Sunday, April 19, 2009

OBAMA COPIES JULIUS CAESAR'S TACTIC WITH ENEMIES

Astoria, New York
Obama may have studied more history and economics than past presidents, or may be he is surrounded by less belligerant people than his predeccesor. In the last few days, the president has visited Latin American countries in the hope of creating new relationships with some of our past enemies like Chavez and Castro. The tactic of reaching out to enemies was General Caesar's concept of strength and not weakness. As civil war raged, Caesar was able to get his enemies on his side after winning decisive battles. Caesar believed in diplomacy and would leave confrontation in the battlefield as the last resort. Of course, Caesar wouldn't take matters lightly and was ready for battle if necessary. The South American leaders of Venezuela and Cuba welcomed Obama's reaching out as they are willing to discuss various issues with the new american president. Security, drug smugglers and human rights are some the items on the agenda. The realeconomist.blogspot.com wishes Obama the best in dealing with these affairs.

No comments:

PLEASE VISIT OTHER BLOGSPOTS

FOR INTERNATIONAL MUSIC RADIO, GO TO ALL MUSIC AT WWW.BERLUSCONIITALIA.BLOGSPOT.COM

PRIVACY RULES DISCLOSURE

Google offers a range of advertising services through our AdWords and AdSense programs to show you the most useful and relevant ads online. These ads appear on Google’s sites and services, and on partner websites in the Google content network. Some ads are based primarily on your search queries or on the content of the page you’re viewing. When providing ads tailored to your interests, we offer useful tools for you to view and manage the information that is being collected and used to serve ads. To protect your privacy, we follow three principles when we serve ads:
Transparency – We provide detailed information about our advertising policies and practices.
Choice – We offer innovative ways to view, manage and opt out of advertising cookies.
No personally identifying information – We don’t collect or serve ads based on personally identifying information without your permission.
The Google Privacy Policy describes how we treat personal information in Google’s products and services, including information provided when using or interacting with our advertising services. In addition, the Privacy Policy for Google ads and the Google content network and the specific privacy notices for Google services describe our privacy practices relating to our advertising services. Google also offers display advertising services through DoubleClick. For more information, see our privacy practices related to DoubleClick advertising products. And to learn more about YouTube’s approach to advertising, see YouTube Advertising and You.
Advertising Cookie Opt-out
Google uses cookies to improve your online experience, including the display of more relevant ads. Learn more about how Google uses advertising cookies.
Anyone may opt out of the DoubleClick cookie (for AdSense partner sites, DoubleClick ad serving, and certain Google services using the DoubleClick cookie) at any time by clicking the button above. Google also offers a number of options to permanently save your opt-out settings in your browser. In addition, Google allows third party advertisers to serve ads on the Google content network. Using a tool created by the Network Advertising Initiative, you can opt out of several third party ad servers’ and networks’ cookies simultaneously. (Google also uses cookies for Google Analytics and conversion tracking.)