Friday, January 16, 2009

re

The causations were spoken of many years ago. The cautions were spoken to give consciousness to the affects of building energies within our society. Dwight Eisenhower, George Orwell, Franklin Roosevelt, Albert Einstein, Martin Luther King, and countless other well-known figures who gave eloquent warnings of social ills in light of exponential social progress.

Their warnings really are not referred to often because most of their concerns are prevalent and relevant to our lives today. It affects everyday life. The "more" society wants more individual items for their money, rather than a visually pleasing, coordinated approach to life. People have fragmented minds that understand wholism, but do not have the capability to apply concepts to everyday life issues of relationships and consumerism. The concerns of cultural evolution have arrived and continue without notation or past reflections to today's world.

Industrial military complex, 1984, social dependency, intentions of science, and separation of classes are all issues that are real causations for many conflicts that exist today. Experts want to isolate the main issues of cause. They want a package of workable solutions without changing the benefits many have received from the causes.

I am truly amazed at the growing trend of leadership to rely on news reports to identify problems, and then be the teller of issues. The amazement is in the form of their surprise, and lack of foresight to provide solutions before catastrophic events have significant impact on society at large. Some have argued that government is bought and paid for by corporations and other special interests. In relationship to causations that are not identified before problems blow up; it seems to me that the benefactors from the causations have planted influence in positions that are to be identifying social imbalances before the news reports of impending doom. The experts have become the problem because they have been the most seduced by the inherent affects cautioned by the significant names of the past. Leadership has become an intention for personal wealth!

(c) kenneth martin

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