Should you know everything about me?
My biography, entitled The Wizard, has just been released in Brazil and given that I opened all my files to my biographer, some people have been horrified with my past.
So here is my question to you: Should you know all about me?
By Paulo Coelho
The warrior of the light knows: everyone is afraid of each other.
This fear can generally be seen in two forms: through aggression, or through submission. They are two sides of the same problem.
That is why, upon being confronted by a someone who inspires terror, the warrior recalls: the other man is just as insecure. He has overcome similar obstacles, and has lived the same problems.
But he knows how to deal with the situation better. Why? Because he uses fear as a motor, not as a brake.
Thus the warrior learns from his opponent, and acts in the same way.
Welcome to Share with Friends - Free Texts for a Free Internet
By Paulo Coelho
The Warrior of Light is always trying to improve.
(Manual of the Warrior of Light)
Welcome to Share with Friends - Free Texts for a Free Internet
Today while reading the IHT, I found this very interesting article by Elaine Sciolino and Eric Schmitt for the NYT:
A bitter personal struggle between two powerful figures in the world of terrorism has broken out, forcing their followers to choose sides. This battle is not being fought in the rugged no man’s land on the Pakistani-Afghan border. It is a contest reverberating inside the Beltway between two of America’s leading theorists on terrorism and how to fight it, two men who hold opposing views on the very nature of the threat.
On one side is Bruce Hoffman, a cerebral 53-year-old Georgetown University historian and author of the highly respected 1998 book “Inside Terrorism.” He argues that Al Qaeda is alive, well, resurgent and more dangerous than it has been in several years. In his corner, he said, is a battalion of mainstream academics and a National Intelligence Estimate issued last summer warning that Al Qaeda had reconstituted in Pakistan.
On the other side is Marc Sageman, an iconoclastic 55-year-old Polish-born psychiatrist, sociologist, former CIA case officer and scholar-in-residence with the New York Police Department. His new book, “Leaderless Jihad,” argues that the main threat no longer comes from the organization called Al Qaeda, but from the bottom up - from radicalized individuals and groups who meet and plot in their neighborhoods and on the Internet. In his camp, he said, are agents and analysts in highly classified positions at the CIA and FBI.
(…)
To read the rest of the article, please go here.
To Digg the news, please go here.
What did you learn during your research in the red light districts?
The women differentiate between three types of customers. The Terminator wants to go directly to the room without drinks and conversation. The Pretty-Woman guy is at the start polite and elegant but during sex is significantly more demanding than the Terminator. The Godfather is immune to compliments which he has to pay for. He treats a woman’s body like piece of merchandise whose value he can estimate extremely accurately.