We live in a world of daily miracles: Walk up to an automated teller machine almost anywhere in the world, insert a card, type four digits, and a small mechanism dispenses cash that you are entitled to draw against an account managed by a bank you have never visited, operating under a legal framework you have never read, denominated in a currency issued by a central authority you have never met. We are so used to such comforts that we simply regard them as background infrastructure that exists without ever really thinking about it. Personally, I consider every trip to the supermarket as a veritable miracle. No matter the time or season, I get fresh fruit and vegetables, and all of it for a comparably small fraction of my salary.
Boris Yeltsin considered a Houston Texas supermarket a veritable miracle as well; when he visited one in 1989, he knew the Soviet Union had lost the Cold War: When Boris Yeltsin went grocery shopping in Clear Lake
Worse than every opioid or alcohol or fentanyl or crack addiction are the drugs of comfort & convenience. And these shackles, you embrace and covet, as if your entire existence depends on them.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy your sportsball.
OverMountainMan
Don’t stop now, Mr. OverMountainMan. You have something to say. Let’s see that manifesto. What’s in your heart?
DeleteAny insights into industrial society and its' future you'd like to share? Maybe one or two on technological slavery?
DeleteI, Pencil
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYO3tOqDISE
What would Gordon Cooper say?
ReplyDeleteHad to read the linked article (can't believe it, a basic b**** Randalls). Article had link to another article about Fidel Castro coming to Texas and eating BBQ. Shame Texas BBQ couldn't convince Fidel to give up Commie-nism like the Randalls helped Yeltsin to.
ReplyDelete