Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Presidential Race

I'm not much into party politics.  I think a candidate should be judged based on his or her character, and nothing else.  Forget birth certificates.  College GPA's.  The most important question you can ask is: "Are they deserving of my trust?"
Well, whoever it comes down to in the election of 2012, I hope one of the candidates shines a spotlight on the struggle of small businesses to compete in our globalized corporate age.  Many entrepreneurs invest their life savings and mortgage their homes in order to follow a dream.  They accumulate such deep debt that it's difficult to turn down a lump-sum check from some corporate fat-cat trying to crush the opposition before it even has an opportunity to bloom.  Who can blame these people for selling their dreams when the bills are stacking up, and their families are hungry?
Luckily, the Internet has made 'getting discovered' easier than ever before.  Fresh, young musicians on YouTube.  The next Mark Twain on Blog spot.  The American Dream is alive and well -- anyone with a good idea and loads of determination can make it in this country.  Keep the Internet free and your best ideas hidden from the prying eyes of big business with Vault Revolution.  "Is it deserving of your trust?" By running off of an irreversible, non-mathematical encryption code, Vault Revolution is practically uncrackable.  Trust that your files are locked away safely simply by entering a password.  It's that easy.
So when you're considering your computer's security, or which candidate to vote for, remember -- trust goes a long way.  Trust Vault Revolution.

2 comments:

  1. Couldn't agree more! I hate how the debates try to focus on faith and things that have little to no bearing on this country. My family owns a small business, so I've seen first hand how big companies try to swallow up all the little fish in the sea.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Right there with you both. Business is all trust. Regardless of the client your dealing with, you're speaking and building a relationship with a person. Sure, a brand because why would do something if the client didn't have anything you needed, but really it's a human. We can have empathy for them, and they us. We relate to them on a level of survival and belief in what we hold dear to us as people. It's a shame we don't interact with big business and even congress and the president. Technically we're in a mutual relationship, providing something to each other (as one sided as it is). They should all have to look us in the face with every decision made...

    ReplyDelete