‘Careful attention to one thing
Often proves superior to genius and art”
- CICERO
The Second National Youth Business and Leadership Summit (2nd NYBLS2015) for the 2nd time has to be postponed, why? The President’s ministerial list that will call its other member-part to action is yet to be constituted as at 29th September, 2015, five months after been sworn in as the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Nigerian Armed Force, Federal Republic of Nigeria and having told us that he is for everybody and for nobody, the Executive in summary is yet to exist in function. Let us turn our eyes to the 2nd Arm of Government the Legislative, from top to bottom both houses of the Assembly have been locked in several controversies from appointments to asset declarations. Just today. Senator Marafa again pulled his “Baba-Riga” shouting obscenities “WAKA!” we hear he's no more a SENATOR.
The 3rd Arm of government the judiciary is presently too busy in Election Tribunals and playing games with adjournments and relocation of justice from one state to the other.
The 3 Arm of government is not working, for us at Begroup Professionals, organizers of the 2nd National Youth Business and Leadership Summit careful attention to one thing, this summit, will prove superior to the inability of the 3 Arms to come around an Entrepreneurial cause. We know so because the attribute to the success and failures to our day as youth is the lack of concentration of purpose. Altogether, too many youth scatter their aims and try to do too many things in different directions. We believe at BEgroup in a singleness of purpose as one chief essentials for success in life no matter what the aim maybe. Once we have defined our goals in life and established it, the next thing is to adopt a “One-Point, On-Point” model, we need to travel straight in a direction towards our chief aim in life – Walk Your Talk.
Concentration of purpose is the secret of strength in politics, in war, in trade, in all management of human affairs. Ralph Waldo Emerson was wrote, to belong in a new wave of job owners and work designers for personal prosperity and National growth. This we are doing to bring to the fore the call on all our potentials to be our own boss, more like Paul Allen “waking the sleeping giant”. That youth who know too many trades… his family starves according to a Chinese proverb is lesson that we seek a life work, a “One-Job-Point, On-Point-Job scenario.
Permit us to quote profusely from Sydney Bremer, “The men who have changed the front of the world have been men of a single aim. No man can make his mark on this stage of specialties who is not a man of one idea, one supreme aim, and one master passion. The man who would make himself felt on this bustling planet must play his guns on one point”.
BEgroup Professionals 2nd NYBLS2015 is hereby postponed indefinitely while all our 800 Delegates wait for further information. On this subject of Entrepreneurship in Nigeria, it is our only point, on pint if we must move up to growth.
SORO MAGAZINE is a human angle lifestyle solution magazine with special focus on entrepreneurship and leadership development.
Wednesday, 30 September 2015
Friday, 18 September 2015
BEgroup Professionals welcomes PMB to Calabar, Tinapa
President Muhammadu Buhari will be in Calabar on the 21 September, 2015 to commission Governor Ayade's mega road project. For us at BEgroup Professionals, we want PMB to reflect on the need for a talk with the Governor on the need for the NYBLS2015.
Welcome PMB to Canaan City, welcome to Tinapa, we expect you back on the 29th to give 800 youth Entrepreneurs a Presidential "Handshake". Welcome again to Calabar Mr. President.
ORIGIN OF IDEAS - A BEgroup Professionals Release
Many studies have revealed that the average person possesses from five hundred to seven hundred different skills and abilities wonderfully measured. The brain for example can store trillion facts while the "mind" can handle fifteen thousand decisions in one seconds; meaning in totality that several billions of ideas are generated every second! But like rain cloud, the thicker it gathers, the more heavy the rain drop. The idea originates from one out of billions of other ideas in their potentialities; like the several billion eggs in the woman's womb, it takes nine months to fertilize and grow to maturity in the woman's womb while several more billions will never see the light of day, so does idea!
