| | | [GMW #1151] My Ultimate Dream Is Paradise Earth Where Humanity Lives In Peace, Well-being and Utmost Happiness | Friday 16 February 2007, Editor: Easy | RobertMuller.org | Contact | Subscribe | Unsubscribe | | GMW Blogs: English | Portuguese | Spanish | Tagalog | Dutch | | Idea Dream - Paradise Earth - Celebrating Robert's 84th Birthday 10 March | So many of my dreams have been fulfilled that I now believe dreams are the surest way to achieve a new reality. My ultimate dream is to see the Earth preserved as the most beautiful paradise in the universe, a new Athens where humanity can live in peace, well-being, and utmost happiness. Good Morning World is featuring one paragraph each day from Robert's 23 paragraph 2 page monograph Paradise Earth edited by Douglas Gillies, Robert's biographer. Paradise Earth is compiled from Robert's first 6,000 Ideas and Dreams for a Better World. The 23 pararaphs will lead to Douglas's teleseminar with Robert on Saturday March 10 at 9:00 am Pacific Time. Douglas will ask Robert questions from you and the listeners about his vision for Paradise Earth. This will hopefully be followed by a series of teleseminars on Paradise Earth with Robert and one special guest each time. To submit a question for Robert and to sign up for this free teleseminar click here: http://www.robertmullerpeacemaker.com . Send your ideas for Paradise Earth and birthday wishes for Robert's birthday by replying to this email or Contact Good Morning World. 3 Birthday wishes for Robert have been received so far. Send yours by Friday 9 March. * |
| Robert's The Miracle, Joy and Art of Living | Elevate, validate everything you touch, make everyone you meet dream. * | My Testament to the UN -A Contribution to the 50th Anniversary of the United Nations, 1995, Appendix 1, Highlihgts of the United Nations | 1946: In January, the General Assembly meets for the first time, in London, and elects the members of the Security Council, the Economic and Social Council, and the Intemational Court of Justice. The first resolution the Assembly adopts is on disarmament, on the peaceful use of nuclear energy. Over the next four decades, as the arms race spirals upward, the organization keeps the problem high on the international agenda. Other major problems considered by the first Assembly: decolonization, racial discrimination in South Africa, and the growing violence between Arabs and Jews in Palestine. In October the Assembly meets in New York, picked as headquarters for the organization. It establishes the United Nations Children's Fund. The Trusteeship Council is set up. * | |
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