April 29, 2013

Ambiguity of Air Travel

A week ago I was away, in California, but this blog isn't about my time in Disneyland or even my humorous observations of Californians. (Californites?) No, this is about safety, pure and simple... because what can be simpler than:

No smoking while fleeing from the wreckage
of your doomed aircraft.
In the event of a crash landing, pick the child you
like the most. You can only save one.
According to FAA Regulations: the landing gear
will not be deployed for water landings.
 
No cigarettes, no briefcases, no broken heels.
 
Step 1: Use your laser vision to attempt to
break the glass.
 
Step 3: Use the door as a shield to block your fellow
passengers from escaping.
 
Step 4: Screw this! I'm outta here!
 
Step 5: High-kick your way down the emergency ramp.
 
Under no circumstances must you be from the 1990's.
 

Men and women, make sure to not press the red button,
especially when the white box is talking at you.
 
Do not bring fire, jagged metal, or the ocean onto this plane
 
Step 2: In the event of a water landing find a
friendly mermaid.
Do not use... (I'm going to say:) an automatic
scotch tape dispenser that emits loud noises.
 
Rows A: Please exit through the front or rear of the aircraft.
Rows B: Please exit through the side of the aircraft.
Rows C-F: Sorry, you're screwed.
 


April 23, 2013

Pond of Consciousness: Flying

Why am I doing another stream of consciousness blog? Aren't my posts random enough as it is... If you use the words, "emotional roller coaster," I am O.U.T... Deal I just feel like I am on this emotional... ride... Why am I even typing this again? I'm on cramped airplane, the laptop is half closed and my arms are shoved all the way into my chest like some stinted tyrannosaurus rex stuck in economy class… Tyranosaurus… I should have some kind of witty pun there. I’ll think of it later. I need to figure out how to disable this touchpad/mouse thingy. The cursor is jumping all over the page. What is that kid doing, marching up and down the aisle like a wooden soldier… toy solider... I'm a real boy... Where are his parents? Here comes the old woman and the inevitable meeting of the immature object verses the unstoppable (I need to go to the bathroom) force…. There should be another joke there. I’ll add it later… Tyrannosaurus Rex… Lex… Dex… Hex… Treks… None of those work… Is it kosher to be writing the jokes in my head as I am actually writing a story about my thoughts… This is getting a little too existential… Why did I use the word kosher? I’m not Jewish… What movie is playing? What’s that guy’s name? Leonidas? Burt? Why is he playing soccer with kids? This is the weirdest remake of 300 I have ever seen. Is that what’s his name? Why can‘t I remember anyone’s… Kurt Russell… no Dennis Quiad? I didn’t know he/they were in 300? Flashover… no Backdraft was a decent film. Why can’t I remember anything today. I feel so slow.. Maybe it's the altitude. From the looks of desolation and Amish we’re somewhere over Pennsylvania. Ouch… Watch it lady. Say excuse me. I never know if I like the aisle better or the window… Die-rannosaurus Rex… that doesn’t even make any sense in the context of the joke…. These are not the jokes you're looking for... Oh good, here comes the complimentary drinks and food. Yes can I have the one peanut and the small glass of water? Cthulhu forbid they gave you actual food on a six-hour flight that made us wait an hour and a half past boarding for take-off… Jessica Biel is in this movie? Gerard Butler… that’s it. This is Sparta… I am starving. I shouldn’t have skipped breakfast. Wasn’t it Dennis Quiad who played General Hawk in that damn awful GI Joe movie? What part of my childhood will Hollywood ruin next? Is Michael Bay still trying to make a teenage mutant... Of course he is. Why the hell are they aliens… Teenage Alien Ninja Turtles? Does he even know that spells TANT? Teenage Alien