Bernard Dozier was awed by economics as a five year old farm boy. Standing in the yard of a little farmhouse in south Arkansas he watched convoys of dilapidated vehicles carrying impoverished refugees and their belongings from the foreclosures of the Dust Bowl to an uncertain future somewhere ...
more Bernard Dozier was awed by economics as a five year old farm boy. Standing in the yard of a little farmhouse in south Arkansas he watched convoys of dilapidated vehicles carrying impoverished refugees and their belongings from the foreclosures of the Dust Bowl to an uncertain future somewhere further down the gravel road. He spent most of the 1950s in college, but before entering the ministry he served as a Speech Therapist for the US Army and the Arkansas State Board of Health. Retirement in 1996 provided motivation, and the young Internet provided opportunity for him to study economic, market, employment, and political trends. By the turn of the century his observations had convinced him that a sound and incorruptible money were absolute requirements for a healthy economy and a wealthy nation. Bernard and his artist wife, Chris--along with two Bichons and an Orange Tabby--live in a sylvan setting in Cordova, TN. A son and granddaughter reside in Florida.
less