วันเสาร์ที่ 19 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2555

The Human Investor Part Ii

Repossessed Mobile Homes:

Emile Gouiran was only getting started as a benefactor. He applied to charity the modus of his expert forte; fixing what wasn't working, putting a shine on what others had neglected, sometimes even to the point of heroic recovery as with a amount of nearly shut down orphan facilities which he caused to be restored or kept open by his relentless intervention. He renovated educational facilities, built dazzling new orphanages, super funded educational endowments for underprivileged children, and even set up a legal defense fund endowment to pay the cost of defending them. Emile believed that children brought up as he was, in orphanages, welfare and juvenile facilities were, as he, more prone to getting in trouble. Interestingly, he called the legal defense fund The Vindication Fund. Among its stated purposes were to right the injustice of overzealous prosecutors, and counter the abuses of corruption at the judicial and political level, and to brake the prosecutorial abuses of trials by the press. Many a young man and woman have found their refuge and salvation from such abuses through this philanthropy.

Emile Gouiran was born in Washington Dc of an Argentinean mum and French father. The parents had met in Argentina. The father a then well known scholar, professor, author and philosopher (complete with libraries named after him) ultimately married Emile's mum in 1949 after Emile was born. He omitted the process of divorcing his wife and a mention of his then four, later five other children. With Emile he fathered six. The acorn does not fall far from the tree as history will tell.

Emile Gouiran was obviously sourced from brains. His father paled with the likes of Jean Paul Sartre and André Gide. His mum now 88 was a rapacious student and intellectual; her scholastic baggage includes three doctorate degrees. Interestingly, his mum took the Hippocratic Oath to the letter, a healing doctor her fee schedule was whatever the sick person could afford if anything. She was also the source of what would come to be Emile's steadfast opposition to abusive police and judicial power. She acts out what she professes and took the heat for him in a case spirited prosecutorial inabilities to get to the son. The prosecutorial strategy to get to the son through the mum failed and she managed to successfully gain credible and incontrovertible evidence of political and judicial corruption. This she did, but the cost was dear: the truth was twisted by prosecutorial despair to frame a fee of perjury and she lost her license to practice treatment to the vociferous chagrin of thousands of her patients. She has written a three volume book exposing the local law and the individuals including prosecutors, judges, and investigators, with amazing credible proof and recordings in support. The book and its documentary and recorded retain is sequestered with wee entrance reserved to an undisclosed global publisher and these documents and texts will be released after her death as will the upper six outline fee and subsequent royalties which will be gifted to an endowment to promote the interest of underprivileged children seeking a healing arts education.

Repossessed Mobile Homes:The Human Investor Part Ii

Emile's talent's in firm indubitably were drawn from his great-grandfather on his mother's side; a land baron owning untold millions of acres in Argentina he gave life to the city of Cordoba. Manuel Garcia had an insatiable appetite for land. He at last presented the Argentinean government with a generous offer; he would donate the land needed for a troops air-base as a gesture of his patriotism. The offer was accepted, and in came water, sewers, electric, gas and even roadways. He instantly subdivided the remaining hundreds of thousands of acres into buildable lots and the city of Cordoba was born and built, and with it his formidable fortune. His descendants were numerous however.

Emile Gouiran has an appetite for all things and a fear of nothing. He has chosen to devote a large part of his time and legendary generosity to the next generations of global orphans. He enjoys doing as many things as he does because with that lies the ever present possibility of studying something new.

An unreserved protector of the arts, Emile Gouiran rallied his moneyed friends, and together they gathered some of the world's literary works and treasures and used them as an gadget to establish, resuscitate and reinvigorate the study of literature from kindergarten through professorial tenure in every country in which the Donemiran and Davalaven Foundations actively retain children.
 
He did all this with a "deeply rooted entrepreneurial creativity" that could see the seeds of great projects in tentative, unformed ideas and could bring them to fruition not only through his own money and exertion but also by looking innovative ways to mobilize the talents, energy, enthusiasm, and resources of others.
 
