Chapter Sixty-two [ The Second Foundation house]
It is not a joke to live in this ancient wooden house, especially when the majority of our beneficiaries are elderly and ill, while others are young adults who have aged, like Cora and Sylvia, who have been deemed victims of human rights crimes.
Mr. Tan and the rest of the faculty at the school, as well as Foundation employees and other staff members, reached a consensus, and he said,
“Even though it is just temporary, the missionary pastors must take this carefully before making a decision.”
As they examine the positive outcomes as well as the negative effects that might occur if the choice of the majority is to pursue the plans of renting the farmland for temporary housing of the foundation's staff and beneficiaries, one of them stands up to share what the majority has realized.
The two little girls appear to want to stop their conversation by saying,