“The World According to Doctrine” — “People are famous for being famous”

“People are famous for being famous”

In a time when being a cult has itself earned cult status – and public images are used to manipulate public images: our Society orbits the real world; without ever coming into contact with it.

What’s in our future? People are famous for being people who were famous for being famous? Now that’s what I call a Legacy!

“The World According to Doctrine” — “Their actions and policies”

“Their actions and policies”

Discrimination, secrecy, censorship, profiling, stereotyping, and demonizing are not the actions of people or governments that believe in human worth and equality — and the more you question it; the more they possessively hug it to themselves. Disclosure and debate? Never. One thought – One taught – One voice – One choice — and enough mob mentality to fuel any action.

“The World According to Doctrine” — “How would I describe the world in 2050?”

“How would I describe the world in 2050?”

A day without rain is just a day without rain; but three months without rain is a drought.

A historic storm is a disaster we can recover from – but put enough of them together. . .

It’s a big world with only a small margin for our survival – and we’ve filled it up. With Climate Change eating the edges — what will people do to cling to what’s left?

“The World According to Doctrine” — “Smack dab in the superficial”

“Smack dab in the superficial”

With all the adolescent horror of a newly discovered pimple – popular culture works to create a façade of conformity; and avoid any ridicule or criticism.

Teeth, hair, skin, clothes, odors, attitudes and opinions, kids and dogs, must all mirror the merchandising they consume – and that consumes them.

In our Great Shallow world of “lots and lots of not very much”: celebrities grow to a size impossible without the support of their teaming acolytes; eating and defecating in the same wallow — like Fantasia dinosaurs on the eve of extinction.

“The World According to Doctrine” — “Today. . .”

“Today. . .”

What are people actually doing about real-world problems? Nothing. We have reached a stage where the value of actions has been subordinated to excuses, and it’s more satisfying to blame others than to set an example yourself. If we continue to do nothing; things will still correct themselves – the way a car stops without brakes.

“The World According to Doctrine” — “Planting and watering in a desert. . .”

“Planting and watering in a desert. . .”

You could look at this as an indictment of the people who see more efficient autos as an excuse to drive more and leave the engine running.

Or of Agricultural policies that pay farmers for the damages done to their crops by the same climate change weather that they are major contributors to.

There are many other examples. It’s not surprising in a time when millennial families are constantly advertised as driving long distances, to out of the way places, in large-engine SUVs. Sustainability isn’t an electric car or a farm subsidy – it’s a way of surviving.

That’s not a living room on wheels you’re driving – it’s a mausoleum on wheels — and you seem to be in a big rush to find a parking spot.

“The World According to Doctrine” — “There’s no difference between. . .”

“There’s no difference between. . .”

Morality is oppressive, and compassion is conditional upon the recipient: today’s doctrine is stripped down to the basics – privilege and hate – what’s in it for you; and who do you have it in for.

“It’s only a temporary condition – and it will all blow over” – I bet there were many Jews who counseled the same viewpoint.

“The World According to Doctrine” — “When you’re waving on the roof. . .”

“When you’re waving on the roof. . .”

We live in a world where an authoritative explanation is considered the same as a solution. We’re told that the recent “1,000-year floods” are due to climate change, and “what would normally be a small and consistent trickle of water over the course of the year, becomes a large bucket dumped all at once” – concluding that “we need to rethink everything about how we build where we build.”

Ya think? Don’t fix the climate change; fix the building codes? Maybe we should rethink everything again.