As I mentioned a
few blog posts back, I’ve always loved the Scifi movie, Blade Runner. It’s only been this past week since I bought and
read, Do Androids Dream of Electric
Sheep, the book upon which that movie was based. They are not the same. The
novel was eye opening and now I see why Philip Dick is so acclaimed.
One big thing
that made an impression on me that was left out of the movie (thus the name
change from book to movie), is a future much like the one we might be headed toward. Of course there are all kinds of time lines/possibilities in our
future, but we have stepped onto a sad and dangerous path that appears to be
heading toward more annihilation of the environment and the people and animals on
it. More and more species are becoming extinct as the land continues to be
ravaged for greed’s sake.
In the novel,
man has killed off almost all species of animals (most extinct)—and poisoned
the environment. He has then made android animals. This allows Rick Decker (our
android hunter, main character) to be able to pretend empathy by feeding and
caring for an electric sheep he keeps in a pen on the roof of his apartment
building.
More and more ‘kipple’
floats to the ground every day, swirling in the air from all the poisonous stuff made and discarded, or left behind after a cataclysm that sent most of
humanity to “outposts” in the sky.
With all this
desolation around, the people remaining have to have mood adjusters to deal
with the depression and emptiness that abounds. There are machines to hold onto
that raise one’s mood and the 24/7 TV show of the man god called Mercer who
talks endlessly.
This dystopian
novel prepared me for the feelings I would have at the results of our
Presidential election. I hope we are not headed into this nightmare scenario: the snake oil salesman whips into town promising the perfect elixir to
cure all your ills. But being the master at diversion and deceit, he has no
real cure, and is only there to take your money before moving on to his next
opportunity, leaving disappointment and worse behind; no cures, no hope and no
money.
But there is
hope—there’s always hope. After this election season, we still have the
concerns of our daily lives and local issues to deal with. So I’ve decided to open
up my other Facebook page that some of you might like to visit for new/old
ideas and speculative, creative solutions for a brighter future. I’ve called it
ANCIENT WISDOM ~ RE-IMAGINED. If you go and find that it stimulates your own creativity and gives
you hope for a brighter future, like and share it. But above all, stay centered and positive.
-0-
“Maybe each human being lives in a unique world, a private world
different from those inhabited and experienced by all other humans. . .
If reality differs from person to person, can we speak of reality
singular, or shouldn't we really be talking about plural realities? And
if there are plural realities, are some more true (more real) than
others? What about the world of a schizophrenic? Maybe it's as real as
our world. Maybe we cannot say that we are in touch with reality and he
is not, but should instead say, His reality is so different from ours
that he can't explain his to us, and we can't explain ours to him. The
problem, then, is that if subjective worlds are experienced too
differently, there occurs a breakdown in communication ... and there is
the real illness.”
― Philip K. Dick
― Philip K. Dick
2 comments:
Very good post. Well written as always.
I also worry about the environment and wildlife. Unfortunately, because of population growth, nature has a dire future.
Keep the faith. I know you do.
I will too, and I'll keep feeding my live goat who probably dreams of electric people.
FUNNY! I'm sure more animals than your goat dream and wish for electric people. When the electricity goes out, poof!
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