Friday, 15 July 2011

Facebook

Facebook is a social networking service and website.Users may create a personal profile, add other users as friends, and exchange messages, including automatic notifications when they update their profile. Facebook users must register before using the site. Additionally, users may join common-interest user groups, organized by workplace, school or college, or other characteristics.Facebook was founded by Mark Zuckerberg with his college roommates and fellow computer science students Eduardo Saverin, Dustin Moskovitz and Chris Hughes


Facebook

Saturday, 9 July 2011

The Power of words

For journalists, their pen is like a sword.For politicians their words are their primary weapons.

Power of words can be analysed by the fact that Lord Krishna made sure that Arjun fights against the Kauravas just by mere words.If it dint happen then we might have been studying a totally different mahabharata today!!.

Its the power of words that makes people sit for hours listening to prayer meetings.

Well with the power comes the pros and cons .The pros are that many people get inspired and do miracles.On the bad side,terrorists feed wrong notions into the mind of youth or their men and guide them to terror attacks.

Look at the wonders it makes.It can kill thousands of people and at the same time it can save or make someone's life .Words can manipulate you into becoming a tool others can use.

This is a link to kasab video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=smoUi4YFg8I

Their words virtually force you to agree with their point of view, give them what they want,do what they ask and buy what they are selling.

Love, laughter, heroism, friendship, and virtually every emotion we feel as human beings can be inspired by words.

Unfortunately, fear, anger, and hatred, can also be invoked by words.The enormous power of words lies in the MEANING that the words have for you.The words trigger concepts, ideas, memories, situations, circumstances, actions,thoughts and feelings from your subconscious mind into corresponding emotional responses toward the subject at hand.

These emotional triggers have been defined as fallacious arguments because they are misleading and deceptive. While they appear to relate to the subject at hand, they do not.
In most cases they have little to do with the subject at all.

Rudyard Kipling rightly stated:

"Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind."