domingo, 23 de abril de 2017

Pobres: Sociedade anonima por acoes

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No planejamento das palestras para minha desclasse social no Brasil, nao pode faltar o item de que os pobres nunca vao sair da pobreza se nao aprenderem a fundar as sociedades anonimas por acoes. Para isto, o tema abaixo e' fundamental. Traduzi-lo e ver a empresa educadora de Curtis.

TED Talk

Curtis "Wall Street" Carroll: How I learned to read -- and trade stocks -- in prison...


https://www.ted.com/talks/curtis_wall_street_carroll_how_i_learned_to_read_and_trade_stocks_in_prison/transcript?language=en#t-233800

0:11I was 14 years old inside of a bowling alley, burglarizing an arcade game, and upon exiting the building a security guard grabbed my arm, so I ran. I ran down the street, and I jumped on top of a fence. And when I got to the top, the weight of 3,000 quarters in my book bag pulled me back down to the ground. So when I came to, the security guard was standing on top of me, and he said, "Next time you little punks steal something you can carry."
0:38(Laughter)
0:40I was taken to juvenile hall and when I was released into the custody of my mother,the first words my uncle said was, "How'd you get caught?" I said, "Man, the book bag was too heavy." He said, "Man, you weren't supposed to take all the quarters."I said, "Man, they were small. What am I supposed to do?" And 10 minutes later, he took me to burglarize another arcade game. We needed gas money to get home.That was my life.
1:06I grew up in Oakland, California, with my mother and members of my immediate family addicted to crack cocaine. My environment consisted of living with family, friends, and homeless shelters. Oftentimes, dinner was served in breadlines and soup kitchens. The big homie told me this: money rules the world and everything in it. And in these streets, money is king. And if you follow the money, it'll lead you to the bad guy or the good guy.
1:37Soon after, I committed my first crime, and it was the first time that I was told that I had potential and felt like somebody believed in me. Nobody ever told me that I could be a lawyer, doctor or engineer. I mean, how was I supposed to do that? I couldn't read, write or spell. I was illiterate. So I always thought crime was my way to go.
1:58And then one day I was talking to somebody and he was telling me about this robbery that we could do. And we did it.
2:08The reality was that I was growing up in the strongest financial nation in the world,the United States of America, while I watched my mother stand in line at a blood bank to sell her blood for 40 dollars just to try to feed her kids. She still has the needle marks on her arms to day to show for that.
2:28So I never cared about my community. They didn't care about my life. Everybody there was doing what they were doing to take what they wanted, the drug dealers, the robbers, the blood bank. Everybody was taking blood money. So I got mine by any means necessary. I got mine. Financial literacy really did rule the world, and I was a child slave to it following the bad guy.
2:51At 17 years old, I was arrested for robbery and murder and I soon learned that finances in prison rule more than they did on the streets, so I wanted in. One day, I rushed to grab the sports page of the newspaper so my celly could read it to me,and I accidentally picked up the business section. And this old man said, "Hey youngster, you pick stocks?" And I said, "What's that?" He said, "That's the place where white folks keep all their money."
3:15(Laughter)
3:16And it was the first time that I saw a glimpse of hope, a future. He gave me this brief description of what stocks were, but it was just a glimpse. I mean, how was I supposed to do it? I couldn't read, write or spell. The skills that I had developed to hide my illiteracy no longer worked in this environment. I was trapped in a cage, prey among predators, fighting for freedom I never had. I was lost, tired, and I was out of options.
3:48So at 20 years old, I did the hardest thing I'd ever done in my life. I picked up a book, and it was the most agonizing time of my life, trying to learn how to read, the ostracizing from my family, the homies. It was rough, man. It was a struggle. But little did I know I was receiving the greatest gifts I had ever dreamed of: self-worth,knowledge, discipline. I was so excited to be reading that I read everything I could get my hands on: candy wrappers, clothing logos, street signs, everything. I was just reading stuff!
4:28(Applause)
4:29Just reading stuff. I was so excited to know how to read and know how to spell. The homie came up, said, "Man, what you eating?" I said, "C-A-N-D-Y, candy."
4:39(Laughter)
4:42He said, "Let me get some." I said, "N-O. No."
4:44(Laughter)
4:45It was awesome. I mean, I can actually now for the first time in my life read. The feeling that I got from it was amazing.
4:54And then at 22, feeling myself, feeling confident, I remembered what the OG told me. So I picked up the business section of the newspaper. I wanted to find these rich white folks.
5:08(Laughter)
5:11So I looked for that glimpse. As I furthered my career in teaching others how to financially manage money and invest, I soon learned that I had to take responsibility for my own actions. True, I grew up in a very complex environment, but I chose to commit crimes, and I had to own up to that. I had to take responsibility for that, and I did. I was building a curriculum that could teach incarcerated men how to manage money through prison employments. Properly managing our lifestyle would provide transferrable tools that we can use to manage money when we reenter society, like the majority of people did who didn't commit crimes. Then I discovered that according to MarketWatch, over 60 percent of the American population has under 1,000 dollars in savings. Sports Illustrated said that over 60 percent of NBA playersand NFL players go broke. 40 percent of marital problems derive from financial issues. What the hell?
6:09(Laughter)
6:11You mean to tell me that people worked their whole lives, buying cars, clothes, homes and material stuff but were living check to check? How in the world were members of society going to help incarcerated individuals back into society if they couldn't manage they own stuff? We screwed.
6:28(Laughter)
6:30I needed a better plan. This is not going to work out too well. So ... I thought. I now had an obligation to meet those on the path and help, and it was crazy because I now cared about my community. Wow, imagine that. I cared about my community.
6:55Financial illiteracy is a disease that has crippled minorities and the lower class in our society for generations and generations, and we should be furious about that. Ask yourselves this: How can 50 percent of the American population be financially illiterate in a nation driven by financial prosperity? Our access to justice, our social status, living conditions, transportation and food are all dependent on money that most people can't manage. It's crazy! It's an epidemic and a bigger danger to public safety than any other issue.
7:32According to the California Department of Corrections, over 70 percent of those incarcerated have committed or have been charged with money-related crimes:robberies, burglaries, fraud, larceny, distortion — and the list goes on. Check this out: a typical incarcerated person would enter the California prison system with no financial education, earn 30 cents an hour, over 800 dollars a year, with no real expenses and save no money. Upon his parole, he will be given 200 dollars gate money and told, "Hey, good luck, stay out of trouble. Don't come back to prison."With no meaningful preparation or long-term financial plan, what does he do ... ? At 60? Get a good job, or go back to the very criminal behavior that led him to prison in the first place? You taxpayers, you choose. Well, his education already chose for him, probably.
8:34So how do we cure this disease? I cofounded a program that we call Financial Empowerment Emotional Literacy. We call it FEEL, and it teaches how do you separate your emotional decisions from your financial decisions, and the four timeless rules to personal finance: the proper way to save, control your cost of living, borrow money effectively and diversify your finances by allowing your money to work for you instead of you working for it. Incarcerated people need these life skills before we reenter society. You can't have full rehabilitation without these life skills. This idea that only professionals can invest and manage money is absolutely ridiculous, and whoever told you that is lying.
9:24(Applause)
9:29A professional is a person who knows his craft better than most, and nobody knows how much money you need, have or want better than you, which means you are the professional. Financial literacy is not a skill, ladies and gentlemen. It's a lifestyle.Financial stability is a byproduct of a proper lifestyle. A financially sound incarcerated person can become a taxpaying citizen, and a financially sound taxpaying citizen can remain one. This allows us to create a bridge between those people who we influence: family, friends and those young people who still believe that crime and money are related. So let's lose the fear and anxiety of all the big financial words and all that other nonsense that you've been out there hearing. And let's get to the heart of what's been crippling our society from taking care of your responsibility to be better life managers. And let's provide a simple and easy to use curriculum that gets to the heart, the heart of what financial empowerment and emotional literacy really is.
10:39Now, if you're sitting out here in the audience and you said, "Oh yeah, well, that ain't me and I don't buy it," then come take my class —
10:46(Laughter)
10:48so I can show you how much money it costs you every time you get emotional.
10:52(Applause)
10:58Thank you very much. Thank you.
11:00(Applause)

