Tuesday, September 13, 2011

US Suspects Ex-NSA, Mukhtar, Had Links with Extremists


12 Sep 2011

By Tokunbo Adedoja

One of the United States diplomatic cables released by internet whistle-blower, WikiLeaks, has revealed that US government suspected that former National Security Adviser (NSA), Major General Abdullahi Seriki Mukhtar, had links with extremists.

The cable, dated December 31, 2008, originated from its Consulate in Lagos and was authored by Ambassador Robin Renee Sanders.

Mukhtar, who was NSA to late President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, was described by Sanders as “a closet extremist we need to watch”.

Narrating a December 22, 2008 encounter she had with Mukhtar to discuss a range of issues, including internecine violence in Jos, she said: “Mukhtar, known as a hawk, should also be known now as a racist and anti-Semite."

She said that though they knew that Mukhtar holds a less than favourable opinion about the US , during her encounter with him, hem presented an “even more worrisome personality as he provided more insight into his thinking”.

She characterised his thinking as not only “racist, anti-Islamic (apparently she meant anti-Semitic) and disparaging of official US persons, but radical and fundamentalist”.

She said: “This should give us grave concern in his position asYar’Adua's National Security Advisor, given his easy access to the President where the latter is hearing his strong opinions on the nature of our relationship.”

According to her, “Post believes that we need to be extremely cautious in engaging with Muktar, especially in any official US-based meetings in which he may accompany Nigerian President Yar’Adua. His comments and views border on him being a radical fundamentalist as well as anti-US.”

The envoy then sent a clear warning to her country: “Any USG meeting in which Mukhtar is present should be handled with extreme caution. He is extremely close to certain Arab and Russian elements, and we do not know at this time if those contacts are on the extremist end of the spectrum, but it sounded like it in this meeting with the Ambassador as she listened to some of his dialogue regarding his discussions with both certain Arab nations and Russians on USG policy.

“He is someone we need to monitor and be careful with regarding any conversation with him, and any access to senior USG officials, particularly in Washington in any meeting he might attend with President Yar’Adua.

“His anti-Semitic comments about certain members of the in-coming administration need to be taken seriously and we need to limit Mukhtar's access to senior USG officials in Washington for the time being.”

Describing his view of the world as "bizarre" and "disconcerting", Sanders said Mukhtar's “perception is that the USG's goal was to eliminate Islam, like it did with communism”.

Sanders stated in the cable that she clearly told him that not only was this not true, but it did not make sense.

The US official said she pointed out the range of her country's efforts that debunk this perception, and highlighted not only what the US Mission in Nigeria was doing, but her government's overall efforts to help build better relations in this area.

She also said she “directly asked him then whether this 'perception'that he was stating was also his personal view; Mukhtar refused to answer”.

In the cable, the US envoy said Mukhtar also provided insights into the Jos crises. She noted that the former NSA said he and other Federal Government officials warned Plateau State Governor Jonah Jang not to hold the Jos North Local Government Area election in the manner he did.

She noted that Mukhtar said not heeding the advice resulted in the violence that erupted.

Sanders also said that the former NSA told her that Chadians and Nigeriens participated in the violence, but that they were long-time residents of the area and not recent arrivals.

According to Sanders, Mukhtar said: “There were eight Chadian students who were attending the University of Jos who participated in the fighting once it started, while the Nigeriens have been informal workers in the area for decades," but added, "there was no evidence they had initiated the violence."

The US envoy said Mukhtar told her that he wanted to find a way for Jang to be removed, or to call for another election that would see him defeated.

Mukhtar was appointed NSA by former President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2006, when Gen. Aliyu Gusau, Mukhtar’s predecessor, resigned to participate in the 2007 presidential election. Late President Yar’Adua, on assumption of office in May 2007, retained Mukhtar, who eventually got replaced by President Goodluck Jonathan when the latter appointed Gen. Andrew Azazi on assumption of office as president, after the death of Yar’Adua.

A Prayer For Nigerian Youths


10 Sep 2011

Pendulum By Dele Momodu. Email, dele.momodu@thisdaylive.com

Fellow Nigerians, I don’t know how many of you watched President Barack Obama Thursday night as he made his most passionate appeal to the Joint-Session of the American Congress on the need to urgently pass the bill on his economic reforms which has been a subject of intense debate at home and abroad. It wasn’t that I expected Barack Obama, one of the most eloquent orators alive in our world today, to perform any less than he did but I was totally astounded by the quality and panache of American politicians.

