Entries from October 2006

Another birthday arrives, and it’s time to reflect

October 28, 2006 · Leave a Comment

Baby Sharon
Even as a toddler, I was pumping the locals for information. No doubt, I wrote it up and reported the news to my cadre of dolls, obediently lined up on our sofa to provide my audience.


AS THEY SAY, “TIME FLIES” — or perhaps, the older I get the more I attract flies. Either way, the past 54 years have truly flown by, and this seems like a perfect opportunity to consider the changes I’ve seen since those early days back in Indiana.

If you’re anywhere near my age, then you’ll surely agree that nearly everything we knew as children is gone, replaced with a less personal, less caring world grown too bright and too busy for Sunday afternoon naps. My mind loves to unfold and review those memories stored so long ago in those innocent 1950s.

During the lazy days of summer, my dad took us (mom and all six garrulous kids) on Sunday drives nearly every weekend. We’d visit my aunts and uncles, join in on picnics, and wander the valleys surrounding our modest two bedroom home (yep — two bedrooms for a family of eight). Dad drove one of those station wagons with the mock wood paneling on the sides. He smelled like Old Spice, and he’d drive a bit quicker over the little hills in the one-lane road — just to hear us squeal with delight as our stomachs flipped.

The Ferguson Clan moved as a herd, six girls and two smiling parents, proud but weary. Mom and Dad stretched a dime to the tensil strength of a dollar, and we giggling girls never realized how poor we really were.

Television replaced radio shortly after I arrived in 1952, so I recall Saturday evenings gathered around a 9-inch screen with hi-fidelity sound watching Frankenstein and The Wolfman turned our squeals to terrified screams. We’d each get one bottle of Coca-Cola, and Fay would pop corn, which we’d devour during commercials.The following Monday afternoons might find me back in front of the ’scream screen’, munching on a toasted cheese sandwich, watching fifteen minutes of Bugs Bunny before Mom chased me outside where I’d meander the meadows, chasing frogs and pretending to be a princess.

My mother worked off and on, but for the most part, she spent her days with us, and I learned to love watching her sparkling blue eyes. Large families weren’t unusual then, and family reunions often included fifty or more children — a raucous bunch of cousins with tanned legs and empty pockets, running, laughing, and enjoying the feel of rocks beneath our barefeet and dirt beneath our nails.In sickness, in health; in triumphs, in disappointment; through lean days and fat, we drew closer together, and we remain that way still. Our faith roots grew deep within well-tended hearts; no matter what might come, we knew we had God and each other.

Since those days, I’ve watched the American family diminish, not just in size but also in heart. When did this idyllic world change? When did innocence die? Perhaps, it started in the middle 1960s — perhaps on November 22, 1963, when a shadow group assassinated an American president — a blood sacrifice on the 33rd parallel.

Since that ritualistic event, childhoods have been reshaped — and each passing generation has grown smaller and more distant. Families scatter on weekends, coming together on stressed-out weeknights around extracurricular activities rather than home-centered ones.Children have abandoned the playground for the PlayStation. The family cars commute to sterile offices and return their weary drivers to packaged dinners accompanied by mind-numbing, digital television. Gone are the days when the medicine cabinet held only aspirin and cod-liver oil — stocked now to near-bursting with prescriptions for every family member, labeled with familiar names like Ritalin, Lexapro, and Prozac.

In fifty years, America has gone to sleep. We have become a nation of disinterested zombies. Just like in the monster movies that used to frighten me so. However, this monstrous trance-formation has taken place — not on that flickering 9-inch screen — but in widescreen, horizon to horizon, Post-ModernVision.Where will we be in another fifty years? I shudder at the thought, but no matter what horrors society might bring, one thing has not changed — will not change: God. He’s the same today as He was yesterday. He loved us then, He loves us now. He gave us free will, and look what we’ve done with it. The world has all but replaced Him with Science.

What of the post-modern monsters? Need we continue to sleep while the monsters roam? Is it too late? Perhaps not — perhaps, small steps could eventually return us to that bright path of wakefulness — to those days of running feet and dirty fingernails, and honest, innocent laughter.

Start this weekend. Spend time around a puzzle or board game, play a game of catch, then load up the car, and take the family for a drive through the countryside.And be sure to drive fast over those bumps.

Categories: Family · Introspection · Life Lessons

Frankenstein and the Genes of Isis

October 25, 2006 · Leave a Comment

Part II in the series “Hollywood and the Coming Apocalypse”

IT’S CALLED DNA, and it’s both hard science and the ’stuff dreams are made of’. Modernists claim credit for the ‘discovery’ of the germ of humanity, all the while nodding graciously to earlier researchers such as Gregor Mendel. The magical double helix served as a platform for the elevation of Watson and Crick to demi-god status and as the backbone of a brand new branch of science — chimeric cloning (aka ‘transhumanism’).

