Instead of fluffing about just thinking and worrying about it as I did initially, I actually set off to determine the comparative pros and cons in each option that I had, evaluating the consequences of each of my options thus helping me to make more informed decisions quickly. This is a habit that I intend to continue practicing.
Tradition vs. The infiltration of newly acquired technology: Many people still believe, despite that the internet has been looming as it has for a decade and that credit violations are traced and nullified more promptly than ever before in human history, people are still leery. And understandably so. But many people uphold such an absolute though unfounded regard toward ritual, tradition, and historical convention that they automatically discount anything new. I honestly first hand see people around me that "cut off their noses despite their faces" so frequently that they pose their own prison, thus creating this prisoner of consciousness refraining them. What I mean to imply is that many people, while they believe that they are in a fruitful process of cautionary preservation, otherwise self-aggrandizement, are actually posing as their own enemies enforcing them into retrogression. In concern to the debate over internet vs. online shopping, accordingly, to take this easy way out in its dismissal would be preposterous.
At the same time, though, technology has altered and continues to alter far too many scientific advancements, as well as too much generalized "stuff," that humans are evolving into something still unfamiliar to us all. Technology has created, in the mindset of trying to keep with such rapid progression -- as Don Henley of the Eagles has noted in their well-known hit -- this "Life in the Fast Lane"; only this Fast Lane revolves around technology rather than methamphethamines.
Understandably, throwing in some barbiturates to counteract this rapid expansion is only craved because humanity is still going through a stage of evolution involving the "I" development, brought on by the revolution which began in the late 1960's United States throughout the age of the hippies, as opposed from the "we" stage prior to then. Legalized and the prescriptions of...
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