Intelligent Ninja Turtles... Are there even ninjas on another planet, or teenagers… or turtles… I'm sure there will be explosions… Is that Amy Acker. I love her... So What are you wearing... Blue overcoat. Fedora... You really stink at this... Orange Socks?... Angel was a good show.... They’ll probably try to make a remake of Ghostbusters with Justin Beiber playing all the parts… that was a horrible joke.... They'll probably try to make a remake of Ghostbusters with Bruce Willis... he was dead the whole time... What’s wrong with me today… A tyrannosaurus rex and a nun walk into a bar… something something… He was Catholic all along… That’s Uma Thurman… I guess she is playing the Persian king, Xerxes, in this version. She has the build for it….. Coke… Pepsi’s fine… Really, what’s the difference… How about giving me one of those sandwiches…. No for free. You left us waiting on the runway for two hours. Mardok forbid there is actually a company out there that wants to keep its customers happy or takes any sort of responsibility for their mistakes… I would have loyalty to a company like that. Fly United… because why not? We’re just as much of dicks as everyone else… except Air New Zealand. They were very nice that one time… Oh gods, that kid is crying now… Wah wah wah my ears are popping and there's no way to console me Wah! Maybe I'm teething, Maybe I'm hungry, who knows? I'm a baby!… No give me the blue chips… THIS IS the most Spartan meal I've ever had... So I guess Jessica Biel is the hunchback in this one... No don’t kiss her, Leonidas. She’s going to sell you out to the Persians!... Why are chips blue? Who thought that was a good idea? Who looked at potato chips and went… you know what will make this better… the color blue. I think that’s the same logic they use with… cars… M&Ms… t-shirts…. Annoying late 90’s pop songs… I'm really off on the jokes today. I’ll just add them in later during editing. A tyrannosaurus rex and Sam Waterson get into a fight… No, Sam Waterson is Jack McCoy on Law and Order… what was the name of the guy who played Dr. Grant? Also how did that T-Rex get into the Jurassic Park visitor center without anyone noticing? Were the doors made conveniently for tyrannosaurus proportions? And did anyone work there? I knew they were on a skeleton crew, but a few more people working security might have made it a very short movie. The only tech guys were Samuel L. Jackson and Newman… Hello Newman… You would have thought that with an experimental facility they would have brought on a few more staff, just to be one the safe side… or at least ran background checks on their employees. I wonder if the US Government had to bail out InGen after they lost all their money on the dinosaur tourist industry Whoa… this movie just got saucy… Run, Leonidas, she is trying to eat your face… Like a T-Rex that's too big to fail... and it all comes full circle. I’m a genius. Now Kurt Russell/Dennis Quaid is in jail…. This is just confusing. Are they arresting him for the GI Joe movie… they should… He deserves it… How can you make a movie that was even cornier than the old cartoon show and I loved the old cartoon show. Seriously. They kept everything they shouldn’t have and took away everything they should have. Don’t worry, I'm sure The Rock and Bruce Willis will save us from the giant Texas sized asteroid of suckage that movie was. All we need now is Areosmith... Turns out he was dead the whole time... and I mean that about Steven Tyler... Adolescent Extraterrestrial Samurai Turtles... AEST… sounds like a standardized assessment test designed to check for asbestos… What if Michael Bay remade Jurassic Park… Exploding dinosaurs, for no reason… They know how to open doors and set C4 charges… Clever girl... My arms are shoved so far into my stomach that I feel like a tyrannosaurus rex in economy class… business class... trying to play pool... That’s not funny… Oh blue chips?
 
