Remember When Inventors Were Heroes?
My medical thriller is .99 through Sunday. If you haven't yet read PoJ, co-authored with my husband dbhalling, check it out! The price is right...
“Pendulum of Justice reads like a book on anti-gravity: impossible to put down! My main complaint is how come the next book in the series isn’t out already.”
Peter Cresswell
Publisher of NotPC
“Pendulum of Justice reads like a book on anti-gravity: impossible to put down! My main complaint is how come the next book in the series isn’t out already.”
Peter Cresswell
Publisher of NotPC
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Stone tools? Pottery? Leather?
I'm thinking pink, soft extinction...Well, maybe we'll have Twitter to follow the whole thing.
There are very few politicians who can be considered heroes. My heroes don’t have to be perfect because I have yet to meet a perfect person. One last item, heroes can also be people who change the world for the better (like Ayn Rand).
I believe he still has a web site at woodynorris.com
Yes enough vampires and zombies.
Since writing my original post, I remembered another series of books that I devoured while in elementary school. They dealt with American historical figures as they "might have been" when they were young and had "familiar" names (Alexander Graham Bell was "Alec Bell").
Many were inventors or similar. I remember Alexander Graham Bell and The Wright Brothers, also George Washington Carver and "Tom Edison". There may have been one on Henry Ford also.
Most were about Annie Oakley, Jim Bridger, Davy Crockett, etc. There were a lot of them. All were presented as positive role models and heroic figures.
Off-topic a bit but does anyone remember "The Equalizer"? The show went off-track as it went on, I suspect in an attempt to compete with "The X-Files", but I always found the hero interesting. A man with a dark past who had decided to right wrongs, one person or situation at a time. Violence was a last resort. Almost always, he figured out his opponents' resources and weaknesses, then used them to bring the opponent down. A thinking person's James Bond.
It's not just inventors no longer considered heroes, it seems to me anyone that achieves beyond the PC avg/mean is marginalized and set out as someone not to emulate.
Apparently, from a political point of view, it is better to be admired as a gangsta than the gentleman that invented air conditioning. Better to be a drug dealer than the fellow that used the secret recipe to market Coca Cola. We should tear down an older southern woman for the language she once used, instead of teaching the kids Harlan Sanders was 66 years old before he figured out KFC.
IMHO, as a Nation we have been talked into keeping our eyes on the wrong ball.
I think that the ubiquity of 'magic' may also explain the return to religiosity.
Jan
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