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Better Lives for Our Grandchildren: A Plane Crash Survivor's Perspective on Politics and Life , by Bill Robertson (Author)

A retired marketing executive of a $40 billion corporation, Bill Robertson has led an interesting life. Growing up in Niles, Michigan, he attended Harvard Business School, ran a marathon, scaled Mt. Rainier, played a round of golf with Neil Armstrong, met President Reagan, and made six holes in one. He also survived a devastating airline disaster aboard United Airlines Flight 232, which crashed in Sioux City, Iowa. The crash changed his priorities and his life. Spending time with a growing family became his top concern, and he worried for the future of his six grandkids. The future looked bleak. His grandkids’ generation might be the first to have a lower standard of living than their parents. This book, Better Lives for Our Grandchildren: A Plane Crash Survivor's Perspective on Politics and Life, shows how he applied his extensive marketing experience to examine the direction of the country by taking the reader on the journey that led to the election of Donald J. Trump as president. The country wanted change, and Bill’s book identifies why there was so much angst and what the country is doing to change direction.

June/24/2009 1:36AM
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Here are a few things you are going to be asked to render unto Obama. Your rights as a free citizen of the country that made freedom the keystone of success. Day by day, like erosion, you will sacrifice to the state. Caesar’s minions created the housing crisis. They forced banks to provide mortgages to Read the full article…

June/23/2009 17:28PM
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If we really want change, not Obama change, but real change, we must vote every incumbent out in the next election. Regardless of what your party allegiance might be, you must vote against the incumbent. This is the only way we can rid out country of the people who are only motivated by money and Read the full article…

June/22/2009 16:25PM
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I have always believed that too much authority is very dangerous. I have resisted excessive authority all my life. It never worked for me. I had an autocratic father and I learned early on he was often wrong. I obeyed when I had to or when I thought he might be right, but many times Read the full article…