future

All posts tagged future

Technology: the hidden tyrant in our lives

Published September 13, 2020 by alisondormaar

I used to think that I coped reasonably well with technology. Given that I am a Gen X, bridging the culture gap between the older generations and the new, I adapted more or less to the rapidly changing world of cellphones, PCs and e-readers without too much hassle – or so I thought.

Just the other day I tried to connect to a Zoom meeting. Simple, many of you might say. Child’s play. First of all, the date settings were all wrong, and try as I might I could not pinpoint the error there. Then my audio began playing up, and so on and so on, until I discovered they had sent me the wrong link altogether which was for a whole different meeting. Needless to say, this leaves one feeling somewhat foolish, and I was so able to identify with my poor bewildered parents many years ago when they had me explain to them how their new VCR worked. I felt so smug back then, so adult, so so – in control! After all, I was a child of the early 80s. A Go-getter, capitalism driven, and to my generation the square shoulder pads, scientific calculators, Walkman stereos and brick cell phones were the ultimate of sophistication. On the game front, Pac Man ruled the day along with Space Invaders. The IBM computer bay at school (complete with huge desk sized modules and rattling dot printers) was a hallowed sanctuary for the Chosen Few.

But ohhh how times have changed, and technology with it, at an ever increasing breathtaking speed. And not necessarily for the better.

Advances are meant to simplify our lives. As the 20th century dawned, people eagerly embraced back breaking labour saving devices such as washing machines, tractors, petrol lawn mowers and vacuum cleaners. We thrilled to the advent of picture theatres, listened with baited breath to the radio, and planes and motor cars rapidly became accessible to almost everyone. We were better informed, travelled further than ever before, and thanks to our labour saving devices even had the time to pursue other interests outside of just trying to eke out a living.

Since when did we start to spend all our time just trying to eke out an understanding of the all consuming web of chaos we have created?

Nowadays we live in a whirlwind of dub dub dub dot com this and that, URL this and that, friend and unfriend. Since when did Tweet mean contacting someone rather than a bird call, and Cookie some connection enhancement device rather than a crunchy treat? An acquaintance of mine remarked just the other day that by the time he has signed into umpteen programs at work alone, he has wasted at least fifteen minutes of worktime. Then he faces at least another half hour combing through the avalanche of emails received overnight, and systematically deleting and unsubscribing from the horde of howling messages wanting his attention – and most of these are trivial at best. He is supposed to start work at 8.30 but usually does not manage to tackle anything serious until morning tea time.

If you too feel that trivia is ruling the day, look to the abbreviated and often crude nature of texting. It may be handy as a quick means of contact, but many people under a certain age are now rapidly losing their general literacy and ability to understand more complex written information. Many universities are reporting that the academic calibre of new students has dropped considerably as a result. Too many people can no longer think for themselves – it is far easier to turn to Google or Wiki for the answers, and whatever their mates say about issues on Facebook is taken as gospel rather than the emotional and public opinion driving trivia that it mostly is.

We cannot move without our smart phones now. It is our identity, our soul, our everything. Go into any shopping mall or public place and you see people walking or sitting around, glued to their screens, oblivious to the world around them , totally consumed by the bright twinkly lights and social media platforms offering up trivial nothings. Some social workers even report young people suffering withdraw when devices are taken away as they have lost the ability to look and observe the real world and see what it has to offer around them. A world of mindless social drivel, of fluttery promises and self promoting videos and selfie pics is what now intrigues them most.

Since when did our society become so shallow, so self absorbed? At what point did the tables turn and our tools become our master? But unlike humanity, technology has no soul.

I have been reminded in recent times of the Terminator film series, when Skynet, the world wide system of military defence, became self aware and decided humans were superfluous to its needs. Prophetic isn’t it? As the technological tyrant in our midst grows ever more rapacious for our time and our resources, it consumes greedily, constantly and remorselessly. A recent TV panel of experts predicted that within the next 20 year over 40% of all jobs, regardless of how well educated or skilled you are, will disappear. I know from my own experience that for each job advertised now, at least 200 people will apply. Hours of employment are now often up for negotiation, you see more short term or casual work advertised, and you wonder how anyone will make a half decent living once we have kowtowed to the computer gods and given them all our livelihoods as well as our souls. And if our earning capacity is so drastically reduced, how will the global economy survive if no-one can afford to buy or sell? I don’t think the latest cute cat pic will put food on the table, fix the car or find a doctor. Nor will your new selfie solve the growing social unrest, the riots or the growing poverty in so many nations, including the so-called developed world.

Forget Covid-19, folks! The true pandemic is all around us. And its casualty rate is now in the billions.

Global economic reality – a follow up

Published May 13, 2019 by alisondormaar

man in blue and brown plaid dress shirt touching his hair

Photo by Nathan Cowley on Pexels.com

Recently I published a blog about the frustrations of the modern labour force, especially for those of us over 45. I feel compelled to share a first rate article that many of you out there may wish to share and read in addition to what I have already written.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/jackkelly/2018/06/12/they-are-not-telling-us-the-truth-about-the-job-market-here-is-what-they-dont-want-you-to-know/

Global warming? Yeah, right…ahhhhCHOOOOO!

