Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Evolutionary, My Dear Watson





"Every generation hopes for a better life for their children than what they had. Then when they get it, they complain about their entitlement."

~ Matthew Leatherwood ~ 


Shortly before I retired from a large metropolitan fire department, I attended an Officer Enrichment Seminar. It was designed to help officers like me become better, well, officers. At one point our group was addressed by a Battalion Chief who began to tell us how challenged we would be at the station by new recruits that were raised as Millennials. He told us how lazy they would be and how they lacked work ethic.

Because I knew I was close to retirement with little to lose, I raised my hand to address the chief. And I began to explain to him that the problem with Millennials wasn't them. It was us. I don't know who he'd been around, but the vast majority of Millennials, Gen Xers, Gen Yers, or whatever that I've encountered are some of the most evolved young people I've ever known. So I told him, after years of tradition and history in a service that often does things "because we've always done them that way," there was, at last, a generation of people brave enough to finally ask, "Why?" And not only that, they were smart enough to suggest a better way. 

Now, I'm going to ask you to think big. No. No. Bigger. Nope. MUCH bigger. Step out of your box of American or even Earthling, and think about things from a perspective that involves our universe. We are stardust on a speck of cosmic mud that is hardly a pin prick on the map of a universe that is one of thousands of universes. And, all of those universes are expanding at an exponential rate. We are completely insignificant. And.....completely unique and special at the same time. We're evolving. We have to evolve. 

Whether you believe in the biblical Adam and Eve, or the Big Bang, life on this planet has been evolving from the beginning. It's been evolving for billions upon billions of years. Human life as we know it has been evolving for about the last ten thousand years or so. The only span of that you can be acutely aware of is the last 100 years, or so. Just think how far things have progressed in the last 100 years. Now imagine the next 100.

But, finally, to my point. Each and every generation since the beginning of man has hoped for a better, easier, more satisfying life for their children. And each generation has basically succeeded at doing exactly that. Once achieved, each generation then calls the next one soft, or lazy, or entitled. My great-grandparents likely thought my grandparents were soft because they had a cover on their wagon. My grandparents scoffed at my parents because they had a car, or black and white television. My parents were amazed I had a car, went to college, etc. And now my generation whines about kids today and their technology. "They should go outside and play more!' we scream. 

Now, I'm not saying it isn't good for anyone to get some fresh air, but stick with me here. This generation is different, and each generation after is going to evolve at an exponential rate. My youngest daughter, clearly in the Millennialish category was never all that crazy about talking on the phone. "We don't do that," she'd say. "We text."  And so it begins.

Faculty at MIT have developed a thingamajig that converts brainwaves to electricity and allows you to manipulate electronic devices with just a thought. It currently only recognizes about 100 english words, but before long thinking is all that will be required to change the channel on your TV, make a phone call, drive your car, and yes, even communicate from one person to the next. Verbal communication is on its way out. 10 years? 100 years? 1000? I don't know, but it's happening.

What about cursive writing? Oh my god, how we cry about how kids can't write or read cursive. My question to you is this. "So what?" Kids and young adults don't need to read and write in cursive. It's outdated and archaic. It's being replaced by something way more efficient, and the fact you're reading this blog is evidence of it. You're just angry that YOU had to learn it. Language and communication are evolving. 

Kids today don't go outside and play as much. Is that sad? Sure, sort of. But it's only sad because that's what I did as a kid, and I loved it. But today's kids are prepping their brain for much bigger things. I don't even know how to play a video game, but can you imagine a better way to prepare your brain for the advances to come than to "plug in?" 

Change is hard, but things are changing and they're changing fast. Every alien movie ever produced imagined an alien species void of things like verbal communication, written word, or even sex as we know it today. It's where every generation is heading. If you don't believe me, do some reading about Quantum Physics or String/Wave Theory. You don't have to understand the math to understand the implications. Even Einstein could barely fathom where we're heading.

Now, it's completely plausible that we won't survive as a species long enough for all this evolution to come to fruition. That's a very long topic for a whole other time. In the meantime, by all means, make your kids get some air, but let them have their electronics and gadgets, too. It's where we're heading, and it's necessary for them to survive. Don't keep them locked in the 1950's and 60's. Help them thrive in a future that's evolving exponentially. You don't have to like it. But it's necessary.

It's evolutionary.

Monday, January 21, 2019

Let Me Stay





“Love, it never dies. It never goes away, it never fades, so long as you hang on to it. Love can make you immortal”
Gayle Forman


Let me stay, 
Just one more day.
Let me see who I can help today.

A loving touch,
A gentle hand.
Let me search throughout the land.

Let me stay,
Just one more day,
To help someone along their way.

A hungry child,
a lonely heart.
Let me give them a new start.

Let me stay,
I beg of you.
Please, let me stay, 
To start anew.

Let me stay, 
Just one more day.
One more sunrise,
One more chance at play.

