The Unvalued but Most Valuable: Rubbish-free Brain's Memory and Hatred-free Society

by Providence Imanikundabayo

About the Book

Isolation threatens many if not most, however, for a minority; it is a great opportunity to exploit. The Unvalued but Most Valuable: His father abandoned him, and the boy didn't manage to make it for school for three years. At risk of indulging himself in drugs abuse, but the boy provided no room for fruitless habits. Relatives and acquaintances hated the boy and the boy kept his eyes blind to their evil deeds and ears deaf to their insults to keep on with his move to a rubbish-free brain's memory possession and fight for hatred-free society. The so hated finally become the so loved while the unvalued got the value it deserved. This for both young and middle aged who value razor sharpened brain and unity.

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  • After reading the article at website , I realized that the spread of anti-Semitism is not something abstract, but a concrete process with very real consequences. The article describes in detail how hatred, initially hidden in comments or "legitimate questions" on social media, can shape opinions and escalate into aggressive actions against real people or groups. This makes me pay closer attention to what I see in my feed, not to overlook hate speech, and to understand that every careless word can have a chain reaction — and the distance from the screen to the street is not that great. It is important to read and discuss such texts because they not only inform but also evoke responsibility in conscious users of digital space.

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