We saw a Speaker who could not be intimidated by the power and glory of the presidential office. And a confident Speaker who told the President what to do and not one to be ordered around by the Whitehouse like an errand boy. We saw a Vice President who walked in alone without the usual overzealous aides who in some other countries would have made every effort to get noticed. The American Vice President, Joe Biden, had walked in briskly, and confidently, backslapping some of his former colleagues and even pecking a few of the influential ladies on their cheeks.

Naturally, we saw the President’s cabinet as they filed in with all eyes on the authentic superstar, Hillary Clinton, who carried herself with pride and dignity. We saw a First Lady who walked in almost incognito, and with graceful humility, without some rented women in uniform to intermittently remind Her Excellency of her status as mother of the nation. In fact, Michelle and her husband were seen leaving the White House under a heavy downpour, as they made their way to Capitol Hill, but yet on time.

There was no reason or flood of excuses to keep the Congress waiting under a deluge of lies. The couple even refused the umbrellas that were offered them by members of the Secret Service, and chose to walk straight into their official car, The Beast, effortlessly. There was no gargantuan protocol as the President of the United States bounced into the most powerful building outside the Whitehouse and took the carnival-like atmosphere to its crescendo. With his rare charms and charisma, he hugged, touched and blew kisses at his fellow politicians. The aroma of power was strong and sweet but the colour was simple. It was showmanship at its best, understated yet elegant. The display of camaraderie was infectious. And the atmosphere was just too electrifying. Obama’s performance was straight out of Hollywood . It was mesmerizing and inspirational.

As I watched in utter wonderment and admiration, I felt this was what politics was supposed to be, a game for patriots and not for rabid looters. It is for politicians who can stimulate and rouse a people to victory and not for somnambulists who needed waking up themselves. I was proud to see democracy at play. No one plays that democratic game better than the Americans. Everything in America is a stuff of thrillers. Watching that show, you could have been teleported to the surreal ambience of Caesar’s Palace or Planet Hollywood. Seated in that hallowed chamber were some of Obama’s bitterest critics. But they still gave honour to who deserved it because the issue was not about one man, it was about America .

And Obama did not disappoint his captive audience. The evening was not for rigmaroles or some jejune pontificating, and it was certainly not about playing to the gallery or offering fake promises. It was a night to present a product of rigorous research and demonstrate a serious determination to succeed where others have failed. President Obama came to play his last card and he needed that ultimate joker, like a hole in the head. It was a risky adventure. He had to pick his words ably and carefully. He even had to choose the mode of delivery. It was like an Inaugural lecture which in those days was the height of intellectual achievement.

Obama’s mission was to convince the unbelieving Thomases on the workability of his master-plan. He did not come in with some ageless godfathers in tow needed to issue threats of firestorm and brimstone against any party member who fails to tow party line. He did not assemble some governors and traditional rulers to come and negotiate with members of their constituencies on how not to disgrace the anointed leader. Obama had to help himself and leave the rest to God.

Even if I did not see Obama sweat that night, it is more than likely he did as he waltzed his way through the process of convincing a stressed nation and a depressed populace. He was not reading from a badly-written theoretical script, he was reeling out his facts and figures from a well-crafted speech only he could have delivered with such incredible elocution. In other climes, the President would have been reading a thesis he himself did not understand or believed was feasible. Obama had to convince his fellow citizens that he was competent, and that he had the kidney, heart and liver for the job he was elected to do. And do he must. The tell-tale signs were there that he’s been operating on the super highway with all his black hair going grey.

I was particularly fascinated by this spectacular event because it happened on a day I was feeling very insulted about a statement credited to a chieftain of the People’s Democratic Party, our own ruling party in Nigeria. According to the PDP Chairman, his party will rule Nigeria forever and no force on earth can remove them from power. It was sad that the man did not elucidate on why Nigerians should continue to vote for a party that has failed to make life better for the generality of our citizens. That is the sort of arrogance that we’ve been forced to consume regularly as an elixir of life in Nigeria . Everywhere else, politicians would have been mandated to serve the people but in our own country the people are expected to serve their omnipotent rulers. And like a people sentenced to perpetual slavery we are expected to vote all the time for our slave-masters. This is why it has become impossible to enjoy free and fair elections because the bad leaders have all it takes to force themselves on us. The Masters have studied what it takes to keep their dogs on the leash.