Published June 28, 2015 by alisondormaar

Over the past few decades it has become very fashionable to blamed the planet’s woes on global warming. Ever since my own early school days I can well remember being treated to constant dire and disturbing films in the school lecture theatre depicting dead and dying animals, polluted waterways, smog, misery, death and general industrial destruction. I am convinced it was the same miserable presenter for all those films whose doleful tones warned us constantly that within decades we could all be facing doom and gloom as Man was destroying the planet by deforestation, overpopulation, slaughter of the wildlife etc etc. By the time these ‘uplifting’ sessions were over, I (and no doubt many others) generally toddled home with my little backpack and pigtails howling my little head off with despair at how rotten we humans all are and losing the will to live, and then causing my mother to wonder why I refused to eat dinner or burst into uncontrollable howls when the evening news came on the TV. Ahhh the joys of childhood….

Now I am in my forties and not much seems to have changed. We still receive the same dire messages of doom and gloom, but no-one seems to know what to do about the world population boom let alone the melting polar ice caps and the threat to the Atlantic oceanic current conveyor which can change the world climate in a twinkle if meddled with. I find it incredible that while we humans certainly do have a lot of cases to answer in the global court of injustice, misery and destruction (we are a pretty rotten, selfish bunch at heart, let’s face it) that we still have the incredible arrogance to believe that we are the root cause of ALL the global problems, and always have been. Hey, we’re far from innocent in this regard, but as the primary nemesis? That is truly giving us far too much credit.

Climate change is as old as the planet itself. We live on a very turbulent earth. Almost one billion years ago this entire planet was one gigantic polar ice cap until a number of giant volcanic explosions etc got the atmosphere and the ocean currents flowing. During the prehistoric epochs the earth fluctuated from temperate to subtropical/tropical, and at the end of the Permian era around 250 million years ago (just before the rise of the dinosaur era) a massive change in climate turned vast swathes of the earth into pitiless desert and wiped out an estimated 90% of all known species then on earth. Several such extinction events took place over the ages, and I suppose that some scientists are even trying to blame the demise of the dinosaurs on human interference (okaaaaay, so a giant meteor crashes to earth and we somehow brought it here. Considering that we were still millions of years away from coming into existence, I’d like to know how we did that). Mother Nature is the ultimate arbiter and judge, and as many of you may well know if you have been following the bizarre weather patterns now occurring around the world, when she chooses to unleash her full power, our flimsy façade of technological might means nothing. If you are of a religious disposition, it was mentioned in the Bible that in the last days knowledge would increase dramatically but wisdom would somewhat diminish. How true is this?

The character Dr Ian Malcolm from the Jurassic Park franchise (ably portrayed by Jeff Goldblum) summed human arrogance up beautifully “We are so busy wondering whether or not we could we don’t stop to think whether or not we should”. As he also said very aptly, Nature always finds a way. It is debatable, however, if Man will. We should not be worrying about how to save the planet – we should be worrying about how to save ourselves. I do believe a bit of humility is long overdue here.

I have just heard yet other update of global warming on the media, while I sit here in an unusually severe Antipodean winter, frost hard on the ground and with record snowfalls in the countryside. My heat pump is cranked up, I have legwarmers wrapped around my calves and my nose is a tap. A warmer climate eh? Ahhh, yeah…I for one believe Global Warming is the biggest money making con of the modern age.

Want to know more abut the world of A J Dormaar? Check her out on Facebook viaAuthor A J Dormaar – Fan Page or tweet @AlisonDormaar to find out about her great books and much more!

Latest release “The Rival”, following the hilarious pawprints of a spoiled cat fighting his mistress’s no-good boyfriend for mastery, is now available via https://www.createspace.com/5016577

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A week in perspective

Published August 18, 2014 by alisondormaar

It’s been a sad week this one just gone. Not only are the rabid fanatics of ISIS on the rampage in Iraq, causing havoc among thousands of unarmed, helpless people, but Ebola is on a relentless crawl across Africa, unemployment stalks the developed world without abating, and desperate refugees continue to entrust their pitiful lives to thoroughly unscrupulous people smugglers who only give a damn about money and who try to force entry into countries that have more than enough problems of their own to contend with. It’s been a week where I for one just shake my head and sigh “Dear God, we are all totally INSANE!!!!” Especially when I see that US media have just launched yet more puerile reality shows where nudity takes centre stage and where giggling morons with more airbrushed good looks than brains or morals display their genitals, among other things, to each other to prove that “bigger is best” – it all reminds me of the old Roman bread and circus mentality put out by the ruling elite to tame the teeming unwashed masses and make them forget, even for a few moments, the grim reality of their meagre hand to mouth existence. In our modern world, perhaps these brainless shows are a way for modern governments to make us all forget how hard things are. It is beyond a joke how difficult it can be to secure a decent job nowadays, to fight the storm of overwhelming political correctness that dictates how we even think, and how to cope with the frantic pace of change in an artificial technology driven world that more and more of us cannot cope with. I am by no means the most religious person in the world as I have said on a few previous occasions, but I can feel the sands of time shift considerably nowadays. The modern day Roman empire is our so called developed world and it is rotting at the core. I’ve been looking up some religious quotes of late – “But realize this, that in the last days difficult times will come. For men will be lovers of self, lovers of money, boastful, arrogant, revilers, disobedient to parents, ungrateful, unholy, unloving, irreconcilable, malicious gossips, without self-control, brutal, haters of good…”(2 Timothy 3.2) I could go on, but you get the picture. Sound familiar to anyone? I bet it does!

