yourself talk

  • you can tell when

  • when you're speaking

  • Properly you will experience a feeling of integration and strength and when you're speaking in a deceitful or manipulative Manner

  • You'll feel that you're starting to come apart at the seams and what you need to do is practice

  • Only saying things that make you feel stronger, and that'll mean to begin with it

  • You'll notice that almost everything you say is a lie. It's either a lie or someone else's words

  • It's very hard to find your [old] words, but you don't actually exist until you have your own words

  • So okay, so then you you try to teach yourself how to speak your own truth

  • And you listen to other people while you're doing that because they can help you shape and correct your words

  • They'll react to them badly if you formulate your ideas

  • Badly and if you listen and pay attention then you can learn to formulate your words

  • More and more clearly and accurately and that makes you more and more powerful

  • It makes you it gives you more and more authority which is the which is the beneficial form of power, okay?

  • So you do that, and then you have to make a decision of Faith

  • And that's basically well that you can either either use [your] language to manipulate the world and make it do what you want

  • or you can use your language to try to articulate the truth as carefully as you possibly can and then

  • [you] can see what happens you have to let go of your desire

  • For the for the consequences that you want you have to assume that if you speak the [truth]

  • The results are the best that is possible under the circumstances

  • [and] so it's a it's a it's an exciting way of living in some sense some sense

  • It's like continually walking off a cliff because you don't know what's going to happen next [if] all you do is say what you think?

  • You know and maybe you're at work, and you say what you [think] and you get fired you think oh my God?

  • That's a terrible catastrophe, but maybe it's not because maybe if you're working somewhere, and you have to lie to maintain your job

  • Maybe you shouldn't be there

  • Maybe it's deadening your soul and damaging you in some permanent manner and making you corrupt and so

  • You have to orient yourself you have to speak the truth

  • as carefully as you can you have to listen to others so that you correct your speech and then you have to allow the

  • Consequences that ensue to unfold as they will that's the ultimate act of Faith

  • I would say and that's what you do if you belong to truth university

  • All right, so more practically speaking then you should educate yourself

  • and it's not that easy to do now because

  • You have to find people who can [actually] tell you mostly what to read and maybe also how to write because writing is a way

  • Of formulating your thoughts ever more precisely

  • that's why you go to university to learn how to write if you learn if you know how to write you can think if

  • You can think and speak and communicate in writing? You're you're unbelievably?

  • powerful in the Authority Manner because

  • arguments move the world Forward and if your arguments are tight and [well-constructed] and

  • Lucid and well edited and carefully thought through and you have five rationales for everything that you're doing

  • Which is what happens if you learn to write properly, then you're like a force of nature man

  • No one can take you down

  • And that's one of the things that people aren't taught about why you go get educated especially in the humanities

  • humanities education if it's real

  • organizes your pSyChe

  • grounds you puts you on a

  • Rock and makes you a force to contend with [but] you have to read the right people and so and those are the great

  • They're the great people of the past in [my] list

  • they're the great men of the past and that's just how it is and

  • So here's who I would recommend I put reading lists up at Jordan B

  • Peterson Com there's two of them and the people that I recommend

  • Primarily are their books written by the followed list of people Fyodor [dostoyevsky]

  • Leo Tolstoy, who I think perhaps the greatest novelists the world has ever seen

  • Alexander solzhenitsyn another great russian novelist. I don't know what it is about the russians, but man they produce they produce writers that are

  • incomparable Alexander solzhenitsyn wrote a book called [the] gulag archipelago

  • where he analyzed the soviet prison Camp system that arose after the leninist revolution in the second decade of the 20th century and

  • details [an] absolutely precisely how the

  • [tenets] of Marxism the Marxist tenants that are supposed to free everyone and change the world produce legislation

  • [that] was that was absolutely murderous in its consequences and solzhenitsyn

  • Painstakingly traces the logical Pathway from the original Marxist principles to the legislation to the to the genocides

  • because you'll hear people who are basically marxist to say things like well true Marxism never existed and

  • Solzhenitsyn took that bad argument apart in the in the [mid-70s] and and the gulag archipelago was an intellectual bomb it it

  • it

  • demolished any

  • Credibility that Marxism had to intellectual respectability you have to read the book

  • The book is about the central issue in our culture at the moment if you don't read it. You're not informed

  • You can't participate in the debate except as a puppet and so I wouldn't recommend

  • Participating in this debate as a puppet because you don't know who's behind the scenes pulling the strings if you remember the pinocchio story

  • The forces that we're pulling the strings were not

  • They were not forces that were acting in Pinocchio's

  • best interest that's for sure George orwell English essayist incomparable commentator on

  • Socialist totalitarianism even though he was a left winger and a Brilliant one aldous Huxley wrote brave New world

  • Had some very brilliant things to say about the potential

  • demolition of sexual choice of choice of sexual partner as a part of part of a you dystopian future Friedrich Nietzsche a

  • Philosopher who described himself as as

  • Someone who thought with a hammer and Nietzsche is a very very dangerous person and an absolutely Brilliant writer and [Carl] jung who?

