Member Since: 6/24/2008
Band Website: http://iacmusic.com/artist.aspx?id=116452
Band Members: Only one guy: Markus Giel. I edited my profile with Thomas Myspace Editor V4.4 (www.strikefile.com/myspace)
Influences: Beatles, Genesis (including Peter Gabriel and Steve Hackett), Pink Floyd, The Police, Fleedwood Mac, Neil Young and many hundreds of other bands. I even love the sound of Paverotti's voice (greetings to heaven)Barack Obama's Question posted on Linkedin 3 months ago: What ideas do you have to keep America competitive in the years ahead?
In a recent speech, I proposed a new competiveness agenda centered around education and energy, innovation and infrastructure, fair trade and reform.
You can watch it, and read the full-text, here: http://my.barackobama.com/competitiveness ++++++++++Markus Giel's answer: “Dear Senator, 1370 previous responses make it hard to believe that there is anything which has not been mentioned at this point. Nevertheless, I am convinced to be able to still add a different perspective even if there had been a million responses. The ability to be confident enough to come up with such statement to get to my point has little do with education but all the loved ones in my life who believed in me and supported me, may it be my parents, an uncle or elementary school teacher, who tried to be the best father for about 150 children, they all supported me in developing a unique ability, have unlimited imagination, ideas, creativity enabling me to learn what is important to me. I could not find a better introduction to make my point by referring to one of the greatest inventors in history, Thomas Edison, to clarify what
changes are needed to make a America a stronger nation: “In school, the young Edison's mind often wandered, and his teacher, the Reverend Engle, was overheard calling him "addled." This ended Edison's three months of official schooling. He recalled later, "My mother was the making of me. She was so true, so sure of me; and I felt I had something to live for, someone I must not disappoint." His mother then home schooled him.[2] Much of his education came from reading R.G. Parker's School of Natural Philosophy and The Cooper Union.†The following “golden rules†have not changed in the 200 years since Mr. Edison as called "addled": Existence of intellect, creativity and innovative brain power of a child is natural whether it has parents who can afford to finance a higher education or not. Support of a loving and financially stable family will increase the chances of academic success and a fulfilled life. A nation which keeps producing inventors
such as Thomas Edision will be competitive as any nation could be. Conclusion: Some of our brightest and creative inventors of our nation may be found in homeless shelters, may it be that they are forgotten veterans with mental problems, or foster children who became homeless when they turned 18, or had divorced parents as the environment has not favored hard working middle class families in the last few years. Less tragic examples can be found easily, an armee of young people who either lack the support of a loving family or financial resources to go to college. If every American regardless of gender, race, religion, financial status quo or family conditions is given a chance to work at his best, and talents are leveraged to the fullest, this nation has a chance to yet reach another stage of the “American Dream†. Irrevocably, one would have to invest in such dream, meaning we would have to find ways to eliminate expenses caused by premature
conclusions, and this should be an easy challenge given the argument that Iraq after all is not the 51st state of our nation. Such financial resources could be more wisely dedicated to find the Thomas Edisons of these days and help relevant children to eliminate medications for attention disorder out of their daily routine, since now they could rightfully proof that they were simply not challenged at school. Furthermore, granting corporate America tax relief while allowing thousands of jobs to be outsourced to India and other nations has to be analyzed. Tax incentives should be offered to keep jobs in the domestic arena to once again guarantee funding for an educational infrastructure which may at the end result in other nations starting to outsource jobs to the USA.â€
Sounds Like: Markus Giel... seems logical. I never tried to copy anyone
Record Label: Unsigned
Type of Label: Unsigned