The male ejaculation to the spurting out of semen, which we know contains not less than three hundred and sixty million spermatozoa races towards the way of the vulva, up the strait of bladders in a marathon race of which one of these sperm will be groom to the only one waiting bride-egg and if on time, wed to become a zygote! Others who fail to reach the egg are all wasted like we do everyday, everywhere.... Skills abound in these potential excess. The body itself, generates ideas, The tongue can taste one part of quinine in two million parts of water while the skin (touch) can detect an item one in twenty five thousand of an inch thick. The nose it is agreed can smell up to, if not more than 10,000 odors. From our abilities to use the nose, skin or eye lies the potential to hatch and harness our skills for human benefit, the reason why we as a group have resolved to go down skill lane and pick up what is too readily available, Human Potentials to fill in the much needed skill-power gap, into directing our national-life for genuine empowerment towards development.
We are BEgroup Professionals ... empowering for posterity
Sunday, 6 September 2015
NYBLS2015 EVERYONE IS INVITED – Morah Emmanuel
NYBLS2015 EVERYONE IS INVITED
The chief Coordinating Officer of the 2nd National Youth
Business and Leadership Summit(NYBLS2015) Morah Emmanuel in media chat with the
Voice of Nigeria said the NYBLS2015 holding in Tinapa is a programme where “Everyone
is invited”
In a 24 minutes chat at the VON Studio, Radio House Garki, Abuja, the CCO
told his audience that the summit is designed primarily to fill-in the need gap
existing especially among our youths whom he said have resorted to folding
their arms and expecting white collar jobs to fall from Heaven. The spirit of
the Summit he said is designed to make participating Delegates work in their
areas of expertise and core skill as well as make them work-right. A design he
said is intended to put square skills in square holes and round skills in round
holes than the hitherto misplacement of the personality involved.
On the distrust towards event such as this that may not have had the
desire impact but “loud promises” he said; “The 2nd NYBLS is not any
other NGO seeking to win a popularity contest. It is midwife by two corporate
entity, Braunplan International and Recreate Nigeria Limited both duely
registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission(CAC). We have a Presidential
Mandate since 2007 to raise 20,020 Entrepreneurial Speakers and have arrived on
how to meet this mandate, so we are not like any other: We are BEgroup
Profesionals and we are into the profession of working for posterity”.
The 2nd National Youth Business and Leadership Summit, with the
theme: Entrepreneurial Empower for Development towards National Transformation:
Options and Strategies is scheduled to hold from the 27th of
September 2015 at the Tinapa Business Resort Calabar. Successful Delegates with
bright entrepreneurial ideas will be goaded through another 30 days mentorship
on the conference blog @ www.nybls2015.blogspot.com.
Soro Magazine is welcoming Voice of Nigeria (VON) the Official Media
Broadcaster of the NYBLS2015 as we look
forward to working together.
Tuesday, 1 September 2015
RE-NYBLS - ECONOMIC REFORMS IN OTHER COUNTRIES
Economic Reforms of Selected Economies –
“Much has been given us, and much will rightfully be expected from us.
We have duties to others and duties to ourselves; and we can shirk neither.
We have become a great nation, forced by the fact of its greatness into relations
with the other nations of the earth, and we must behave as beseems
a people with such responsibilities.”
Franklin Delano Roosevelt – (4 Time American President)
“My fellow-citizens, no people on earth have more cause to be thankful than ours, and this is said reverently, in no spirit of boastfulness in our own strength, but with gratitude to the Giver of Good who has blessed us with the conditions which have enabled us to achieve so large a measure of well-being and of happiness. To us as a people it has been granted to lay the foundations of our national life in a new continent. We are the heirs of the ages, and yet we have had to pay few of the penalties which in old countries are exacted by the dead hand of a bygone civilization. We have not been obliged to fight for our existence against any alien race; and yet our life has called for the vigor and effort without which the manlier and hardier virtues wither away. Under such conditions it would be our own fault if we failed; and the success which we have had in the past, the success which we confidently believe the future will bring, should cause in us no feeling of vainglory, but rather a deep and abiding realization of all which life has offered us; a full acknowledgment of the responsibility which is ours; and a fixed determination to show that under a free government a mighty people can thrive best, alike as regards the things of the body and the things of the soul.