 

April 10, 2013

Fairly Tales

This was the best acting Stewart did all movie... lifelessness.
I was watching HBO-Go the other day, catching up on the latest episode of Game of Thrones, and after its conclusion I found myself wandering around the site looking to satiate my need for more sword and sorcery fantasy. Unfortunately, the only thing I could find was the newest incarnation of the Snow White story, Snow White and the Huntsman. Also unfortunately, it was exactly what I expected.

Staring Kristen "What do you mean emote?" Stewart, maybe the only good thing I can say about the movie is that the resulting scandal/affair from it probably finished her career. It also starred, Thor, which means that every time he was on screen, the movie in my mind was much more interesting than what was actually happening in truth. The special effects looked unfinished and surprisingly insulting. For example, the seven dwarves were an amalgam of bodies and heads, as if the producers couldn't decide between going with the Lord of the Rings technique (and just using perspective to shrink the actors,) or the Game of Thrones technique (and actually cast an award winning little-person actor.) Instead, the dwarves were made up of the bodies of little people with the heads of average sized actors CGI imposed on them. This left lead dwarf, Bob Hoskins, looking like Super Mario before he found any mushrooms to eat... but I am digressing.

The point of this entry is not so much to point out the many flaws of the movie (many flaws,) but to try and understand the sudden resurgence of the popularity of fairy tales in pop culture. Take a look and the trend is all around you. Shows like Once Upon a Time and Grimm are bending these old stories to fit modern sensibilities and tastes, and movies like the aforementioned one, the new Jack the Giant Killer, and Hansel and Gretel are (unsuccessfully) trying to turn these stories into something they are not... blockbuster movies. I could also mention the comic book Fables, which unbeknownst to the general public was really one of the forerunners for this entire trend, (so much so that that many have argued that Once Upon a Time is really nothing more than a Disneyized version of Fables... but in all fairness Disney has been ripping off and homogenizing folklore and fairy tales since almost before cartoons were a "thing.")

So why all the fairy tale stuff? I suppose really that is a multi-part answer. The first and most obvious being, Nerd Culture is becoming prominent in the media. (I know I tend to argue this point... a lot.) With comic book movies breaking box office records, and comic conventions being more jam packed with advertisers than a broadcast by the NFL, Hollywood is looking for new (old) source material for which to keep things going. Fairy tales and mythology are actually a perfectly logical extension of this idea. After all, I have always argued that comic books really are nothing more than classical myths retold from modern perspectives. This brings me to my second point, fairy tales, like mythology, are the original source material for most of our modern stories, (I mean except for Inception whose source material was a Donald Duck cartoon.) So it makes sense to go back to the raw material and try to tell the old stories in new ways.

Once Upon a Time (sometimes to great success and sometime
not) tries to delve into the motives and reasons why the
familiar characters act the way do. Ultimately, taking this risk
helps many characters, like the Evil Queen, become much
more interesting and even sympathetic.
Lastly, there is something inherently dark about fairy tales. They are stories made specifically for children, in which people are eaten by wolves, (step) mothers try to kill their children, and the woods are always full of dark and sinister things just waiting to devour the souls of children. Ultimately, these stories were meant as cautionary tales from a time when the world was dark and full of dangers, and when parents could be just as superstitious as their children. Nowadays, we think we know better. We see the world with science and logic and take the old tales with a grain of pixie dust, but sometimes they prove right. Sometimes there are strangers intent on harm who have windowless vans instead of gingerbread houses, evil queens and kings who rule governments for power and personal gain, and a big bad wolf willing to crash planes into buildings. I don't know about you, but sometimes when I think about the world, it scares the hell out of me.
 
It is no coincidence that superheroes, zombies, and fairy tales all saw a rise in popularity after the events of the past decade. We have seen the face of monsters and super villains, so it is only proper that we would cling to the tales that caution us against their dangers and give us hope for heroes that offer salvation. These stories make light of our fears as a way to play out our nightmares in safe ways. Some scientists claim that dreaming has similar purposes. We are presented with fears in safe environments where we can have the time to figure out how to deal with them and maybe even face them, so that (when in the waking world) we are presented with an actual problem or normally terrifying situation we will be better prepared to cope. In other words, you watch a zombie movie not to prepare for the zombie apocalypse, but to prepare for stressful presentations at work or even being mugged on the streets. Stories like fairy tales allow us to conceptualize the dangers and maybe even reassure us that everything will work out. We want to know that it will be okay, and these stories are a way for us to put our deepest fears into a predictable box we can digest. This is no different than what our ancestors did when they first invented them, except today the stories are updated for the reality of war in the Middle East as opposed to something like the Crusades which were... well I guess war in the Middle East.... well it is a different war... but that is why updating these stories to better reflect who we are is a fairly good idea.

If you like folklore and fairy tale, check out the 10th Kingdom.
I promise you won't be disappointed.
And maybe that is my biggest contention with Snow White and the Huntsman, because ultimately the story is not really a modern adaptation at all. Yes, there are some new special affects thrown in and some kind of hint at a convoluted love triangle, but the story was nothing new. At least Hansel and Gretel tried to put an unexpected twist on an old classic (and we won't even mention the creativity of shows like Once Upon a Time and Grimm.) There was nothing new or exciting in the revised Snow White, no twist. They even had singing dwarves (Hi ho, Hi ho,) and worst of all, Snow White was helpless, (almost as helpless as she was in the other role she is so well known for playing.) The character spends most of the movie stumbling around with other people or even animals leading her one way or another. So by the end of the movie, when we are supposed to believe she has become a sword wielding warrior queen, the transformation seems a little unbelievable, considering two days prior she barely knew how to hold a knife.

