John Perkins for one, and the other one is HOWARD ZINN, whom Perkins gives great honor too.
If you are sincere about what you believe and what you believe can withstand the test of dogma and time. "Stay your Course!" However, if you are a person who is realistic and concerned about your land, people, world, family, lifestyle and today in the NOW... "well" Read on, please and thank you.
Our journey in life is not singular but collective. The Father and Mother of our Universe has led us to the NOW!
For information on John Perkins read on: Perkins was and is known, as an Economic Hit Man for our nation.
I was introduced to him through Peter Joseph and the Zeitgeist Addendum. http://thezeitgeistmovement.com/
If you have not seen or heard about the Zeitgeist Addendum...do a quick search. If you are a person who understands that WE are all peoples of the World and that WE are related and that WE are all connected. Then you need to evaluate and understand the dynamics of We the People...http://thezeitgeistmovement.com/
People want change...some don't know, and others don't care. "WHERE ARE YOU IN THIS EQUATION?"
THANKS! "Be diligent to present yourself approved to the Good in all things, as a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth"
HOWARD ZINN was such a MAN.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <johnperkinsorg@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 4:57 PM
Subject: From John Perkins
To: icjr52@gmail.com

I'm writing to you this week for a special reason. I wanted to share my thoughts with you in regard to the loss of Howard Zinn. If you've not yet read any of his works, I hope that you will do so.
What follows is my personal message about Howard and the impact he had on my life and so many others as well.
My professor, friend, and mentor Howard Zinn passed away on January 27 at the age of 87.
While I was a student at Boston University, Prof. Zinn inspired me to think deeply about humanity, politics, and the need to stand firm against bullies -- even when the bully was my own government. He often warned his students that material wealth, if left unchecked can corrupt and lead to despotic uses of power.
I was teaching in Central America on the morning I learned that he had died -- suddenly, from a heart attack. It was the day when I was supposed to celebrate my 65th birthday. At first I was overwhelmed with grief, but quickly realized Howard would want me to rejoice over his life rather than mourn his death.
I wandered into a nearby forest and sat on a rock. Not much time passed before a family of howler monkeys arrived. They seemed oblivious to my presence. The adults swung from limb to limb. Their acrobatics looked effortless. I had to wonder how they knew that the next limb would bear their weight. Two babies followed at the end. Where their elders had swung, they were forced to leap, to literally fly through the air. It struck me that each leap was an amazing act of faith.
The howlers departed; the forest went silent. As I sat there alone, I kept seeing Howard's smiling face, his intense and compassionate eyes. I recommitted to spreading the message that he taught me in the late '6os at BU: that true democracy requires action from each and every one of us; that our focus on instantaneous material gratification has sent us into a stupor that allows multinational corporations to exploit us, our government, and human and natural resources around the planet; and that we the people MUST insist on change. Like those howler babies, we must muster the courage to leap -- to fly through the air and have faith that the branches will support us.
It is time to take back our power, to wrest it from all the megalomaniac corporations and those who profit from withholding information from the people. It is time to revisit the true meaning of "democracy," "freedom," and "of, for, and by the people."