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FonoLibro se enorgullece en presentar la mejor versión ...)
FonoLibro se enorgullece en presentar la mejor versión en audiolibro del clásico de negocio de todos los tiempos, Piense y hágase rico, de Napoleón Hill, libro que ha inspirado a personas como tu a cómo crear sus fortunas y ser millonarios. En este audiolibro aprenderás que cualquier cosa que pienses y que realmente creas, puedes hacerla realidad.
Publicado originalmente en 1937, al final de la Gran Depresión, Piense y hágase rico muestra que los "13 pasos probados para la acumulación de riquezas" de Hill son tan poderosos hoy como lo fueron entonces; y pueden cambiar tu vida para siempre. Esta obra maestra es el resultado de 25 años de estudio de Hill, entrevistando a más de 500 de los personajes más exitosos de su tiempo y revelando el secreto de sus fortunas.Este audiolibro te preparará para la acumulación de riquezas en abundancia en las área que más te interese, no sólo materialmente. Entre los principios descritos en este audiolibro está la importancia de sobrellevar temores comunes, desarrollar un ferviente deseo para alcanzar tus sueños, persistencia en tus esfuerzos y la importancia de la autosugestión y visualización.
En Piense y Hágase Rico, como dice su título, el comienzo de la abundancia de todos los multi-millonarios vino de sus pensamientos. Esté título, bien puede ser considerado el precursor de El Secreto y un punto clave de referencia para la Ley de la Atracción y la superación personal.
Please note: This audiobook is in Spanish.
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FonoLibro se enorgullece en presentar el audiolibro La ...)
FonoLibro se enorgullece en presentar el audiolibro La Ley del Éxito de Napoleón Hill autor del clásico de negocios de todos los tiempos, Piense y Hágase Rico. En 1908 Napoleón Hill le fue encargado por Andrew Carnegie, uno de los hombres más ricos del mundo para entonces, que entrevistara más de 500 de los hombres y mujeres más exitosos de Estados Unidos para probar su teoría que el éxito puede ser descrito y presentado en una fórmula simple que sea accesible y usada por la persona promedio.
En 1928, después de 20 años de investigación la obra maestra de la filosofía de éxito de Napoleón Hill fue publicada como La Ley del Éxito. Esta obra vendió millones de copias y fue su primer éxito antes del bestseller de todos los tiempos Piense y Hágase Rico, FonoLibro les trae el Cáliz Sagrado de la filosofía del éxito en una magnifica adaptación y producción que de manera fácil te enseña el camino al éxito y la prosperidad. No dejes de escuchar Piense y Hágase Rico de Napoleón Hill, también disponible de FonoLibro.
Please Note: This audiobook is in Spanish.
La course de ma vie : 100km de Biel/Bienne (French Edition)
(Nous sommes dans les années 70, je venais de renter du Po...)
Nous sommes dans les années 70, je venais de renter du Portugal, malgré qui jai toujours pratiqué un peu de sport comme foot, vélo et course à pied, mais pour des motifs professionnel, jai laisse de pratiquer et par la suite, je me suis senti un peu lourd et mal à laise.
Tout a commencé un jour lequel jai me sentais à stresser avec ma vie en général. Jai décidé de reprendre un peu de formes physiques en me mettant à faire des petites promenades dans les forêts dOrpund, Brügg, et un peu de temps le virus de la course est réapparu comme un deuxième personnage qui sest agrafé dabord au psychique et ensuite à ma condition physique mon corps prennent des autres formes et jai commencé à mapprécier même avoir un peu de narcissisme, quand je me regardais au miroir spécialement.
José Napoleón Duarte Fuentes, more commonly known as José Napoleón Duarte. was a Salvadoran political figure who served as President of El Salvador from June 1, 1984 to June 1, 1989.
Background
Duarte was born in San Salvador on November 23, 1926, to a family of comfortable means. His father was Jose Jesus Duarte, a tailor, and his mother’s name was Amelia. His father and mother were not formally married and had several other children in addition to him.
His father had political aspirations but was unsuccessful in his attempts to get into politics. In fact, his father’s political ambitions caused him to go bankrupt and even led to his arrest.
Education
He received an excellent education in El Salvador and the United States, graduating in civil engineering from Notre Dame University in 1948.