Much has been given us, and much will rightfully be expected from us. We have duties to others and duties to ourselves; and we can shirk neither. We have become a great nation, forced by the fact of its greatness into relations with the other nations of the earth, and we must behave as beseems a people with such responsibilities. Toward all other nations, large and small, our attitude must be one of cordial and sincere friendship. We must show not only in our words, but in our deeds, that we are earnestly desirous of securing their good will by acting toward them in a spirit of just and generous recognition of all their rights. But justice and generosity in a nation, as in an individual, count most when shown not by the weak but by the strong. While ever careful to refrain from wrongdoing others, we must be no less insistent that we are not wronged ourselves. We wish peace, but we wish the peace of justice, the peace of righteousness. We wish it because we think it is right and not because we are afraid. No weak nation that acts manfully and justly should ever have cause to fear us, and no strong power should ever be able to single us out as a subject for insolent aggression.
Our relations with the other powers of the world are important; but still more important are our relations among ourselves. Such growth in wealth, in population, and in power as this nation has seen during the century and a quarter of its national life is inevitably accompanied by a like growth in the problems which are ever before every nation that rises to greatness. Power invariably means both responsibility and danger. Our forefathers faced certain perils which we have outgrown. We now face other perils, the very existence of which it was impossible that they should foresee. Modern life is both complex and intense, and the tremendous changes wrought by the extraordinary industrial development of the last half century are felt in every fiber of our social and political being. Never before have men tried so vast and formidable an experiment as that of administering the affairs of a continent under the forms of a Democratic republic. The conditions which have told for our marvelous material well-being, which have developed to a very high degree our energy, self-reliance, and individual initiative, have also brought the care and anxiety inseparable from the accumulation of great wealth in industrial centers. Upon the success of our experiment much depends, not only as regards our own welfare, but as regards the welfare of mankind. If we fail, the cause of free self-government throughout the world will rock to its foundations, and therefore our responsibility is heavy, to ourselves, to the world as it is to-day, and to the generations yet unborn. There is no good reason why we should fear the future, but there is every reason why we should face it seriously, neither hiding from ourselves the gravity of the problems before us nor fearing to approach these problems with the unbending, unflinching purpose to solve them aright.
Yet, after all, though the problems are new, though the tasks set before us differ from the tasks set before our fathers who founded and preserved this Republic, the spirit in which these tasks must be undertaken and these problems faced, if our duty is to be well done, remains essentially unchanged. We know that self-government is difficult. We know that no people needs such high traits of character as that people which seeks to govern its affairs aright through the freely expressed will of the freemen who compose it. But we have faith that we shall not prove false to the memories of the men of the mighty past. They did their work, they left us the splendid heritage we now enjoy. We in our turn have an assured confidence that we shall be able to leave this heritage unwasted and enlarged to our children and our children's children. To do so we must show, not merely in great crises, but in the everyday affairs of life, the qualities of practical intelligence, of courage, of hardihood, and endurance, and above all the power of devotion to a lofty ideal, which made great the men who founded this Republic in the days of Washington, which made great the men who preserved this Republic in the days of Abraham Lincoln.
SELECTED EXAMPLES OF ECONOMIC REFORMS…
Reforms in China in 1970s
…Before economic reforms began in the late 1970s, state-owned enterprises generally did not purchase their raw materials and equipment as commodities, but rather received them directly from the government. The enterprises then submitted their finished products to the government for distribution. The Supply and Marketing Cooperative, a state-run operation, distributed consumer goods to the rural population. Such essential items as grains, oil, meat, sugar, and cotton fabric were rationed because they were relatively scarce and because low fixed prices had to be ensured for everyone.
The United States of America
This period of reform lasted from the last decade of the 19th century into World War I. Reformers, or progressives as they were called, were concerned about abuses of power by government and businesses. They did not all agree with each other, but many advocated at least some government regulation of business practices. They wanted the direct election of U.S. senators (in most states the legislature chose them). Some sought the prohibition of child labor, others the prohibition of alcoholic beverages, and for many the conservation of the nation's natural resources was important. Muckrakers (journalists who wrote articles exposing corruption in both politics and in business) often joined with progressives to publicize child labor, unsanitary industrial conditions, business monopolies, and censorship. Progressives believed that the government could play an important role in making the United States a better place to live, and many looked for leadership to President Theodore Roosevelt.”