Snow White as a weak female character may have worked in the 1550's or even in the 1950's, but in today's world that no longer reflects the reality we live in, (Unless you live in a reality of sparkling vampires, which I guess Stewart kind of does.) For a really good adaptation of the a strong Snow White and stronge female characters in genreal, check out Once Upon a Time, or even my favorite modernized fairy tale (from way back when,) The 10th Kingdom. As for everything else, I am enjoying this new resurgence of folklore, and I am looking forward to see in what new and creative direction it continues... as long as you leave Kristen Stewart out of it.

 

April 2, 2013

Do Androids Dream of Electric Lawyers?

Side Prediction: In the future Supreme Court Justice is going
to come with nicer robes... and a golden throne of dragons.
When last we met, we talked about the horrifying truth of how humans are really going to become nothing more than machines, or at the very least some sort of demon spawn that is half human and half microwave. In summation, expect to have microchips implanted basically everywhere... I mean everywhere... but there are scarier consequences to this trend than simply giving me legs that will let me jump like Super Mario on shrooms.

The real question of all of this is not how it will happen, but what will we do when it does? What kind of new legal consequences will there be? If my body is 51% robot, am I still legally considered human? or robot? Can I be owned by another person? And what if I break the speed limit while just going out for my morning jog? Will the law of the future even be able to keep up with our coming technological advances, because let's face it... we don't now.



If you are a frequent reader of this blog, (and the answer to that is, you're not,) you might remember when I made an argument a while back that, Sometimes politicians just make sad and useless laws just to justify their jobs. Well in the future, our elected official may not have that problem, because there will be so many new problems cropping up that they won't be able to keep up with even half of them. I mean there are future problems we can't even begin to think about, and they are going to require some pretty hard and fast legislation to prevent society from descending into a scene straight out of Terminator or Ratatouille.

That last movie reference, by the way, was not one of my usually flippant off-kilter jokes. I am serious, in the future humans will most likely possess the ability to give a rat human-level intelligence and Gordon Ramsey-level cooking abilities, (the British accent will cost you extra.) So how in Hell's Kitchen, do we classify such an abomination against God under the law? Is that rat considered human? Does it get all the same rights that are entitled to my newborn grandchild? Would it be allowed to continue cooking or is that a violation of sanitation laws, (even if it frequently washes its little hands?) And if so, is it entitled to equal pay wages? Health insurance? Pension? Death Benefits? (Because rats live on average 2 to 4 years, and can have litters of up to 24 babies at a time.)

Okay, maybe that last example is a little ridiculous. I mean who would ever increase a rat's intelligence level to human proportions... oh wait, that is exactly what humans will probably try to do first. Rats are prime laboratory experiment animals (lab rats if you will) for a few reasons. Not only have they showed a keen ability to learn quickly, but their brain chemistry closely resembles humans. So any experiments made to learn how to increase human intelligence will most likely start on rats, (before they move up to apes and then we're all screwed.) And don't think this isn't going to happen. Humans have proven time and time again, that if it is possible for us to do something (no matter how bad of an idea it is,) we will do it. Everything from the nuclear bomb to disco has made that crystal clear, and humans have been trying to find ways to increase our intelligence since the time of your grandparents. With new genetic techniques, projects launched to map the brain and human genome, and a sizable pharmaceutical industry... it's only a matter of time.

Side Prediction: According to the Droid Regulation Law
of 2043, all androids must resemble David Bowie in the
creepiest way imaginable. 
So how do you regulate this kind of stuff? Is it fair that the rich will get to afford all these sorts of upgrades to themselves, whether it be robotic or genetic? Is this covered by my health insurance? (Which could really be a whole other blog by itself, because the crazy weird world of HMO's and health care providers will probably either collapse or see a profit boon like never before, under the weight of all the coming advancements. On a side note: I can't even get my Lasic eye surgery covered by health care... so take that into consideration when you ask your representative if they will pay for you to get a higher IQ, stronger muscles, or that third limb you've always wanted.)

However, those are all after market upgrades, what about when you start from scratch? Designer babies are not something of the future, they are something of the present. I know everyone is more preoccupied with arguing over the cuteness of their duck face photos and listening to your New Kids On the Block CD, (or whatever it is you kids listen to these days,) but while you were sleeping and looking at Internet cat pictures, companies like this one, have begun to offer options to parents who want to determine the sex of their baby. The company had even planned to offer more designer options, like hair and eye colors, but pulled the idea at the last minute because I guess someone  realized, Holy crap, that's the plot of an Ethan Hawke movie, and I guess the company didn't want to be the first one to venture into a dystopic future plot line. Rest assured though, someone will, and we're going to need laws to govern that bleak gray-and-blue-tinted future.