I would have expected our leaders to engage Nigerians the way President Obama engaged the Americans two nights ago but we have not been that lucky here. In America , no politician would have dared to talk so glibly about winning elections in perpetuity because there are polls galore to gauge the political barometer and wake up the politicians from their day-dreams. Obama was obviously not under any illusion that if elections were held today he would face a grand failure. The reason is very simple. America is a country where leaders are held accountable. And it is a country where a one-party state can never be regarded as a Democracy.

Nigeria is clearly an Autocracy where we pretend to run an American style of government. What we run in reality is a convoluted mockery of democracy.

We are too timid to see the viability of removing an incumbent President in Nigeria . One is often regarded as the biggest fool to even attempt it, as I was told when I contested the Presidential election last April. They studiously ignored the fact that if we can’t defeat our oppressors now it is very possible to do so in the future.

Even if President Jonathan had good intentions, he does not have the muscles to checkmate the demi-gods that litter his political party. He also lacks the radical pedigree that would have prepared him for such an epic battle. No matter how well-intentioned he is, our President is bound to run into troubled waters because he does not control the levers of power in a Mafia country like Nigeria . That is the obvious reasons he has not been able to touch the sponsors of terror he claims to know.

Where then do we go from here? As usual, I like to end by proffering solutions. I’m convinced that only the youths of Nigeria can liberate us from those too rigid to change their bad ways. But where are these youths? The times have changed. The Gani Fawehinmis, Femi Falanas, Olisa Agbakobas, Shehu Sanis, Colonel Abubakar Dangiwa Umars, Uche Onyeagochas, and others, have since been replaced by the new internet warriors. These are young men and women who have never fought in the trenches. They’ve never been baptised in the dungeons of Alagbon or Gashua prisons. They were never bayonetted like the Beekololari Ransome-Kutis. They were never forced into exile like the Wole Soyinkas. You can always pardon them if they think the new social media can replace or replicate the adventures of the Christopher Okigbos. But it cannot. Our youths have a lot to learn from the past that tried its best but did not achieve its aim.

Our change agents of the new era must go beyond the internet and fashion ingenious ways of tackling the many problems of nationhood in Nigeria . There are minimum standards they must demand from our leaders. The first condition is that our students must insist that our educational system must be brought up to the highest standards as it is in responsible countries. The biggest weapon that has been used to keep Nigerians in this squalid condition is the proliferation of ignorance. An ignorant people can never demand their rights. The politicians have deliberately collapsed our institutions of learning in order to keep most of our youths as political thugs. In our days, students demanded their rights at every opportunity. But these days, poverty has whipped most of young people into line. Our youths should work assiduously for a better future and resist the temptations that can only lead to eventual annihilation.

Since they constitute the majority of our population, they must get more active in the electoral process. Most of those who collected money from politicians last April are already back where they were before the election. Nothing is likely to improve because our leaders treat politics as business and since they purchased our votes they are going to demand and collect more than enough dividends from us.

I pray that someone somewhere would read this and act.

The Nation - Nigerians were shortchanged, says Ojudu

The Nation - Nigerians were shortchanged, says Ojudu

Monday, September 12, 2011

A decade on, rise of BRICs shaped by September 11

By Peter Apps, Political Risk Correspondent

LONDON (Reuters) - As his global teleconference broke up in disarray on September 11, 2001, a top economist at a U.S. investment bank began to ponder what the attacks on the United States might tell him about the future shape of the world. His conclusions had little to do with Al Qaeda.

Jim O'Neill of Goldman Sachs had been at a meeting in the World Trade Center only two days before, and flew home to London just hours before airliners slammed into New York's twin towers. About to become head of the bank's global economics team, he was looking for a "big idea" to put a stamp on his leadership.

Soon, he had it: the decade after September 11 would be defined not by the world's sole superpower or the war on terror but by the rise of the four biggest emerging market economies - China, Russia, India and Brazil. O'Neill nicknamed them the "BRICs" after the first letter of their names.

"I'll never forget that day," O'Neill told Reuters. "It was right at the core of how I dreamt up the whole thing... Something clicked in my head that the lasting consequence of 9/11 had to be the end of American dominance of globalization... that seems to be exactly what happened."

O'Neill, who now heads Goldman's global asset management business, launched the BRIC phrase in a pamphlet published in November 2001. The numbers from the past decade suggest the trend he identified will resonate more in world history than the strikes and their aftermath.