Upon his return to El Salvador, Duarte joined his father-in-law's construction firm and devoted his time to his profession, to part-time university teaching, and to work with service organizations.
Career
In 1970 he retired from the mayoralty to begin a campaign for the presidency in 1972. First Try for the Presidency El Salvador had not had a civilian president nor a truly free presidential election since 1931, but many progressive politicians saw 1972 as the year in which that might change. The right was alienated by what it perceived as the leftward drift of military men who controlled the government. The army had permitted greater political activity on the part of civilian opposition parties and had even promoted reforms which made opposition electoral victories more likely.
The Christian Democrats joined together with two other parties to their left to form a progressive coalition called the Unión Nacional Opositora (UNO). The UNO nominated Duarte for president and Guillermo Manuel Ungo of the democratic socialist Movimiento Nacional Revolucionario (MNR) for vice-president.
Duarte's chief rival in 1972 was Colonel Arturo Armando Molina, the candidate of the army-backed Partido de Conciliación Nacional (PCN), which had dominated the government since 1961. In early returns Duarte appeared to be leading.
Later, however, the government ordered a halt to broadcast coverage of the counting. The following morning the authorities announced a victory of Molina. Duarte's subsequent support of an attempted coup d'état by a group of disgruntled officers led to his arrest, torture, and expulsion from the country.
He spent the balance of the 1970s in exile in Venezuela. Following another coup d'état, on October 15, 1979, in which a group of reformist officers overthrew the corrupt and unpopular regime of Colonel Carlos Humberto Romero (1977 - 1979), Duarte returned to El Salvador.
When other progressive civilians-some of them, including Guillermo Manuel Ungo, his former political allies-resigned their positions in the new government in frustration over their inability to influence the behavior of the country's repressive armed forces and police, Duarte himself consented in March 1980 to join the ruling civilian-military junta.
This action split the Christian Democratic party and led a number of its younger members to join the armed opposition on the left, but Duarte persisted in his own belief, asserted several times after his defeat and exile in 1972, that no successful program of change could come about in El Salvador without the cooperation of moderate elements in the military.
Moved to the Presidency Duarte remained in the junta until its dissolution in December 1980, at which time he became provisional president. Once in power he pushed through a number of important measures, including an agrarian reform and the nationalization of the banking industry. These changes met violent opposition from El Salvador's right, which manifested itself in a number of assassinations, including that of San Salvador Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero, widely respected as a champion of social justice for the country's exploited poor, on March 24, 1980.
During succeeding months the Duarte government survived several attempts to overthrow it, thanks to the continued support of key elements in the armed forces and of the United States, which considered Duarte's "moderate" reforms the best approach to neutralizing the appeal of the leftist guerrillas and arresting the spread of radical revolution from nearby Nicaragua.
The new president's principal critic on the right was Roberto d'Aubuisson, a charismatic ex-army major whom official sources implicated in the coup attempts against Duarte.
In Constituent Assembly elections held March 28, 1982, and boycotted by the left, Duarte's centrist Christian Democrats won a plurality but lost control of the Assembly to a coalition of right-wing parties led by d'Aubuisson's Alianza Republicana Nacionalista (ARENA).
The rightists ousted Duarte as provisional president and replaced him with conservative businessman Alvaro Magaña (1982 - 1984). The Constitutent Assembly governed the country while drafting a new constitution. Attempts by rightists within the body to dismantle the reforms initiated by Duarte led to the further polarization of Salvadoran politics.
On May 6, 1984, following a bitter and violent campaign, Duarte defeated d'Aubuisson in a runoff election to become El Salvador's first elected civilian president in 53 years. Once again the left had boycotted the vote, charging that there could be no true democracy without peace and social change. Duarte made good a campaign pledge to open a dialogue with the armed opposition, which had been waging a guerrilla war against the government for more than five years.
Little came of the first talks, held at La Palma in October 1984. The ARENA-dominated Assembly's resistance to negotiations with the left as well as to further reforms compromised Duarte's effectiveness as president, although legislative elections held on March 31, 1985, strengthened his hand by giving an unexpected majority to the Christian Democrats.
