Thursday, March 11, 2010

Free e-books

Free e-books


Tick Tock, Don't Stop - A Manual for Workaholics

Posted:

Swiatek takes a look at various aspects of work, including the Union, the unions, slavery, his job experience and why Americans work as hard as they do. He also looks at the origin of work – at least his take on it – and how corporations can reevaluate their current systems to help employees work fewer hours with higher productivity. The author also points out that working smart beats working harder, any day. Tick Tock, Don't Stop may not enable the reader to retire today, but perhaps sooner than planned. The reader won't become a millionaire, but should have a richer life.

Here's Your Free Gift - Send $10 For Shipping

Posted:

Missing intelligence is all around and no one is exempt from this behavior, but it results in many laughs. Sit back and smile. Laughter is the best medicine and it's available even if you're a pirate or Joe the Plumber and no one will throw shoes at you. You will find more examples of temporary brain tumors that should make you laugh, including headlines, the brilliance of the banks and government – especially Newman and Cliff Claven – signs and other tax deductions and further thoughts by our youth. The author offers some worthless facts, fun things to do and more dumb, but funny questions.

This War Won't Cost Much - I'm Already Against the Next One

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War is always being fought. Most people – even those in the military – oppose it. People demonstrate against it even before the bombing starts and history has seen numerous defectors, draft evaders and conscientious objectors. If the military uses "precision bombing," why do we have "collateral damage?" If soldiers enter the "theatre of war," do they need a degree in acting? If we take away the matches and cigarette lighters from war combatants, will that be the end of "friendly fire? The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are just for oil and the rich getting richer - really good for nothing.

Don't Bet On It

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Buffalo software consultant John Kuzinski doesn't play the lottery, but somehow gets entangled in it. He wishes he hadn't. This is a novel about politics, gambling, deception, technology, fear and food. It is fiction and the characters are not real, but the information contained within dealing with odds, statistics, computers and lotteries are fact. If you play the lottery, by all means read this book. Even if you are not a gambler, you should still be enlightened and have a new outlook about games of chance.

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