Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, "You can have happiness, or you can gain power, but you can not have both." This transcendental quotation seems simple, but its explanation became very deep. The best place to explain the words of Emerson is The Merriam-Webster online dictionary. Power is defined as "control, authority, or influence over others," and Joey is defined as "the feelings that are caused by happiness, success or fortune, or the likelihood of having what you want." My first literal explanation made me disagree with this sentence.
The origin of the state authority: the sovereignty of the people (the state as the enumerated, the nation as the founding of the authorized people) and various forms of absolute and organic national philosophy (the national as the first and fundamental authority) vs. anarchist The view - "Civilization was born out of conquest of foreign countries and oppression of domestic" is a primitiveism. As Russian political scientist Stepan S. Sulakshin shows, political spectroscopy can be used as a forecasting tool. Sulakshin provides mathematical evidence that stable development (the positive dynamics of many statistical indicators) depends on the extent of the political field. If it is too narrow or too wide, it will lead to stagnation and political disasters. Sulakshin also showed that, in the short term, the political spectrum determines the dynamics of the statistical indicator and not the opposite.
A division and governance strategy of the same politics is seen in American politics: refugee camp and foreign phobia, LGBT rights and family values, Republican and Democratic Party, black life problems and youth problem. This is the most successful way for the power elite to weaken the power of people. These are distracting and very useful. If the power elite attempts to comply with their totalitarian approach in expanding the NATO empire, the military worship has raised the special suffering for the public's national pride and French people's collective self-respect A day better than the idle day. What?