The United Kingdom (Britain)
The British Radicals, led by the philosopher James Mill, the jurist and philosopher Jeremy Bentham, and the political economist David Ricardo, developed a philosophy based on Bentham's principle of “the greatest happiness of the greatest number.” They proposed as a means to this end the removal of all political and social restraints on economic relations, believing that individuals are free to the extent that their commercial life is unrestricted. British radicalism was an effort to establish private economic expansion as the principle of the modern state.
There is so much to say, but this is not the time for too much talk. Only one question: Will Nigerians agree with President FDR (Roosevelt)?
“Much has been given us, and much will rightfully be expected from us.
We have duties to others and duties to ourselves; and we can shirk neither.
We have become a great nation, forced by the fact of its greatness into relations
with the other nations of the earth (global economy), and we must behave as beseems
a people with such responsibilities.” ?
In my view we have one option left if subsidy is too hard on us,; close all our borders to going out, no coming in. We must all agree to “The Closing of the Gate” if present globalised economy is too hard to bear. It means we will live together and die together for our next generation to have a country to call their own. I rest my case on this matter.
Support Materials: Microsoft Encarta
We have duties to others and duties to ourselves; and we can shirk neither.
We have become a great nation, forced by the fact of its greatness into relations
with the other nations of the earth, and we must behave as beseems
a people with such responsibilities.”
Franklin Delano Roosevelt – (4 Time American President)
“My fellow-citizens, no people on earth have more cause to be thankful than ours, and this is said reverently, in no spirit of boastfulness in our own strength, but with gratitude to the Giver of Good who has blessed us with the conditions which have enabled us to achieve so large a measure of well-being and of happiness. To us as a people it has been granted to lay the foundations of our national life in a new continent. We are the heirs of the ages, and yet we have had to pay few of the penalties which in old countries are exacted by the dead hand of a bygone civilization. We have not been obliged to fight for our existence against any alien race; and yet our life has called for the vigor and effort without which the manlier and hardier virtues wither away. Under such conditions it would be our own fault if we failed; and the success which we have had in the past, the success which we confidently believe the future will bring, should cause in us no feeling of vainglory, but rather a deep and abiding realization of all which life has offered us; a full acknowledgment of the responsibility which is ours; and a fixed determination to show that under a free government a mighty people can thrive best, alike as regards the things of the body and the things of the soul.
Much has been given us, and much will rightfully be expected from us. We have duties to others and duties to ourselves; and we can shirk neither. We have become a great nation, forced by the fact of its greatness into relations with the other nations of the earth, and we must behave as beseems a people with such responsibilities. Toward all other nations, large and small, our attitude must be one of cordial and sincere friendship. We must show not only in our words, but in our deeds, that we are earnestly desirous of securing their good will by acting toward them in a spirit of just and generous recognition of all their rights. But justice and generosity in a nation, as in an individual, count most when shown not by the weak but by the strong. While ever careful to refrain from wrongdoing others, we must be no less insistent that we are not wronged ourselves. We wish peace, but we wish the peace of justice, the peace of righteousness. We wish it because we think it is right and not because we are afraid. No weak nation that acts manfully and justly should ever have cause to fear us, and no strong power should ever be able to single us out as a subject for insolent aggression.
