A training video associated with Project 2025 — a controversial playbook for a future conservative presidency by the right-wing Heritage Foundation — calls for eliminating references to climate change across the federal government.
The video was published online this weekend by news outlets ProPublica and Documented, shared with the news outlets by a person who had access to them.
Ambition, or the lack thereof, will lead somewhere, even if that somewhere is nowhere. Ambition doesn’t mean getting rich and famous as our society and commercialistic culture define or dictate. We tend to become engaged in costly activities that do not satisfy us as we expect them to. It’s quite natural for us to seek and try to be like someone else because in our eyes it appears the grass is always greener on the other side, when all it could be is bright green artificial turf.
I believe everyone has ambition (aspirations, goals, intentions, willingness, objectives, etc.), a strong desire to do or to achieve something, typically requiring determination and hard work. The degree to which our ambition is mobilized, however, is individualistic.
Whether we are overly ambitious, under-ambitious, or utilizing our aspirations just right, according to our abilities, and avoid falling prey to unrealistic and worldly role models, we can determine where we’re going or at least where we want to go. The path(s) we take may not be laid out before us with precision, but they are formed by the choices we make using the tools we have and the essential tools we may pick up along the way. These encounters help us to take the necessary actions and embrace the experiences along our road to discovery. Reconditioning our thinking can be liberating. Forge your own path! Do you know where you’re going to? Do you like the things that life is showing you?
Although Louis Armstrong was mainly a jazz musician, this song is the one most often associated with him. Though it was first released in 1967, it didn’t become a hit in the U.S. until 20 years later when it was used in the Robin Williams movie Good Morning, Vietnam. However, it went to #1 in the UK.
The song was written by Bob Thiele (as “George Douglas”) and George David Weiss, both of whom were prominent in the music world (Thiele as a producer and Weiss as a composer/performer). Armstrong’s recording was inducted in the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999.
Bem Vindos a este espaço onde compartilhamos um pouco da realidade do Japão à todos aqueles que desejam visitar ou morar no Japão. Aqui neste espaço, mostramos a realidade do Japão e dos imigrantes. O nosso compromisso é com a realidade. Fique por dentro do noticiário dos principais jornais japoneses, tutoriais de Faça você mesmo no Japão e acompanhe a Série Histórias de Imigrantes no Japão. Esperamos que goste de nossos conteúdos, deixe seu like, seu comentário, compartilhe e nos ajudar você e à outras pessoas. Grande abraço, gratidão e volte sempre!
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