Think about a world where the rich will be genetically and technologically superior to the poor. Should we just make laws restricting how much genetic modifications the rich can have, or should we pass laws that state all babies born in America must have a standard level of genetic manipulation to weed out diseases and birth defects? You think the argument over welfare is acidic, wait till you have Republicans calling Democrats, "Gene Socialists," but even if we weed out diseases and birth defects, we can still go deeper. What about designing a baby to be a star football player, rock star, scientist, or maybe the perfect soldier? You can start to see the ethical and moral difficulties that might arise.

With the human genome mapped, doctors and scientist will even eventually be able to tell us if our child will be predisposed to being a dancer, a mathematician, or a violent criminal. If a child is born with a genetic imperative to be more violent than others, should we treat it any different? Or should we just put it down Spartan style, because it could be the next Hitler, and move on? Does free will enter into the equation for our little Charles Manson? Should we weed out these tendencies if we can? But aren't they there for a reason?... Go even deeper with this... What if the doctors can tell you if your baby is gay or straight? Would it be right to change that, if you could?... Maybe you're starting to see how complicated this is going to get.

Let's revist the subject of bad dystopian movies, instead this time let's talk Justin Timerblake, because if we discover the Fountain of Not Dying, (which we will,) is it right for the government to make a law preventing extreme age? Would our government dare put a cap on age the same way the National Football League puts a cap on salaries? After all, don't people kind of need to die? Not only would we quickly run out of food, room, jobs, etc, but humanity could very well stop moving forward. Again I turn to Congress, because... well just look at them... They're a bunch of old (mostly) white (mostly) men who are so stuck int their backward Baby Boomer ways that they can't even get off their assess long enough to keep the economy afloat, let alone see the reasonableness of something as simple as gay marriage. However, it is not entirely their fault. With age comes a certain recalcitrance to change or for anything new. Its a natural sort of survival mechanism hard wired into all humans (though in the future we may be able to change that too,) which is why human society needs old people to die so new people with new ideas (who are less afraid of change) can step up and continue driving us forward... but what if we never die? I mean John McCain has been in Congress ever since he fought against the Japanese with Commodore Perry in 1852, so his old ideas still hold power. Yet, is it right to mandate some sort of Logan's Run solution?

Side Prediction: Turtlenecks are going to make a
come back... in a big way.
Speaking of Congress, that brings up another problem in this whole thing... Congress is terrible at their job. (You had one job!) They can't even make any laws that effectively regulates the sale of firearms, and that technology was invented before the United States was invented. Most officials in Washington barely know how to program their VCR (that they still have for some unknown reason,) let alone know anything about how to make laws that actually deter file sharing, hacking, or the million other problems that dominate the wild west of the Internet. Make no mistake, the Internet is not only here to stay, it will become the end all and be all, so they had better figure out how to get a grasp on it, quickly, or they are going to be left even further behind than they already are. In fact, their inability to keep up with future demands is hindering us right now. Currently the lack of regulation over space transport, means that less private companies are willing to risk creating their own cargo/transport vehicles, because if something happens while a ship is carrying cargo from the ground to the International Space Station, (or some near-future space station or Moon colony,) there are no laws protecting that company in case of an accident. That means if something happens insurance will not help mitigate the loss of the vehicle and cargo, because they are not compelled to, even though they do it now when companies transport hundreds-of-millions of dollars across state and international lines with trucks, trains, planes, and cargo ships.

In the future, we can easily foresee how this trend will continue and Congress' ineptitude and slowness will not only will mean that they get left behind, but that they could potentially hold the rest of us back, as well. As government stands right now they will not be able to meet the demands of the future, (that is not an opinion that is an obvious fact,) which means we may not able to rely on them. I'm not calling for anarchy or any sort of rise to imperialism, but quite the opposite. I am asking us all to remember a quaint old idea called morality... I'll give you a minute as you look it up on Google.