quarta-feira, 19 de abril de 2017

Vídeo de Serra Pelada e meu Debate com Os Comentaristas

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(obs: tem mais comentarios meu no Youtube neste video porem devido erros de formatacao nao consigo copia-los aqui)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bfghf_juH_w

Louis Charles Morelli 
A maioria dos comentários aqui julgam e condenam garimpeiros que enriqueceram e empobreceram. Eu estive la e vi muitos destes casos em outros garimpos da Amazônia e posso atestar: você faria exatamente igual se tivesse nascido e crescido pelas mesmas experiencias. Assim como o treinamento militar transforma jovens comuns em maquinas para matar, a selva em poucos meses faz uma lavagem cerebral de toda a cultura humana e reduz o individuo ao ancestral macaco, mas não o bonzinho do zoológico e sim o feroz e instintivo macaco da selva. Eu passei por isto depois de alguns meses isolado e com duas malarias, a falciparum e a vivax. O pobre nativo do Amazonas assim como a massa pobre do Nordeste não tem educação para resistir de consumir o que puder agora, eles não tem celeiros e geladeiras para guardar e conservar a carne da cassa. (raios, não tenho c cedilha aqui). Aprendi a nunca julgar ninguém sem antes de experimentar o seu mundo... pois sempre sera um julgamento alienado. Eu conheci o Indio, o Chico, o Ze Maria, e não foi apenas as extravagancias que empobreceram, teve outro motivo que vou postar aqui encima.

