
With half-baked mystical promises, every man’s work, pursued steadily, tends to become an end in itself, and so to bridge over the loveless chasms of life. Each day, the wire services that provide news capsules for all media—from radio to the Internet—detail stories of bureaucratic waste, inefficiency, and corruption. Television news magazines like 60 Minutes and Nightline virtually depend on these stories for their popularity and high ratings, as do late-night television comics, newspapers, and magazines. In terms of challenges to government and the establishment in general, however. The mass media cannot compare to the diverse voices and opinions on the Internet or those associated with interactive television, cellular phones, and other evolving media. For example, we do not have bloggers creating their own forms of news and in two short years, Randolph Harris Research and Development has written more articles than journalist, who have been in the business for 40 years, which might be generating some animosity from seasoned jerkenheads. The news of the day is commonly a lie, and that lie a stupid one: somebody in, somebody out, a new chariot, a new play, a hand at quadrille descried to a pip.

This is the most dangerous game. When you can turn to light, do not make this darkness your house. Do not you wander here searching and moaning. Many media scholars believe that the techomedia are radically altering virtually all groups and organizations Worldwide. Technopagans, a term coined by Anne Rice, are creating endless clusters of new and very valuable groups with some common intense commercially exploitable interest. It is clear that the technomedia and techonopagans have enabled many marginalized groups—those based on ethnicity, gender, age, disability, religion, and sexual orientation, as well as low-income nations (the politically correct term for third World country)—to vice their perspectives, learn about the ideas and concerns of others, and instantaneously communicate with legions of people across this beautiful Earth. Some technopagans and scholars contend that the technomedia has brought even greater changes to bureaucracies. With the help of the new media, debureaucratization of the unreality that TV and newspapers play in the dissemination of fostering lies and trauma for entertainment will proceed at an accelerate rate in this century, to the point that virtually all news bureaucracies will become smaller and more manageable, and some will become obsolete because they are not providing the public with helpful information, besides the weather.

Electronic communications have already begun to produce dramatic changes in many large corporations, as it has facilitated the removal of middle management and eliminated millions of jobs. For instance, bank tellers have been replaced by automated teller machines (ATMs), TV news anchors are expected to be replaced by robots, and cars can now even drive themselves. I used to be against the rise in technology, until I noticed how rude and sarcastic many humans are. I come from a family where you are not supposed to speak much, and if you do not have anything nice to say, do not say anything at all because not only is it improper, but being rude to the wrong person can get your wig split. However, after interacting with psychopaths who are employed, I welcome machines. I do not like unnecessary rude comments, nor assumptions. And since we cannot control people, and do not like to complain, many corporations are just finding it easier to replace them. However, it is sad because human interaction is great, but no human interaction is better than dealing with deviant people. As more people shop by computer, the number of department stores and supermarkets may decline as well, which could be a good thing because it will reduce the number of cars on the road, decrease vehicle insurance rates and the number of automobile accidents will go down, saving millions of lives.

Inexpensive, high-quality videos and teleconferencing, like Cisco TelePresence, which is a TV that can link two physically separated rooms so they resemble a single conference room, will eliminate educational bureaucracies at all levels and even supplement the work office. Basically, it is a TV that you can watch, and the people in the TV can see you and interact with you also. If you think about it, technology wise, as a society, we are behind. We do not have many internet cafes, it is hard to find public WiFi, and there are no pay phones on the street. Not everyone has a cell phone, and what happens if your cell phone dies or gets lost and you need to make a phone call? Society is set up for the wealthy, and technology is an equalizer, making sure that everyone has access to the resources they require. We should have modern telephone booths, with an integrated computer capable of 5G internet service (5G is about 100 times faster than what you are using today), where you can pay to access the internet, make phone calls, and charge your phone on every street corner by now, it is almost 2020 and the World, technologically speaking still looks like we are stuck in 1985.

It has also been predicted that many of these overpriced universities and colleges will also be replaced by a small number of education centers with high-tech media capabilities and media-savvy instructors, who will teach and offer affordable and safe college degrees to students all over the globe. Again, this is good people will not have to buy school clothes, will not get bullied, nor will they get sexually assaulted like many young men and women do on college campuses. It will also reduce fraternity hazing, saves lives, and keep cars off of the road, which will save energy and the environment. Without so many people on the streets, crime will also go down because people will be tucked away safely in their houses, and when they go out, it will be for a purpose. Evening—that mystic period between the glare and gloom of the World when life is changing from one sphere or condition to another. Ah, the promise of the night. What does it not hold for the weary! What old illusion of anticipation is not here forever repeated! Moonlight is a medium the most suitable for a romance writer to get acquainted with his illusive guest.