Although outspokenly pro-Western and anti-Communist, Duarte occasionally criticized the United States for its support of dictatorial regimes in Latin America. For its part, Washington was sometimes reluctant to give Duarte its unqualified support.
The Nixon administration failed to intervene on his behalf in 1972, perhaps because he had run that year with Communist endorsement. Following Duarte's provisional presidency (1980 - 1982), the United States apparently questioned his leadership ability and hoped for a victory by some other candidate in 1984. When the field narrowed to Duarte and the intransigent d'Aubuisson in the runoff, however, the Reagan administration threw its support to Duarte as the only hope for a "centrist" solution.
By mid-1985 Duarte enjoyed the support of both the Assembly and the United States. Many knowledgeable observers cautioned, however, that his chances of success in the dangerous Salvadoran political climate would continue to depend upon his ability to retain the confidence of the armed forces and establish a dialogue with rebel leaders.
The Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN), a coalition of rebel groups, became a highly disruptive guerrilla force that craved recognition and legitimacy. Prior to the free presidential elections in March of 1989, the FMLN tried to pressure the government into allowing its full participation with a number of proposals that included demands for restructuring the military, as well as a six-month postponement of voting.
In exchange, they offered to halt guerrilla warfare that had killed an estimated 70, 000 Salvadorans in nine years, but would not promise to end their armed struggle after the election. A Bloody Road To Democracy Various offers were rejected by the armed forces, the Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA), and the ruling Christian Democrats. Yet even as late as February 26 President Duarte continued to offer options to negotiate a peace, including the postponement of elections for six weeks and the call for a cease fire until his term ended on June 1 if the rebels would do the same.
Even though no single proposal satisfied every group's criteria and the election was not postponed, formal talks did begin among the Democratic Convergence (the political arm of the FMLN), the Christian Democrats, and ARENA.
The government and military were not represented. Meanwhile, leftist rebels continued to attack military posts and utilities, as well as civilians. Democratic Change Amid Extremists' Gunfire Elections took place as planned on March 19, and Alfredo Cristiani representing the right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance became El Salvador's new president with 54 percent of the popular vote. Ultimately, Salvadorans had become disgusted with government corruption, and voted to defeat the Christian Democrat candidate, Fidel Chavez Mena. Duarte had become increasingly frail due to his struggle against cancer.
The outgoing president was proud of the peaceful transfer of power, and was quoted as saying his government had "laid the foundation for democracy in this country. I have created here a new concept of politics. "
He died in San Salvador on February 23, 1990, less than a year after leaving office.
In the United States, both the Reagan and Bush administrations praised Duarte for promoting democracy, while pushing to end the long civil war through a negotiated settlement. The United States government supported El Salvador with millions of dollars in economic and military aid, in spite of reported human rights abuse on all sides.
By his own account he took little interest in politics until 1960. In 1960 a leftist-supported coup d'état overthrew the government of Colondel José María Lemus (1956 - 1960), raising fears that El Salvador might succumb to radical contagion from Cuba where Fidel Castro had seized power the previous year.
Responding to these concerns, Duarte joined other middle-class Salvadorans in founding the Christian Democratic party and was elected its first secretary general. Because of its claim to represent a "third way, " one that was neither capitalist nor Communist, Christian Democracy enjoyed a brief vogue in Latin America in the 1960s.
The Christian Democratic party of El Salvador grew rapidly during the decade, gaining a following especially in urban areas among professionals, teachers, organized labor, and women. Duarte, the best known and most charismatic Christian Democrat politician, won election three times (1964, 1966, and 1968) as mayor of San Salvador, the nation's capital and largest city.
Throughout Duarte's administration (1984 - 1989), extremists from both the left and right interrupted his efforts at political, social, and economic reform.
During that time, middle class Salvadorans came to associate the Christian Democratic Party with corruption, injustice, and oppression rather than its reform platform, and rebel groups became more organized and increasingly violent.
Views
Quotations:
In his autobiography, Duarte wrote: "When the structures and values of Salvadoran society exemplify a democratic system, then the revolution I have worked for will have taken place. This is my dream".
Connections
He married his childhood sweetheart, Maria Inés Durán, with whom he had 6 children: Inés Guadalupe, Alejandro, Napoleón, María Eugenia, María Elena, and Ana Lorena.