When O'Neill dreamed up the BRIC acronym, the four big emerging powers made up eight percent of the world economy. The top five world economies were, in order, the United States, Japan, Germany, Britain and France.

Ten years later, the BRICs have grown faster than even O'Neill expected to constitute nearly 20 percent of the global economy. China is the world's number two economic power, while Britain - the closest ally of the U.S. in the decade-long war on terror -- has dropped out of the top five, overtaken by Brazil. India and Russia are not far behind.

Within days of the attacks on New York and Washington, the U.S. had launched a costly and attention-sapping global "war on terror" and was plotting retaliation against not just Al Qaeda but also other members of what it saw as a wider "axis of evil," including Saddam Hussein's Iraq.

At first sight, the U.S. and its allies appear to have won their war. The Al-Qaeda network is badly damaged, Osama Bin Laden and other key leaders are dead and the group has not pulled off a major terror strike in the West for years.

What is less obvious is the cost of that apparent victory, both financially and diplomatically.

"For most of the first decade of the century, as the world economy gradually shifted its center of gravity toward Asia, the United States was preoccupied with a mistaken war of choice in the Middle East," said Joseph Nye, a former U.S. under-secretary of state and defense as well as ex-chair of the National Intelligence Council and now a Harvard professor of international relations.

U.S. actions, he says, critically undermined its "soft power" in diplomacy, values and culture, while diverting and ultimately weakening its military and economic "hard power."

COSTLY OVERREACTION?

The day before the attacks, the U.S. national debt stood at a sliver under $5.8 trillion. A decade on, it has skyrocketed to $14.7 trillion.

Unfunded tax cuts, post-financial crisis stimulus and other increased domestic spending account for much of that. But America's post-9/11 conflicts added heavily to the burden.

One recent estimate, from Brown University in the U.S., put the cost of America's wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan at up to $4.4 trillion - nearly a third of the total.

"It was pretty immediately obvious that the Americans were going to lash out and probably going to overreact," says Nigel Inkster, a former deputy head of Britain's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) and now head of transnational threats and political risk at London's International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS).

"In the overall scheme of things, I suspect the impact of 9/11 and rise of Al Qaeda is going to be seen as not much more than a blip."

The United States was not the only Western power to take drastic measures.

Like then-U.S. president George W Bush, British Prime Minister Tony Blair saw the September 11 attacks as a defining moment.

"I was very, very clear from the outset that this was not just a terrorist attack of extraordinary magnitude but one that had to change global politics" says Blair in a television interview to be published this weekend on www.reuters.com.

"... I don't think we were clear on what exactly had to be done but I do think we were clear that the calculus of risk had changed."

That belief helped send Blair and his country to war in Iraq and later Afghanistan, costly military adventures that ultimately may have made far less difference to Britain than the threats it faced from a fast-changing world economic order -- as well as its own internal financial problems.

The Iraq war ended up seriously tarnishing Blair's premiership and his reputation, after it emerged Britain went to war based on a faulty assessment of the risks posed by weapons of mass destruction.

Wolfgang Ischinger, a former German deputy foreign minister appointed ambassador to the U.S. in 2001, says September 11 "burst the bubble" of any illusion that one superpower could rule the world.

"But in terms of importance for the global power situation, for global governance, I think the rise of the BRICs will have the more enduring effect. 9/11 created such a lot of confusion that it took us the better part of a decade to figure out what conclusions we should draw from it and the wrong turns some countries took."

LESS A TURNING POINT THAN FINANCIAL CRISIS?

On a flight into Houston, Texas for a meeting between Jordan's King Abdullah and Bush when Al Qaeda struck, Jordan's ambassador to Washington Marwan Muasher's initial worries were over an anti-Muslim backlash in the United States. He believes Washington did well to avoid that, but misjudged its broader reaction and should never have launched the Iraq war.

"But there have been other developments since then such as the financial crisis that in some ways, overshadow much of 9/11," says Muasher, who later became foreign minister and is now a vice president at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a U.S. think-tank.

"It is not a matter just of U.S. decline, it is a matter of the emergence of other powers. The age of the unipolar power of the United States was very short in part because it was ultimately never sustainable."

Ian Bremmer, president of political risk consultancy Eurasia Group, says the world has already moved on from September 11.

"With hindsight, 2008 was the seminal moment," Bremmer told Reuters. "Not only did we have the financial crisis, we also had the Beijing Olympics. Before that, China was seen simply as an emerging market, a backwater. Suddenly we saw them coming into their own."

