Learning from my mistakes: He is a great man who does not hesitate to accept his mistakes. Once he became famous, "Freedom is not worth having if freedom to make mistakes is not included." His autobiography "My Truth Experiment" has many such examples and forms private life in the public place. He will clearly tell you what you learned from all the mistakes you made and how they changed your life. This is also very important for investors to learn from every mistake he did. Otherwise, if the same mistake is repeated, it can make a lot of effort to weaken the wealth earned. This is an endless continuous learning process
If it does not include freedom to make mistakes, freedom is not worth having. Human beings are not always right. Mistakes are a good learning course, and anyone entering an unknown area knows and understands the danger of his or her failure. In order to do what you are afraid you will become a leader who is not satisfied with satisfying things. He is useless when a mentor opposes his own conscience. It is your responsibility to do something bad about your watch. Leaders intentionally avoid morally wrong problems. Transparency International 's 2016 Corruption Perceptions Index ranks India as the 79th country with fewer corruption in 175 countries - Indians are not proud of it. In this country, people who rely on their own conscience and claiming the wrong state - rarely have no problems - without problems.
In our enthusiasm for government politics, we often miss the good things the government does. Our biggest mistake is to protect commercial freedom within the feedback loop of the government's profit and loss, which hinders or loses economic freedom. Perhaps our biggest weakness is to ignore the complexity of poverty and growth. We believe economic freedom always brings good results - but the economic patterns and corruption of Eastern Europe and Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union should stop us. We believe that freedom of education and elimination of minimum wages lead to poverty and the possibility of eradicating poverty. I think this is definitely useful. But we ignore the culture and family role in stopping the most vulnerable people. Incentives may be helpful, but they rarely solve all the problems altogether. We can use a little free sympathy for those with hard experiences.