Our relations with the other powers of the world are important; but still more important are our relations among ourselves. Such growth in wealth, in population, and in power as this nation has seen during the century and a quarter of its national life is inevitably accompanied by a like growth in the problems which are ever before every nation that rises to greatness. Power invariably means both responsibility and danger. Our forefathers faced certain perils which we have outgrown. We now face other perils, the very existence of which it was impossible that they should foresee. Modern life is both complex and intense, and the tremendous changes wrought by the extraordinary industrial development of the last half century are felt in every fiber of our social and political being. Never before have men tried so vast and formidable an experiment as that of administering the affairs of a continent under the forms of a Democratic republic. The conditions which have told for our marvelous material well-being, which have developed to a very high degree our energy, self-reliance, and individual initiative, have also brought the care and anxiety inseparable from the accumulation of great wealth in industrial centers. Upon the success of our experiment much depends, not only as regards our own welfare, but as regards the welfare of mankind. If we fail, the cause of free self-government throughout the world will rock to its foundations, and therefore our responsibility is heavy, to ourselves, to the world as it is to-day, and to the generations yet unborn. There is no good reason why we should fear the future, but there is every reason why we should face it seriously, neither hiding from ourselves the gravity of the problems before us nor fearing to approach these problems with the unbending, unflinching purpose to solve them aright.
Yet, after all, though the problems are new, though the tasks set before us differ from the tasks set before our fathers who founded and preserved this Republic, the spirit in which these tasks must be undertaken and these problems faced, if our duty is to be well done, remains essentially unchanged. We know that self-government is difficult. We know that no people needs such high traits of character as that people which seeks to govern its affairs aright through the freely expressed will of the freemen who compose it. But we have faith that we shall not prove false to the memories of the men of the mighty past. They did their work, they left us the splendid heritage we now enjoy. We in our turn have an assured confidence that we shall be able to leave this heritage unwasted and enlarged to our children and our children's children. To do so we must show, not merely in great crises, but in the everyday affairs of life, the qualities of practical intelligence, of courage, of hardihood, and endurance, and above all the power of devotion to a lofty ideal, which made great the men who founded this Republic in the days of Washington, which made great the men who preserved this Republic in the days of Abraham Lincoln.
SELECTED EXAMPLES OF ECONOMIC REFORMS…
Reforms in China in 1970s
…Before economic reforms began in the late 1970s, state-owned enterprises generally did not purchase their raw materials and equipment as commodities, but rather received them directly from the government. The enterprises then submitted their finished products to the government for distribution. The Supply and Marketing Cooperative, a state-run operation, distributed consumer goods to the rural population. Such essential items as grains, oil, meat, sugar, and cotton fabric were rationed because they were relatively scarce and because low fixed prices had to be ensured for everyone.
The United States of America
This period of reform lasted from the last decade of the 19th century into World War I. Reformers, or progressives as they were called, were concerned about abuses of power by government and businesses. They did not all agree with each other, but many advocated at least some government regulation of business practices. They wanted the direct election of U.S. senators (in most states the legislature chose them). Some sought the prohibition of child labor, others the prohibition of alcoholic beverages, and for many the conservation of the nation's natural resources was important. Muckrakers (journalists who wrote articles exposing corruption in both politics and in business) often joined with progressives to publicize child labor, unsanitary industrial conditions, business monopolies, and censorship. Progressives believed that the government could play an important role in making the United States a better place to live, and many looked for leadership to President Theodore Roosevelt.”
The United Kingdom (Britain)
The British Radicals, led by the philosopher James Mill, the jurist and philosopher Jeremy Bentham, and the political economist David Ricardo, developed a philosophy based on Bentham's principle of “the greatest happiness of the greatest number.” They proposed as a means to this end the removal of all political and social restraints on economic relations, believing that individuals are free to the extent that their commercial life is unrestricted. British radicalism was an effort to establish private economic expansion as the principle of the modern state.
There is so much to say, but this is not the time for too much talk. Only one question: Will Nigerians agree with President FDR (Roosevelt)?
“Much has been given us, and much will rightfully be expected from us.
We have duties to others and duties to ourselves; and we can shirk neither.
We have become a great nation, forced by the fact of its greatness into relations
with the other nations of the earth (global economy), and we must behave as beseems
a people with such responsibilities.” ?
In my view we have one option left if subsidy is too hard on us,; close all our borders to going out, no coming in. We must all agree to “The Closing of the Gate” if present globalised economy is too hard to bear. It means we will live together and die together for our next generation to have a country to call their own. I rest my case on this matter.
Support Materials: Microsoft Encarta
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)