China paraded brash self-confidence at the 2008 Olympics opening ceremony, showing off spectacular new buildings in its capital and brushing aside Western concerns at human rights abuses.

The country's growing financial and economic weight - it now holds $1.2 trillion of U.S. government debt, by far the biggest foreign investor in these securities - means the West can ill afford to question it.

When a government debt crisis hit Europe this year as buyers shunned the most indebted countries, leaders begged China to come to their help by buying up euro-zone securities - a scenario unimaginable in the 20th century.

August 2008 also saw fellow BRIC Russia swiftly won a war with U.S.-backed neighbor Georgia, the first time Moscow had sent troops outside its borders since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. That more muscular approach from emerging powers -- particularly in their own backyard - could in future be adopted by the likes of China or India.

HASTENING THE WEST'S (RELATIVE) DECLINE?

Reflecting broader changes to investment patterns, Stephen Jennings, the CEO of Moscow-based investment bank Renaissance Capital, says he sees more and more big "south-south" business deals now struck in developing nations, funded by BRIC banks on behalf of emerging market investors - and at which there is not a single face from London or New York.

"The traditional financial centers and Western economic model are losing their pre-eminence," Jennings said in a speech to investors in Moscow in June. "There is a gravitational shift of business, capital and ideas toward emerging market economies. fast-growing economies, including Russia, are becoming the leaders of the new economic order."

The diplomatic order has also changed. When it came to salvaging a deal at the Copenhagen climate summit in 2009, U.S. President Barack Obama went into a room not with the other G8 developed states but with the leaders of the emerging world: China, India, Brazil and South Africa, the latter increasingly keen to position itself as part of a wider "BRICS" grouping to counterweight older powers.

The uprisings of the so-called "Arab Spring" across the Middle East and North Africa -- which blindsided not only regional leaders but also Western intelligence agencies and apparently Al Qaeda -- were seen by some as a wake-up call for more authoritarian BRICs like China. But critics said the uprisings also pointed to double standards on the part of the U.S. and its allies.

The West, they charged, backed authoritarian Arab rulers when they needed their business or support in the "war on terror," then abandoned them when their positions became untenable.

Now, Britain and the United States have been embarrassed by documents found in Libya suggesting that their intelligence services were cooperating closely with Col. Muammar Gaddafi's regime.

"In many ways, it shows the whole hypocrisy of the approach that said you had to embrace the dark side to defeat terror," says Jan Egeland, Europe head of Human Rights Watch and United Nations global humanitarian chief between 2003 and 2006, a role in which he became a frequent critic of U.S. Policy.

"It was devastating for the reputation of the West -- and it happened at the same time as the emerging economies were already closing the gap in other ways."

A CHANGED WORLD

In many ways, much of what has happened since September 11, 2001 was precisely the opposite of what conventional opinion expected.

Whilst the US and allies spent much of the following decade at war in the Middle East, in much of the rest of the globe the number of conflicts fell sharply.

Whilst development economists such as Jeffrey Sachs say the billions spent on Western wars represent a lost opportunity to tackle poverty and hardship in the poorest countries, BRIC economic growth in particular has lifted millions from poverty - despite a growing internal wealth gap in many states.

Now, following a long-standing historical pattern, the growing economic power of the BRICs is starting to translate into greater military strength - and the West's financial decline is mirrored in ever more drastic cuts to its defense spending.

London's International Institute for Strategic Studies highlighted in its annual survey of global military power this year a key theme: while Western military budgets are being pruned, those in Asia and the Middle East are growing sometimes by double digits every year.

"There is persuasive evidence that a global redistribution of military power is under way," it said.

This year, Britain replaced China as the only member of the UN Security Council without an aircraft carrier, scrapping the Royal Navy's flagship "Ark Royal" just as China launched its first such vessel.

Goldman's O'Neill believes the dramatic economic growth of the BRICs will dwarf the long-term impact of September 11. His bank is now touting the merits of what they term the "N-11" - the next 11 big emerging market economies after the BRICs, including such powers as Mexico, Indonesia and Turkey.

He also believes the attack and its aftermath may have played a part in shaping the BRICs' newly assertive approach in the world.

"What it may have done at the margin was to sow the seeds of doubt about the power of America and therefore the need for them to stand more on their own two feet," he says.

With the West's single-minded focus on the Middle East, Al Qaeda and its allies, some worry that the old powers missed their chance to help shape the new world order that is emerging. But even had they been paying more attention, perhaps it would have made little difference.

