THE LOST WORLD

Imagine a world where no one has a cell phone and nobody wants one. A world without computers, a world where you can buy a brand new, ranch style home in a nice neighborhood for under $30,000 and a good used car for $100.

A world without homeless people, or a global homosexual agenda, or lockdowns.

The comparison between the Quality of Life in 1973 and today, 50 years later, is stark.

50 years goes by in a flash when you’re living it and it’s like yesterday to me, so when I look at how things were to how they are now, it’s like stepping back into the Age of Dinosaurs. Life was so much better then. There was almost no pollution, everything was cheaper, cars, gas, homes, food, everything, in comparison to wages. Inflation crept along instead of soaring to new daily heights, so it made sense to have savings accounts in banks.

We were a lot happier. We felt secure in our futures. Jobs were plentiful, opportunity was everywhere, and living was really, really good.

That was then and I’m glad I lived it.

The big changes we’ve seen, especially in the last ten years, are only a warning sign, like a rising wind or a whiff of smoke in the air, of the dramatically different new world that’s coming.

It’s like building a tower with bricks but no mortar. If the base is level, the tower can get pretty tall but the higher it’s built, the more unstable it gets, until it’s so high that it finally collapses of itself into a heap of junk.

I know this is going to happen soon, not the end of civilization or of government but the end of how everything is done, of how we live and are governed. We won’t have to wait much longer to find out.