When we talk about politics the one term that instantly pops up into the debate is corruption. It is the one aspect of politics or governance that none were able to solve or find a cure of since the beginning of time. Today a person can simply not imagine politics without corruption in fact it has arguably become of the many definitions that our society has given it.
Corruption today is not just an act, it has now become a system. It has penetrated everywhere, starting from the top authority to a low wage labor, you can find a person from each category involved in this mess. This whole system is entangled and it affects any and every person that tries to get associated. That is the reason things in this part of the world are not as simple as they are shown by the media and may be that is the reason that controversies exist.
If you are looking to know and learn more about politics and the controversial aspects that has come up over the then spice then the book “Brothers at war: Corrupt Nation” by David S. Cochran is a recommended read.
The book captures the attention of its reader by manipulating some of the most appalling controversies in the world of politics and giving it a dramatic fictional structure. It is a fantasy world that most of us have thought about in our sub conscious mind.
David S. Cochran Jr. was born on 27 February 1996 in Langhorne, PA, and grew up in Chalfont, PA, 20 miles outside of the City of Brotherly Love, Philadelphia. Growing up, his biggest passion was sports. David played soccer for one year, at the age of 4, because he was too young to play any other sport. Once he reached the rightful age of 5, he dropped soccer and moved on to play baseball, football, and hockey. Out of the three, hockey and football stuck the most and he played both up until the 9th grade when he had to choose between the two.
David always continued chasing his creative passion. At the age of 10 he wrote, directed, produced, and edited a 12 episode, homemade, TV show called Stupid Times. At the age of 11, he created his own ‘Scene It’ board game and at the age of 12, he organized an entire football league with trophies and fans. He would eventually go on to create videos for his high school class and different hockey and softball teams.
Working 16 hours every day in New York and South Texas, with no days off, David was exhausted, but it was there that he discovered his love for writing. Whenever he was not on a call, he would take his mind off of things by writing about his idea he generated with his father nearly 4 years prior. Thus, creating the fictional world known to many as ‘Brothers at war.’
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