Louis Charles Morelli 
Serra Pelada funcionou exatamente como um cassino, eu vi ela crescer e definhar, como vi um jogador de cassino quando era seu motorista particular em Atlantic City. No cassino faz-se uma maquina programada para em certo tempo (digamos,1 ano) devolver 40% em prêmios do total em dinheiro que nela for depositado. Então se o programa e' para 200.000,00, cerca de 80.000,00 apenas retorna para os jogadores. Nas minas de ouro do Amazonas, alguém tem que começar investindo dinheiro, em equipamentos, viveres, etc. Assim, os que vão sem dinheiro caem nas mãos dos donos de barrancos, que levaram dinheiro. Antes que o dinheiro termine tem que acertar a sorte e obter alguma pepita o que vai retroalimentar o jogo. A Serra estava programada para 4 anos, quando então atingiria o lençol freático e a garimpagem seria impossível. Devido as pepitas serem espalhadas por uma explosão vulcânica não havia filões,veios, por tanto era uma distribuição por acaso, um jogo de sorte e azar. Todos os bamburrados compraram mais áreas e aumentaram seus investimentos enquanto esbanjavam fora o dinheiro, crendo misticamente que a fonte nunca iria secar. O custo de um barranco era alto, mantendo no minimo 12 homens, maquinário lavando o minério, barracão de pousada e manutenção, cozinheiro, veículos, etc. Donos de 20 barrancos mantinham 300 homens, ... A maioria, como o empresario João Paulo, personagem deste filme que esta la a 25 anos, ( e com quem eu gostava de conversar pois e' um individuo bastante disciplinado, intelectual e bem informado do mundo cá' fora), estavam chegando na sorte grande quando a maquina ( do jogo de azar, como nos cassinos), parou e lhes foi retirada. Portanto, algum dinheiro foi desperdiçado em extravagancias porem a maior parte foi reinvestido e enterrado la mesmo. Os que continuaram ricos - como o Ze Maria, que mantem suas fazendas - o foi porque não tiveram tempo de reinvestir tudo antes da maquina parar. Como sempre, a busca do ouro, o ganho do dinheiro fácil, torna-se um vicio, para todos que entram no jogo.
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Wee Boy 
governo do PT deu a mina 75 % da mina pros canadenses parabéns Brasil Louis Charles Morelli 
O governo ali sempre foi de laranjas da velha autocracia: Curio, Lobão, Jader Barbalho, etc.



Mas em todo caso, e' melhor dar o ouro para estrangeiros o que dar para a velha e porca aristocracia, pois isto a tornaria mais forte e maior peso nas costas da massa brasileira. Ela estava ali representada pelos seus laranjas no governo e seus tentáculos financeiros como a Vale, que ate hoje roubou bilhões de dólares de vocês através do minério de ferro e metais preciosos no Carajás, sem que você tenha visto um centavo do que lhe deveria pertencer também, e sem que você reclame... me mostre ai um centavo ao menos que você recebeu da venda desse minério... Mas como não tens?! Você não e' um dos 200 milhões de sócios acionistas desta empresa Brasil?!


Louis Charles Morelli 

O governo ali sempre foi de laranjas da velha autocracia: Curio, Lobão, Jader Barbalho, etc. Mas em todo caso, e' melhor dar o ouro para estrangeiros o que dar para a velha e porca aristocracia, pois isto a tornaria mais forte e maior peso nas costas da massa brasileira. Ela estava ali representada pelos seus laranjas no governo e seus tentáculos financeiros como a Vale, que ate hoje roubou bilhões de dólares de vocês através do minério de ferro e metais preciosos no Carajás, sem que você tenha visto um centavo do que lhe deveria pertencer também, e sem que você reclame... me mostre ai um centavo ao menos que você recebeu da venda desse minério... Mas como não tens?! Você não e' um dos 200 milhões de sócios acionistas desta empresa Brasil?!


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