You see, before the invention of laws, (which are a man made invention,) humans had to find other reasons to not kill each other or just generally be total assholes to one another, which is what the Greeks called ethos, or character. A lot of people, especially in America, don't understand that morality and laws are actually different things. When the United States was formed in the 18th century it was unique in the fact that it was founded upon a principal of laws, which at the time was great. It is part of the reason why our revolution was one of the only ones in history that did not swiftly de-evolve into a power struggle between would-be dictators. Unlike Britain, France, Spain, or all the rest, who added rules of law much later after their formation, America had laws and universial rights from the get-go. That meant there was never a time in American history where, we as a people, could not turn to a list of prescribed rules that told us what was right and wrong. Unfortunately, over the past 200+ years that has turned into a mentality of, "If it's not illegal, it's not wrong." You can see how this would be a problem.

Adultery is not illegal, but it sure as hell is immoral. There was a time when owning people as property was not illegal, but you better believe it was immoral. In many states a man who wants to marry another man is illegal, but it is not immoral. You see what I am saying? Now going forward, this attitude of "legal = moral," is going to get us into a lot of trouble, because the gears of Congress (especially this Congress) can be clocked with a calendar, while the gears of progress are clocked with a stop watch. If we continue to equate legality with morality, then nothing will ever be immoral. You want to have a sex-robot that looks like a 12-year old Selma Hayek? You want to clone yourself and keep that spare person alive for body parts? You want to weaponize your dog, (I mean as long as you get the proper gun permits and dog licenses)?

Look at it in terms of today. It is not illegal to Facebook stalk anyone, nor is it even that hard. However, is it right? Personally, I don't think so. In the future where privacy will be an even bigger issue than it is today, I think we are going to have establish our own set of moral standards about what is proper or improper when it comes to Internet stalking (a term which hopefully everyone gets started as negative and as a felony.) as well as many other things... However, that brings us to the next problem, morality is subjective. What I believe, may not be the same as what you believe, which is why we always have so many debates over Pro-Life versus Pro-Choice. That is also why Rick in the Walking Dead winds up having such a hard time, because in his lawless world he must face his own and subjective morality. Without law or religion there is no black and white... I mean, other than the episodes they are airing in black and white on AMC.

Side Prediction: In the future all lawyers will taste like chicken.
Maybe this is what worries me the most. In the future we aren't going to be able to use the whole religion-thing, (where God and Gordon Ramsey says you will burn in Hell if you don't do what's right,) to keep people in line. It will be entirely up to us. Things like laws are comforting because we don't have to think or judge for ourselves about the consequences of our actions. They are like the instruction books that come with Lego sets. You just have to follow what they say, but in a world where the instruction book tells you to how make a dinosaur and you want to make a rocketship, what do you do? I would like to think that we, as humans, will come to understand the destructiveness of our selfish decisions and try to actively take a stance against it, not just publicly, but in our own lives... but I have to be a realist... I am worried. We've lost our sense of right and wrong and put more and more faith in the easiness of paper laws made by less than stellar elected officials. I mean go onto any Internet forum and read the comments, they're not written with any sort of moral imperative (or even basic human decency) in mind. Humanity has lost a lot of its decorum, especially in the face of anonymous technology. From where I am currently sitting, this trend will probably only get worse.

Technology has already outpaced laws and will exponentially continue to do so. Cloning, genetics, nanotechnology, the Internet, and all sorts of new frontiers are waiting for us in the future, but these angels of our advancement do not come without their demons. The examples I gave above are only the most generalized and obvious of them. What happens when we have the ability to start breeding any animal we can think of, extinct or otherwise, do poaching and conservation laws go out the window? Can I hunt a saber-tooth tiger if I am willing to pay for breeding it?.. Even scarier, what if I want to develop a weaponized version of the common cold in my basement, and use it topple governments? How do you stop me?

I know I have asked a lot of questions in this entry (more than in any of the others,) but that is because I don't have any of the answers. In truth, only time will tell the outcome of all this. I want to believe in the positive, but I fear the negative more than anything. I don't want to say laws will become obsolete, but I do believe that in the future the burden of determining what is right and what is wrong will ultimately be placed on our individual shoulders. I would like to say that such a thing shouldn't be considered new or novel, since it is a concept older than the written Bible, but every time I see any of the programming on MTV or TLC, my doubt increases... So maybe, (just this once,) we shouldn't try and look ahead, but instead look back to a time when we let our principles govern us, because if we can use our science to resurrect a woolly mammoth, maybe we need to also use our conscience to resurrect a culture of ethos, before we all go extinct.