"The focus on the Islamic world meant that shift (to emerging powers) took us by surprise," says former British spy Inkster. "But it probably would have done so in any case." (Additional reporting by Jamie McGeever, Darcy Lambton, Alan Wheatley and Noah Barkin; Editing by Michael Stott)

http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE78916H20110910?irpc=935

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

The Sense, Credibility and Accountability

The Sense, Credibility and Accountability

Networth versus Selfworth

What we must decide is perhaps how we are valuable rather than how valuable we are” The Vanishing Adolescent 1959, Edgar Z. Friedenberg Net worth is an external measure of how much we are worth in financial terms, while self-worth is an internal measure of how much one values oneself. In our society, there is a tendency to attach self worth and other people’s approval to material things and shows of ostentation.
The dangers of materialism A society that celebrates a person’s worth based on his or her assets, connections and influence is materialistic as it builds a social strata based on material things. When people are ‘encouraged’ to amass and cling to possessions, when our pursuit is on making profit, pursuing pleasure, and obtaining position, it leaves little energy, time, and ability to focus on our real purpose and the things that really matter.
A materialistic society rates individuals not on personal character and achievement, but rather on the fantastic display that they are able to put on in the form of and other extreme shows of ostentation.
In Nigeria, a societal value system has evolved where material fortune is more widely celebrated than diligence, honesty, honour and integrity; these virtues are seldom accorded the respect they do deserve.
As materialism becomes endemic and a society equates self worth with networth, with far too much emphasis placed on money, power, position and possessions, and acknowledges and celebrates wealth without questioning its source, there is a tendency for people to go to extremes in order to increase their networth at all costs and by any means possible leading to dishonesty and corruption.
As people compete to build the trappings of wealth and put these on display, the seeds of corruption are sown. Greed and the insatiable love for materialism are at the root of bribery and corruption, which have eaten deep into the marrow of our society. The endless desire of all strata of society, both rich and poor, for possessions, inevitably leads to moral decadence.
How do you measure yourself? Have you ever thought of how you measure yourself? Reflect on whether you have measured yourself through your job, your money, your position, or your possessions. Does your self worth come from your job and all its perks, your money, your position in government or in the private sector and the attendant trappings, or your position in society?
The Next Generation Children often identify their self worth with the approval of their peers, which could be linked to how many toys they have, or how expensive their clothes are. Or how quickly they acquire the latest blackberry, i-phone, I-pad or other gadget.
Stories abound of children asking to be dropped off before the school gate, so that their peers won’t see the car they arrived in. If it is not an expensive car or jeep, it could be embarrassing as they face jeers. In an excerpt from The Vanishing Adolescent, 1959, Edgar Z. Friedenberg writes, “What we must decide is perhaps how we are valuable rather than how valuable we are”. To release the next generation from the scourge of materialism, we must teach our children to be proud of whom they are, to value themselves and not to confuse their self worth with their net worth. Parents and leaders must teach their children and our youth, by example, that their true value lies in their inner qualities - their kindness, sensitivity, creativity, compassion, rather than their looks, performance, possessions and how much money their parents may or may not have. They must be taught to embrace hard work and diligence as a means to success and not be under peer pressure to look for shortcuts to “get rich quick”.
Why is self-worth important? Life is not about accumulating wealth and possessions because, in the end, you cannot take them away with you. We often feel a false sense of security by having a large net worth or more wealth than our neighbor. As we have seen in the recent past, net worth and fortunes can change dramatically; wealth can be transient and all can change in an instant. During periods of economic turmoil and stock market declines, investors have lost fortunes; properties worth billions will be worth only a tiny percentage of their “value” if there are no buyers. Wealth is nice to have and can and does bring pleasure, but it is important to keep it in perspective. A strong sense of self worth is the key to true and lasting fulfillment.
Primary success, of which self worth is a part and includes character, integrity, humility, service above self, and legacy are far more important than secondary success of networth that is associated with title, position, bank accounts, properties and cars.
In their study, “Inner Security and Infinite Wealth: Merging Self Worth and Net Worth”, Stuart Zimmerman and Jared Rosen contrast the idea of net worth, an external measure of how much money one may or may not have, and self-worth, an internal appraisal of one’s own worth. They suggest that in order to develop a sense of well being beyond material success and its outward trappings, we should strive to become more aware of what is truly important in life and what legacy we will leave behind.
 
Food for thought….