This is truly the viewpoint of Buddhism, the viewpoint of faith. Happiness lies in just such limitless hope and aspiration.

Worldwide, people are living in a culture of fear. They see the horror of brutality through conventional media or in virtual communication every day that creates a mindset of fear.
But, people should not bear this legacy further when all of us envision a good and peaceful society for ourselves as well as for the next generation.
How communication will play a role in eradicating fear from mind, life and society is the key point of this article.
The quality of human life is seriously at stake in the early 21st century due to the fearful mindset of people all over the world.
Every moment human beings are exposing various types of fear related to natural calamities, terrorism, epidemics, food toxins, global climate change, nuclear disaster, third party interference in virtual communication platforms, a crisis of trust, and ubiquitous surveillance by law-enforcement agencies.
We perceive the world as a dangerous place to live and survive. The present world is characterised by the spread of risks and worldwide we can observe a growing “culture of fear.”
Tomorrow Will Be a Better Day:
I am elated that, after some few years, I can now see in Italy again in high spirits.

Italians are very fortunate if they have such good leaders who have the country’s interest at heart.
Tsasi: Today, I can see with my eyes the same members representing Italy who are very well informed, became great leaders of Italy today.
Promoting a culture of hope, and creating a sustaining service is essential to ensuring an organisational environment that encourages and supports people’s recovery efforts.
There are many who express concern that the EU has become a Union without integrity, without any beliefs, but with this new Italian leadership beliefs, they did not allow themselves to swept away by that tide.
It is my hope that the Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni will never grow spiritless or weak-willed.

Assumpta: Developing a sense of EU citizenship and the mission.
Tsasi: Let me turn back for a while and take a look at some few years back, at a time we were talking about clandestine movement and migrants who arrive on Italian shores by boat and live through a kind of horrible experience before their arrival, and the bitter experience inflicted on Italians.

That is the disheartening realization you must never live with again.
Tsasi: The newly Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni’s efforts are hardly necessary to remind the EU that in frequency, scale, and level of deaths on Italy’s sea shores carried human tragedy to extremes that have no comparison in any other period of history, and it hinders the realisation of peace.
Assumpta :The unproductive confrontation of ideologies seem finally to have resolved, and decisive energies are on board now.
Tsasi: You are right, the tendencies of such an era will change only when there is a fundamental change in values and ideologies. It is important that many great good leaders such as that of the Italy appear during this period.
Assumpta: I have become convinced that Italy has made a whole bold new start.
Tsasi: Indeed, it is time for another deep spiritual transformation, which will come about as we seek to erect a new, solid foundation on which to build a global society of human rights.
Everyone should participate in creating and maintaining organisational culture through the perpetuation of behaviours and attitudes. However, governance/leadership roles are responsible for leading efforts to establish a positive and hopeful culture conducive to people’s recovery.
This fear is the key drawback to a culture of hope and, of course, dreams of living in a good society. This is not, perhaps, anything new.

But the nature of fear has changed over the centuries. The invention of new technologies of information and communication has brought new tensions and new fears, while offering some measure of hope for change.
Some critics believe that fear is an outcome of neoliberalism in this century. With the rise of neoliberalism, Khan (2015) asserts that a corporate dominated , state-assisted, deregulated growth strategy has yielded significant economic gains for many but has also entailed inexorable social, moral and environmental adversities. In the next article, I suggest how communication will help eradicate or uproot the fear of mind, life and society and what strategies will bring a culture of hope to achieve the ultimate goal of well being.
Thank you Tsasi.
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