Mary Shelley imagined a hideous creature — the modern Prometheus — compiled of stitched parts and a humanist soul. Some may call Shelley’s Frankenstein monster a metaphor for government devoid of religion, others a post-apocalyptic picture of evolving mankind in its inevitable chaotic end. No matter how one interprets the story, the 19th century mind of Mary Shelley painted a literary portrait of the true monster we face today — science unbridled. (more…)

Categories: Connecting Dots · Film and Television · Hollywood Series · Paganism · Prophecy

Self-Image and Society’s Expectations

October 4, 2006 · Leave a Comment

Sharon Skinny
My dear mother took this photo of me back in 1978. On the back, she wrote a personal note where she calls me her “little pea pod”. I had no idea then just how ‘little’ I was, because I was dieting even then. As I recall, my goal was to weigh 99 pounds (I probably weighed 107 or so here).


WHILE shopping at our local supermarket last week, I took a few minutes to peruse the magazine rack. Few places in our post-modern world so reveal the mixed message that our society sends to women. Here you’ll find periodicals specializing in fitness, feminity, and food — often in the very same magazine. One such woman’s journal reveals diet secrets, tips for surviving a one-night stand, and the world’s best chocolate cake recipe — all in the same issue.

Flashback to 1978. (more…)

Categories: Introspection · Life Lessons

Welcome to the Brave New World

October 1, 2006 · Leave a Comment

I am the eye in the sky
Looking at you
I can read your mind
I am the maker of rules
Dealing with fools
I can cheat you blind
And I don’t need to see any more
To know that
I can read your mind, I can read your mind– Alan Parsons Project


IMAGINE yourself stranded — out of gas — on a small gravel road, somewhere in the middle of Kansas. You have no map of the area, and you are certain that your hotel back in Topeka is at least an hour away. You check your cell phone, but the battery’s dead. What do you do? Even a few years ago, you might well have started walking, hoping to find a nearby farmhouse.

Not so today. The modern road warrior can now press a button on his onboard GPS tracking service. “May I help you, Mr. Larson? We see that your gas tank is empty, and it appears that you are alone. We’ve dispatched a rescue truck from the nearest participating dealer, and we’ve placed a call to your hotel — that’s the Center City Inn, isn’t it? By the way, since you failed to refuel when the guage reached one-quarter tank, and since you’ve driven over the speed limit three times, we have debited your credit card the mandatory fine of $300.00. Shall I remain on the line until help arrives?”

Although I write fiction, I assure you that this scenario is very real. Take for instance, the recent case in Connecticut involving Acme rental company. According to the complaint, Acme has been charging customers for driving over 79 miles per hour.

“Vehicles driven in excess of the posted speed limit will be charged $150 per occurrence. All our vehicles are GPS equipped.” (Acme eventually replaced the words “posted speed limit” with “79 miles per hour.”)  

GPS tracking systems provide police with precise locations of criminals, offer directions to the lost driver, and serve as a 24/7 rescue service, but there is a darker side to this 21st century techno-savior. You and I are always being watched. Soon, closed-circuit cameras will gaze upon us at every intersection while reading RFID tags placed on our license plates and coordinating our position with a vast computer interface.We’ll even hear personalized commercials on our satellite radio — “Mr. Larson, MegaSaver has a special on diet frozen dinners! Turn right at the next signal. We’ll reserve half a dozen of the chicken marsala – your favorite and so good for a diabetic. Don’t wait! Their stock is running low!”

Debit card information will be tracked via our personal Verichip implant, to provide security and efficiency. We can fill up our fuel tanks without having to swipe a card. The computers will conduct the transaction without our having to give it a passing thought. Low on cash? No problem! “Mr. Larson, we note that your account is running low and your next paycheck won’t be deposited for three days. We’ll go ahead and advance you five hundred credits as provided by your contract with us. We have your signature on file for the loan. This leaves three thousand left in your equity loan account. Remember to repair the lock on your backdoor or you run the risk of default on your agreement. Have a nice day!”

Truckers will benefit as well. The spacious lanes of the trans-continental transit system will track each delivery and exact tolls along a set of RFID enabled collection stations. Truck weights, driving records, and even blood alcohol reports will ensure prompt, safe delivery of Pan-America’s goods.

Commuter lanes will facilitate quicker morning drives, and mechanized sentry markers will assess the number of passengers. Any driver caught without a full car will be pulled over remotely, and substantial fines will be debited from the driver’s account. Traffic drones will fly high above, monitoring traffic flow while sending back video to human workers far below ground level.

Even our homes will be safer in a few years. RFID locks will open only to a verified sensor key, and television and computer screen cameras will alert authorities of any civic or criminal violations. “Mr. Larson, you are not allowed to smoke in this apartment. Please remain in place and wait for the civic patrol. Have a nice day!”

The country we know today as the United States will no longer exist, but will have been replaced with Pan-America, Region I of the Global Alliance. Our infrastructure will be in the hands of Spain and China, gas stations owned by Russia and Venezuela, and all communcations will be under the single umbrella of an international conglomerate. Our news, consumer goods, and travel will be controlled. We will be chipped at birth, and once our genetic print is examined, we’ll be approved for mating or scheduled for vasectomy or tubal ligation.

Far-fetched? Thirty years ago, when I first read Aldous Huxley’s 1932 novel, Brave New World, I would have said yes. Older now, and having spent the past ten years observing our changing geopolitical and economic system, I fear Huxley’s world is not just coming — it may already be here.

Categories: Big Brother · Connecting Dots · Final Freedoms · One World Government