  • Was a student of Nietzsche and who Nietzsche was the philosopher who announced the death of God back in the late?

  • 1800s and jung spent his whole life

  • Attempting to revivify God that's one way of thinking about it, and so if you or educate yourself

  • And this is [a] really good place to start if you read these authors then you'll know what else to read if you read these

  • authors it'll it'll take you a good long time and it will be very very hard on you and and

  • You won't be the same person when you come out?

  • And that's very frightening and because being torn down and rebuilt his note is no joke

  • But it beats the hell out [of] the alternative which is just to stagnate and stay as stagnant infant

  • Which is which is not something. I recommend there's nothing uglier than a

  • stagnant 40 year old infant

  • So that's equivalent. Just so you know - pinocchio back to the pinocchio story

  • rescuing geppetto from the underworld remember and he was he had kind of turned into a half jackass after being at the

  • Pleasure Island where he was enticed by the way from a couple of people who that was the fox and the cat who attempted to?

  • entice himself into believing that he [was] a victim and needed a vacation, so

  • pinocchio was enticed [onto] pleasure island by two two figures that played on his sense of

  • Victimization and neuroses and suffering to convince him that he didn't have to he didn't have to take any

  • [responsibility] for his own existence

  • And he could just busy himself with impulsive pleasures right that's how he fell into the hands of the totalitarian, so on Pleasure Island

  • Anyways, Pinocchio after he left?

  • Pleasure Island had to go into the ocean twice and the second time [he] went into the ocean he was looking for his father well

  • everyone's father from a mythological perspective is dying in the underworld in the Chaos because

  • everyone inhabits a culture

  • that's that's sick and old so to speak and it's sick [and] old because it was made by the dead and

  • the living have to revivify it continually in order for it to be a

  • Dynamic Force and the living have to revivify their connection with the culture internally to because you're

  • Constructions of culture although not only constructions of culture and you have to understand history

  • Because otherwise you can't understand yourself

  • You're a historical creature

  • And so you have to rescue your dead father from the belly of the beast from the dragon

  • Guests remember the whale in pinocchio is also a fire-breathing dragon

  • [and] that means you have to face the thing that you most fear and when you do that, you'll rescue your father from the underworld

  • [these] are very complex ideas and you can read about them in my book maps of meaning if you want it's on the reading list

  • I put a free copy of it on Jordan B. Peterson [Com] so you can download it

  • I take apart these sorts of things in detail. So anyways you have to revivify your father before you can become real and

  • that's part of the problem with the

  • The [feminists] in feminist and Social Justice warrior insistence on the existence of the patriarchy it's like

  • Everyone's known since the beginning of time that culture is corrupt and tyrannical

  • But it's also protective and benevolent even the language used is a product of culture and so you don't overthrow the patriarchy

  • Yuri vivify your culture and you do that by adopting

  • Responsibility for your own being and then acting as a moral agent in the culture, that's what you do

  • To become educated so read these books read these books they'll change your life. I guarantee it. They'll change your life

  • They'll take you apart. They'll devastate you and then they'll rebuild you into something far greater than you are now [you're] [hurt]

  • Don't worry

  • Jenny

  • You need to get yourself out

  • Follow the chamber, and you'll find wrong

  • you

  • You were brilliant folks. [I] just [wasn't] quick enough

  • Of course Phoenix tears have healing powers

  • Thanks

  • it's alright today and

  • That's what to aim for

  • So then and here's something that will help you my colleagues

  • And I have developed a series of online writing programs called the self authoring suite

  • And they help people write about their past and organize that and their present

  • Personality and organize and understand that and then the future and the future authoring program asks you to write about

  • six different dimensions of your life

  • so it asks you first of all treat yourself as if you're someone that you want to help and

  • Lend that someone that you love and take care of and someone that you want to help and then

  • It asks you well if you could if you [could] organize your life in the best possible Manner and in keeping with those principles

  • We discussed earlier um

  • What do you want? What? Do you want for your career like what do you want? What would make your life meaningful?

  • What do you want for your career? What do you want for your family and from your family?

  • What do you want for an intimate relationship?

  • How are you going to handle how are you going to take care of your mental and physical health?

  • How are you going to handle drug drug and alcohol use it asks you a series [of] fundamental questions like that

  • To get your mind moving, and then it asks you to write for 15 minutes about what your life could be [like]

  • fifty three to five years in the future if

  • it was laid out like you were laying out a life for someone you deeply cared about and

  • so you're asked to write for 15 minutes about that without worrying too much about structure the structure of the [argument] or

  • Any grammatical niceties that [that's] put off for later, so that gives you a little heaven dame for right?

  • It's like well

  • If I could have this my life would be clearly worthwhile even if I had to put up with a fair bit of suffering along

  • the way that's what you're trying to construct and you can think about that as a heaven worth moving towards and

  • then the second part of the program asks you to write about

  • what your life would be like three to five years down the road if all of your bad habits and nihilistic tendencies and

  • proclivity towards resentment and lack of Desire to shoulder responsibility

  • if all your weak points got the upper hand and just ordered you into the ground and

  • Everyone knows that you know what you'd be like if you just let everything slide and and you know what particular hell

  • You were ended up heading towards and so the set the second part of the program asks you to write about

  • What your life would be like three to five years down the road if everything just went to hell around you and so that gives?

  • you a hell to avoid and heaven to strive for

  • You need both of those because that's what keeps you properly motivated in life

  • And then the second half of the program that the next part of the program

  • helps you turn your vision of the desirable future into an implementable reality and to

  • Articulate it fully and to articulate the arguments for why you want that and those even help you overcome your own doubts, right?

  • It's not only to argue against other people

  • It's to argue against the chattering Demons of Nihilism and hopelessness and ideological

  • possession that that exists in your mind and in society

  • Simultaneously you need powerful weapons to fight back against those so here's an offer for you

  • We've made the future authoring program available free for the next while

  • I don't know how long a while be but let's assume a week or something like that and

  • so if you go to

  • WWL farthing Com Slash future authoring Dot HtML

  • You can read about the program there and [now] I got to tell you we've used this program on about

  • 5,000 university students so far mostly in Holland, but some in Canada as well, and what we've shown

  • Is that they the program if you if you complete this program even if you do it badly?

  • And I would recommend it do it badly man

  • It doesn't matter you don't have to do it perfectly do it badly

  • And then maybe do it better as you move forward, but at least do [it] badly it

  • increases the performance of University students it increases their grades by between 20 and 25 percent and

  • Decreases their dropout by about the same percent

  • And so we have doubt on [5,000] [people] one of those papers has been published

  • and I'll put that in in the description in the [description] of this video and so this program really works if you do it and

  • And so I would highly recommend that you do it anyways you can read about the program there

  • click purchase for 1495

  • Then enter this code change yourself

  • that'll give you a 1495 discount and that means you can have the program for free and

  • So here's what Millennials should do if they want to change the world the first thing

  • they should do is orient themselves to [the] good and that's away from Evil away from malevolence away from the

  • Manufacture of pointless suffering and pain away from Auschwitz let's say and away from the gulag archipelago

  • And the terrible soviet camps and the massive murders that occurred in China you want to get it end

  • you want to get as far away from that as you possibly can whatever direction is away from [that] is a good direction and

  • and then you also want to

  • contemplate what the highest possible good could look [like] for you and your family and your society we already discussed that and

  • Then you need to speak the truth in

  • Relationship to that and then you need to educate yourself and then you need to

  • Shoulder your responsibility responsibility is a good thing because it makes you strong to bear up under it makes you strong

  • You can turn yourself into a you can free yourself

  • From your strings and turn yourself into a genuine individual and then you can shoulder the world and then you're in a position to make

  • To make change as a person like that your mere being will change the world in a positive direction

  • And that's what you should be aiming for so

  • Read the books that I put up on my site and do the future authoring program, and that will improve your life dramatically

  • And that's how you can change the world

Hi there. This is my message to Millennials about how to change the world and I would say how to change the world properly

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2016/11/08:ミレニアル世代へのメッセージ。世界を変える方法--適切に (2016/11/08: My Message to Millennials: How to Change the World -- Properly)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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