Tolstoy's Advice
Leo Tolstoy was a Russian writer most famous for his works of fiction such as War and Peace, which discuss the importance of the latter and the hope for the complete eradication of the former. Among his many non-fiction writings is the book A Confession and Other Religious Writings wherein he writes about his own chronic depression and his search for a religion which could give him inner peace. Tolstoy had lived his whole life without fear of starvation and yet he realized that he was not nearly as happy as the peasants that he saw living in the village near his family home. He determined to reexamine his life and to reevaluate the things that were important. What he was able to finally conclude was that the road to happiness had everything to do with understanding, cooperation and peace. If Leo Tolstoy were alive today and able to see the current relationship between the United States and the Islamic world, he would have much to say about what the government of the U.S. should do in order to improve its relationship with the othered group.
The United States has had an aggressive relationship with the people of the Islamic world for quite some time. Since the 1960s, a steady increase in radicalization of viewpoints have led to increased friction culminating with the War on Terror starting September of 2001, following the attacks on the United States by fundamentalists who claimed to represent the Muslim religion. It must be noted that the religion does not promote or support violence of any kind and the terrorist who claim to be acting...
Henry David Thoreau left us two most important options when things go very bad in this world: a bloodless but effective way of saying "no" and a fitting advice to rely on ourselves. He did this through his famous works, "Civil Disobedience" and "Walden." Civil Disobedience" is about showing protest by resisting the orders of the authority being opposed. When authority conflicts with one's true values, the person has the right
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