No need to reinvent the wheel
A test that all aspiring ministers and state officials should take in order to be eligible to occupy the position thus aspired.
The following should be adopted and adapted to the whole people not to the Republic of Port-au-Prince only. Taking of course into account the overall level of education, as this should be applied to the peasantry as well.
An extraordinary discovery.
The Government should convene all these ministers to give priority to this subject as a duty and demand that everyone comes back with at least 20 pages of suggestions regarding their area of evolution and execution. So to work on a new development project with reinforcement of laws for a redesign of the archaic system that must be set aside for good. It is necessary to stop the dusting and makeup due to bad faith, lack of will in order to keep the status quo that benefits some people.
in this Vidéo, do you see anyone is the whole crow who is ready or willing to make a little sacrifice for the country?
This would have been a real conversion that has nothing to see with religion.
Here is the case study:
No need to reinvent the wheel.
I do not know what it remitted to the ministers the so called Ampliation or roadmap but, in my opinion, this should include the 20 pages resulting from their own reflection on this text below, of which, each minister should produce, which would constitute the institution’s road map, of course, with tags to prevent anyone from making any unlawful intrusion.
* “broken window theory” *
In 1969, at Stanford University (USA), Professor Philip Zimbardo conducted an experiment in social psychology. He left two cars abandoned in the street, two identical cars, same brand, model and color. One stayed in the Bronx, a poor and troubled neighborhood of New York and the other in Palo Alto, a wealthy and peaceful district of California. Two identical abandoned cars, two neighborhoods with very different populations and a team of specialists in Social psychology who studied the behaviour of people on each site.
It turned out that the abandoned car in the Bronx began to be vandalized in a few hours. It has lost engine, mirrors, radio, etc. tires. Everything that was usable was carried away and what was not, was destroyed. On the contrary, the abandoned car in Palo Alto remained intact.
It is common to attribute to poverty the cause of the crimes. Attribution shared by the most conservative ideological positions (both right and left). However, the experience in question did not end there, when the abandoned car in the Bronx was destroyed and the one in Palo Alto was in perfect condition.
The researchers then decided to break the glass of the Palo Alto vehicle. The result was the initiation of the same process of the Bronx, with theft, violence and vandalism of the vehicle, reduced to the same state as that of the poor neighborhood.
Why is the broken glass of a car parked in a supposedly secure neighborhood capable of triggering a whole criminal process?
It is not because of poverty. There is obviously something that has to do with psychology, with human behavior and with social relations.
The broken glass of an abandoned car conveys an idea of decadence, of disinterest, of neglect that breaks the codes of coexistence. It is as if the law, the norms and the rules are absent and nothing is worth anything. Every new attack by the automobile reaffirms and multiplies this idea, until the escalation of events worsens and becomes uncontrollable, leading to irrational violence.
Later experiments (James Q. Wilson and George Kelling) helped develop the “broken glass Theory”. From a criminological point of view, this theory establishes that crime is higher in areas where neglect, filth, disorder and violence are the highest.