Tuesday, November 14, 2006

PART IV: What if the world was a perfect place?

I received a letter (what a great thing that people still write letters) asking the following question:
What if the world was a perfect place?
The answer lies between your eyes and your LCD display:


At first, if the world was a perfect place, there would be more beavers.
As an animal, beaver is a good example of a happy creature. Building and building, without a real reason to build. It doesn´t questionize its reason to live or its function on the earth. It just builds. It shows us how we really don´t need to think further.
Most certainly, in a perfect world, there would be more beavers.





A beaver.


In a perfect world, money would matter more. Like everyone knows, communism never succeeded because human beings are greedy animals. The problem with the capitalism is that not everyone is greedy enough. In a perfect world everybody would put the money on the highest place on their personal podium and capitalism would finally work. How can we ever save this planet if all of us aren´t thinking about just money?

Rupert Murdoch thinks about money.



In a perfect world, everybody would be the same. The problem in this unperfect world is the diversity. There are too many kind of people, too many different ways to see things and too many different opinions. Most of the people have to spend their days arguing with people who disagree with them. With people who are wrong. Those people don´t understand. They say that diversity is a richness. It is not true. It creates bad mood and also children with three hands.





Order Jim Wootens book "We are all the same" from Amazon.com.




In a perfect world, milk cans would be like balls. They would always be in balance and never fall.




No more milk on the table.

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