Then to top it off we got the news of the deaths of two legends – Lauren Bacall, that husky voiced screen siren of yesteryear, and Robin Williams, the death of whom upset me more than I thought possible. Life can really throw some foul curveballs at times, and his death comes from a result of severe depression combined with the recent knowledge he had a bad form of Parkinson’s disease. I can really see that in the last few moments of this dear man’s life he was looking at the grim years ahead of decay and bitter struggle and that at the moment of death he really thought he was doing the right thing by everyone. RIP, Robin. Your life was not in vain as you are mourned and loved by millions. The British comedian Russell Brand put it very aptly on Twitter when he said (more or less) that Robin was a light of gladness in a world of sadness. One quote I heard from Robin from his “Mork and Mindy” show I will mention here as it seems somewhat appropriate for this nutty world we live in:

“Loneliness is man made. As young children we are told not to talk to strangers. At school and at work we are told not to talk to those sitting at the desk next to ours. And in old age we are told not to talk to ourselves. Who does this leave?”

Okay, this is not the exact wording, but you get the general idea! Poor Robin, I think many of us can relate to that one!!!

And what can I for one do? Nothing. Zilch, nein, nought, nil!!! But I am, however, a writer. I seek to entertain and inspire those around me. And I hope that my work can inspire and entertain those of you who read my blog and that you will share this with anyone else you know around the world.

Interested in this blogger’s writing? Read more about A J Dormaar by checking out Facebook at Author A J Dormaar – Fan page or at Twitter @AlisonDormaar or her book series “The Chronicles of Aridayn” at

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THE UNCROWNED QUEEN

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Cyber chaos carnage!!!

Published May 30, 2014 by alisondormaar

One of the modern aspects of trying to be a writer nowadays is the fact that so much of your time is online trying to “get yourself out there” so to speak. In an ideal world, one would think that once the contract with a publisher has been signed and the book deal done, that the author can heave a sigh of relief and, apart from attending book signings, contributing to blogs etcetera and answering fan mail via Facebook or Twitter for example, that their social media work is done, right?

WRONG!

In the real world, this is where the hard yards really start. I for one still find in incredible that many publishers, considering that it is in their direct interests to have successful sales figures for their carefully sourced writers, still force the bulk of hard core advertising on the writers, who, let’s face it, often do not have the very different skill set required for hard sell. You need a thick skin and a bottomless well of patience, and, if you are like me, self promotion has never come easy. I for one feel like the time honoured stereotyped slick car salesman with the check jacket, gelled hair, gleaming teeth and the sleazy sales pitch, out to make a fast buck from the gullible public. Apart from that, with all the time fretting about promotions, many people admit to stopping writing – ahm, isn’t this the Catch 22 here? A writer is supposed to write after all.

The other aspect I for one am grappling with is just how much time is spent roaming in cyber space and I was stunned the other day when I totted up just how many social media sites I now have running. You tend to lose track of them all, and that, of course, is not a great look at any time. I find myself yearning for the kindly Promo Fairy who will wave her magic wand and somehow make all my pages look good, who will somehow put my work and name before eager thousands, if not millions and gloss over all my mistakes. Then of course, comes the TV interviews, the appearances at club meetings, schools and other hallowed institutions, the demand for you to appear on daytime TV amid the rabid applause of adoring fans…oooh, we’re really drifting into the realms of fantasy here, folks…

Sound familiar to you, anyone?

I can imagine that thousands of years from now some alien civilisation will intercept all of that desperate author self-promotion media garbage floating around in darkest space and wonder. They will no doubt muse on our sorry desperate state and use us as examples of what to avoid for their own future generations, and who can blame them? As a generation, the majority of younger people in particular are using the net  to escape from a world which they perceive as gone totally mad. They prefer to live online in their virtual reality instead of tackling with things as they really are, and when you see much of the web content, you realise just how many of us fail to read or scrutinise what we post properly. It can come across as pretty self centred, inane and shallow. The time honoured howl of “Notice me!” resonates like a biblical tsunami around the world. I can therefore imagine that some alien civilisation would indeed think us all warped and thoroughly self involved, especially when people post some pretty sick and feeble photos of themselves doing brainless acts online without thinking of the wider reaction they’ll get. Anything to get noticed, eh? Unhappily, to get ahead nowadays, we are all part of this grinding, inhuman, inexhaustible machine. And as an author, like it or not, this is our career reality.