A lot to ask,
By chance at best.
If I can stay,
I'll help the rest.

Please, if you can,
Please, let me stay.
Just let me stay,
Just one more day.

~ Matthew Leatherwood ~
   

In All Fairness






“Equality is not a concept. It's not something we should be striving for. It's a necessity. Equality is like gravity. We need it to stand on this earth as men and women, and the misogyny that is in every culture is not a true part of the human condition. It is life out of balance, and that imbalance is sucking something out of the soul of every man and woman who's confronted with it. We need equality. Kinda now.”
Joss Whedon 


When I was attending college at the University of Nebraska, an Economics professor assigned Looking Backward, by Edward Bellamy as required reading. In this novel with economic undertones, a man with insomnia wakes from his basement sleep quarters to find his house burned down around him and he was left undiscovered for many years. 

What this man discovered was that, while in a deep sleep, society had changed...... a lot. He awoke to a modernized society; a society governed by pure socialism. So while you're bashing me as a "libtard, socialist, bleeding heart," let me explain to you what Socialism actually is.....and what it is not.

In his novel, Bellamy describes an economy and society free from worry, crime, war, poverty, hunger, etc. Everyone, regardless of job or status, makes exactly the same amount of money per year in the form of "credits." Doctors, lawyers, cooks, dishwashers, construction workers, ad infinitum, all make exactly the same salary. What you choose to DO with your salary is entirely up to you. You can live in a big house, drive fancy cars, take lavish vacations: it doesn't matter. Oh, and you if you accidentally overspend your credits, you can get an advance on a future year's wages. 

Sounds beautiful, doesn't it? Well, to be fair, the human condition (mainly greed) won't allow for this type of economy. We all strive to desire more and we think working harder, or smarter, or whatever will get us "more." And truthfully, I can see where this type of setup would speak to our inherent laziness as humans. What's the incentive? 

So, let's be clear. Let's be fair. I'm not a socialist. It simply won't work. It's a shame, but it won't. Capitalism, on the other hand, seems to work for a bit, but you can bet we'll collapse under its weight eventually. Wanting to provide affordable health insurance, wanting to feed those that are hungry, and wanting to provide safe haven to those seeking asylum, is not socialism. It's caring.

Let's discuss immigration for a moment, you know, just to be fair. We have to start thinking outside the "'Merica!" box for a bit if we're going to survive as a species. We're humans, not Americans. But I've covered that in other posts. 

The "Wall" is a bad idea. It won't help, for a number of reasons. For starters, most illegal immigration occurs in places other than our southern border. It happens in the air, by sea, and to the north. Just like spending billions per year on a drug war we can't win, building a wall doesn't address the issue at all. Illegal immigration isn't the giant mess you think it is. It's what you've been programmed to believe.

A very small fraction of those that enter "our" country are criminals: drug dealers, murderers, rapists, terrorists. The vast majority of our major crimes are committed by white male citizens of these United States. It doesn't come from the outside. Think immigration drains our system? It's hardly a blip on the radar. Out-of-status immigrants don't qualify for any government programs and it is heavily screened and scrutinized. There are some exceptions where immigrant children are concerned, but it's a number you'll never feel.

And before you bash immigrants (who do actually fuel our economy in a number of ways by paying different taxes and buying goods), by saying they're "taking our jobs," remember two things. Immigrants aren't taking your jobs. Automation is. And for every immigrant who gets a job in the U.S., it's an American company who hires them illegally. 

And to be fair, perhaps we should talk about the notion of drug testing people on welfare. It's a ridiculous notion you wouldn't support if you did the math. Most people on welfare are A: already employed in a job that doesn't provide a living wage. B: white, and drug free. Welfare and "food stamps" are the most highly scrutinized programs there are. It's difficult to qualify. Just like the drug war, drug testing welfare recipients would be an huge expenditure to police a program that doesn't need policed in that way. 

Let's tackle the Trump issue, just to be fair. I don't need to write an entire page of adjectives to describe him. I don't blame him. I blame you....and me. We put him there. We either didn't go to the polls or we did and didn't bring enough people with us. We put him there, but we can get him out, too......if we hurry. 

In the midterm elections in Texas, only 12% of the eligible Hispanic and Black vote turned out to actually cast a ballot. The very people most affected by a conservative platform didn't show up to make their voices heard. Are they lazy? No. They've been beaten back culturally for generations and they believe their voice doesn't matter. We have to change that. Everyone counts. 

It seems to me I could ramble on and on about the concept of fairness and there just wouldn't be enough space in all the internet to cover it. Like many other entries in the past, I'm begging you to do your homework. Don't look to the news. Look to your soul to do the right thing for all humanity. Our situation is reaching Critical Mass, and if we don't change our collective consciousness, and soon, we can pull up a chair next to the dinosaurs. 

Just be fair