Relief from Incongruity

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Alli was standing in the tree, on one of the thicker branches, looking down at the white-green leaves littering the ground. Nealy was standing above her, on a higher branch. The dappled sunlight cut through the canopy and fell on them both.

Nealy kept one hand resting on the trunk, while she held out a spoon, that she had brought with her. “Watch this,” the high schooler said.

The silver utensil bent, the silent depression turning inside out and the business end, undulating and twisting around, like the instrument had been made of leaping mercury and not stainless steel.

A spark of familiarity flashed through Alli’s eyes. “I can do that,” she thought. What she didn’t realize was that she had said that aloud. “Then do it,” Nealy challenged her. She dropped the spoon, and Alli deftly caught it, before it fell to the forest floor below.

Alli held the spoon, since returned to its former shape. The surface felt lukewarm and dull to her tiny fist. Alli huffed. The mindless metal was suddenly alive in her hands; the scoop wrapped itself all the way around, curling 360 degrees. Alli felt a slight ache in her forehead and a bitter, coppery taste in the back of her mouth. A faint, high-pitched whine receded in her ears.

“See,” Alli looked up, at the other girl, standing there in jeans and a jean jacket, “I can do it!”

“Heh,” Nealy said with a wolfish half-grin, “I knew you could do it.” She laughed and glanced at the sun and the passing clouds.

Alli laughed too and dropped the spoon. It hit the murky carpet of dirt and bounced back up, at her beck and call, like a rubber ball – morphing in the air, like a bubble of silly putty. Alli gasped and chuckled. “I haven’t done that in years,” she said to Nealy.

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How Technology Reduces Inflation

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Today, with the exponential rise of technology, we no longer live in an agricultural, industrial, manufacturing or even service economy anymore. We live in an information economy. Simply put, there are fewer jobs. Technology has reduced the global number of jobs needed or available. Hence, crises where jobs do not match the number of young people in abundance – like the Great Recession and the Arab Spring. A young population meets a job shortage.

It is better to have a kid’s entire college fund paid for, instead of hoping a kid will become rich and take care of the prior generation. We act like an aging population is a problem, when the flip side, a young population, is a far more unstable situation. As more and more people move from pre-modern, to modern to post-modern societies, they will realize that there are fewer jobs and that the price of having a child is higher than it was in the past. People will be incentivized to work longer in the jobs they do have, and have fewer kids, later, when they are better financially equipped to take care of them. This is a global phenomenon.

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