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Started by Steph S.. Last reply by Tom Sarbeck 48 minutes ago. 10 Replies 1 Like
Oh no! Crazy ants!!CNN) -- Beware the "crazy…Continue
Started by Steph S.. Last reply by Tom Sarbeck 1 hour ago. 3 Replies 0 Likes
I just wanted to make a fun discussion and see what all of you are doing on Memorial Day.Anyone attending a parade?Anyone honoring vets?Here is an event in Austin that looks very interesting to me.Austin, TXClose Assault 1944 is living history and…Continue
Started by Joan Denoo. Last reply by Ruth Anthony-Gardner 2 hours ago. 3 Replies 0 Likes
Brutal 4 Minutes for All of Religion Christopher HitchensJust think about this for a minute, “three thousand years ago, at the most, it was decided,…Continue
Started by Ruth Anthony-Gardner 3 hours ago. 0 Replies 0 Likes
This photo essay shows the remarkable benefits of replacing a secular government with a religious one. The fate of Egypt is quite an endorsement for the superior morality of religious rule.I was a bit surprised by the extent to which the temporary…Continue
Started by Steph S.. Last reply by Lillie yesterday. 9 Replies 0 Likes
Psychics are all BS.Here's an interesting news article.Amanda Berry, a…Continue
Started by Joan Denoo yesterday. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Life offers many opportunities for health and flourishing and our bodies have all kinds of red flags it sends up to tell us something is wrong. Pay attention to those flags, they can save your health and your life. I talked to a lady yesterday who…Continue
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Comment by booklover on January 17, 2013 at 8:19am
Comment by booklover on January 17, 2013 at 8:18am That's exactly what I think about Joan? Even self-driving cars are coming. What will my kids do for jobs? Will the planet even survive all this? I THINK it was on 60 Minutes, they just had a story about robots in the workplace, and how the jobs in the middle-level would be done by robots for much cheaper, in the future. And it has already started. Cool what can be invented, not so cool if people don't have jobs to do. Too much to think about right now!
Comment by Joan Denoo on January 17, 2013 at 2:39am It has to be more than 65 years ago I sat in a theater and saw films of out expected future, with cars flying between sky scrapers, and huge highways carrying vast numbers of people to and from their activities, robots doing the work that humans were doing, and all kinds of gadgets would be made available to make life easier for everyone.
WW II had just ended, we still were on sugar and fat rations, and we still were trying to repair our home that burned during the war. Our bathroom and kitchen fixtures were old beat up pieces of pot-metal plumbing but that was all we could get at that time. It took a couple more years before we could replace the electrical and plumbing with fixtures with new modern ones. We had a washer with a wringer on it and there was no such thing as a dryer.
I remember watching the film thinking that with all those modern conveniences like a washer and dryer and dishwasher and vacuum and new tools shown for carpenters and plumbers and electricians it seemed that everyone could just sit ... we didn't even have TV in those days. The vision was that all the work would be done, toil of trade labor and homemaking left a lot of time for pleasure in the new cars and toys that would be coming onto the market. Ronald Reagan was beginning to plug electric appliances of every kind and we all wanted everything.
The movie didn't tell that robots would replace workers on the assembly line, thus reducing the need for human labor. Machines would do the work of keeping inventory and checking out at the grocery story and a lot of them had to be laid off. Cheap clothes started coming into stores and dressmakers were no long needed. Manufacture of shoes went overseas and shops closed their doors. Fast foods came along and many mom and pop restaurants closed down. One by one, the commerce of our nation changed, the main streets changed, beautiful old commercial buildings were torn down and monstrous bank building grew to change our skyline.
That was the end of the "ball bearing era" and the beginning of a new technological era.
Today, we are at the end of an era and I don't know what to call it, and going into a new age with computers, world-wide trade, opening opportunities for those who are prepared, and closing doors on many of the old ways of making a living. Kind of like the end of the horse and buggy era when we needed black smiths, and an ice man.
When my mother was a little girl, my father was her family's ice man in a little farming town. No electricity, outdoor plumbing, no phones, few cars, the "Green Hornet" bus took us from Tekoa to Spokane, or we took the train. Both are gone now. The first airplane came through doing stunts.
What is the name of the new era? What will our coming generations do for a living? How will we find work for all the unemployed workers? How will our graduating college kids find work? How will we take care of our children and elderly? With all these questions, that implies opportunities for innovation. Are we prepared for that?
Comment by Joan Denoo on January 17, 2013 at 12:31am Loca the Pug singing 'The pug that couldn't run'
"I'm bouncing, flouncing, falling all around the show..."
Comment by Patricia on January 16, 2013 at 11:40pm The bunny is a riot!!!!
Comment by The Flying Atheist on January 16, 2013 at 11:22pm That's a hilarious video, sk8eycat. The dog just sits there and watches. He's probably thinking, "There's no reason for me to get up. That crazy rabbit is doing all the work. I'll just relax a bit."
Comment by Ruth Anthony-Gardner on January 16, 2013 at 11:13pm
Comment by sk8eycat on January 16, 2013 at 9:51pm Ooooooh, Patricia! I feel better already!
Joseph, it's not the whole world that is sick...it's the USA that needs a high colonic every time the fundies get one of their buybull-based restrictions added to the law books. They THINK that the stiff-necked, bigoted puritans who settled Massachusetts in the 17th century were the people who wrote the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. They know NOTHING about what happened on this continent between 1620 and 1776. And anyone who thinks the buybull is a history book will believe anything. No wonder we call a congregation a "flock." They'll let anybody herd them.
(You kind of have to wait for the video to load, but it's worth it.)
Comment by Joseph Corder on January 16, 2013 at 7:58pm sk8eycat, It is a sick world in which we live! One horror story after another and it all centers around basic needs for survival! This is INSANE!! Basic needs for survival, should NEVER have to be thought of as free handouts or for profit, EVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Debra Stevenson commented on Debra Stevenson's blog post Do you support 'traditional' marriage, vot now ad
Tom Sarbeck replied to Steph S.'s discussion 'Crazy ants' a threat in southern U.S. in the group Hang With Friends© 2013 Atheist Nexus. All rights reserved. Admin: Richard Haynes.


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