Orleans, a city some 45 km south of Paris had been Emile Gouiran's backyard from the age of 18 months when he was on the authorities' request located in an orphanage there until he was a boy. In the 1950s, his closest thing to concentration and an interface with the face world was the occasional visits of American soldiers stationed at the Us base in Orléans. They would come to donate troops food, second hand toys left by departing troops families, and some to play with the children. He learned his first word of English, the amount 8 which he could not contend - it simply came out "arrrrr". He was 3.

As a child, he took to walking alone, he would walk for hours. All the time an outsider vexed by his circumstances he never indubitably quite fit in. He never was exposed to team sports or activities. Yet in competition he was ferocious, he mastered and competed vigorously in the art of Taekwondo, for years, rain, shine, or snow.
 
In 1968, Gouiran left the maritime Corps and immediately started his first business, he soon ran a very thriving repossession and variety department ensuring prestige recoveries for the likes of Sears, Wt Grant, Ej Korvettes, A&S to name but a few. A year later he was buying real estate and occasion a real estate brokerage department "because the real estate agents wouldn't take me seriously and I couldn't get enough to buy." He explained. These were the Lindsay years, that mayor had already altered New York into a case study on how not to run a city. Lindsay, the archetypal 1960s luxuriously chauffeured noninterventionist, had churned every idiotic organize of the time into rules and law. Welfare was marketed to "Come-and-Get-It" and more than doubled in the name of group interest; the group parks and facilities were trampled with callous disregard invaded by hordes of musical destruction.
 
This was the era of permissiveness; "victimless" crimes should not be reprimanded. Expressions of mind and art such as graffiti were not vandalism, doing drugs was creative fuel and dealers mere retailers. group urination, they do it in Paris, and group drunkenness is a state of irreproachable being. The defacements and despoilments of group places were a cost of liberal expression. New Yorkers had appropriate parks filled with filth and the stench of organic waste. The muttering and tousled deinstitutionalized madmen were landscape artifact as were the tough, hostile stares of the resident muggers and drug dealers. These conditions were as unsafe as they were unsightly.

Most troublesome for Emile Gouiran, was that children had come to be commodities, useful to growth welfare checks, rental payments and other retain benefits, it was a business. Welfare homes, juvenile institutions, orphanages, halfway houses, sustain homes were dumping grounds for thousands of once born, unwanted progeny of unidentifiable but indubitably living parents.
 
Unlike most New Yorkers, Emile would not stand for this. And so, he went about to see what he could do. He also reasoned that if the most thriving country in the world could score so bad, that the rest of the world's children must be worse off.

He sponsored a study showing how inexpressive money, a inexpressive Board, and contemporary administration could recovery the state of misfortune surrounding innocent children in inapt facilities. He, in cooperation with wealthy friends set up the Davalaven and later Donemiran Foundations to begin turning the study into reality.
 
"By then a new man was mayor," Gouiran recalled dryly. "Abe Beam was from Brooklyn. He had no use for children, orphanages and other juvenile facilities." For four years, Gouiran felt he was spinning his wheels. "I made virtually no advancement, the mayor wouldn't hear of it." The Foundations self-funded a amount of facilities, equipment, and even payrolls for establishments laboring under demoralizing and inefficient workforce, but the Foundation's main accomplishment was merely to hang in there. "Here's what I learned from this," Gouiran says: "If you have an exquisite inspiration, it's going to happen, in spite of yourself and no matter how bad you turn it."
 
Emile Gouiran's passion about his work and projects is universally known yet many in his entourage have voiced suspicion that one of the secrets of his success is that "he does not sleep". His inexpressive however seems more connected to his capability to combine 100 per cent on whatever he does. He channels his vigor into all things he undertakes and is All the time first to arrive and the last to leave.

Repossessed Mobile Homes:The Human Investor Part Ii

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