A Martian Sends a Postcard Home 2024
By HarryC
- 4875 reads
(with apologies to Craig Raine)
Smart-phones are electronic gadgets with many apps.
Humans treasure them for their frivolousness.
They cause attention deficit addiction disorder
and make humans to do strange things, like dress
up as dogs to film themselves, or climb high
buildings and fall off.
I have never seen one fly - except
when the battery dies.
Mostly they perch on the hand.
Humans look at them all the time.
They walk around looking at them.
They drive looking at them.
They meditate and pray looking at them.
They work looking at them.
They shop looking at them.
They urinate and defecate
looking at them.
They eat looking at them.
They masturbate looking at them.
They take their children for walks
looking at them.
They go to live music performances
and spend the whole time
looking at them.
They socialise looking at them.
They sight-see looking at them.
They attend funerals looking at them.
They have sex looking at them.
They sit through wars, explosions,
tsunamis, earthquakes, wildfires,
volcanic eruptions, tornados,
drive-by shootings, plane crashes
looking at them.
They sleep looking at them.
They die looking at them.
Sometimes, they talk to them.
Mostly, they shout at them.
They don't use Caxtons much
any more.
They'll surrender in a couple of hours.
We won't need major weaponry.
(IMAGE: my own)
- Log in to post comments
Comments
It is a real problem! My
It is a real problem! My frustration is that parents are so often talking to their young children while looking at their phone. Children need eye-contact and the feeling of undivided attention and interest. Rhiannon
- Log in to post comments
Well said.
Well said.
I saw a piece on the news last night about schools in Scotland making children hand in their mobiles and 'park' them in a holder at the front of the classroom before each lesson. Even the kids themselves say that they can't focus when their phone is with them because of constant notifications. They are the crack cocaine of the modern age. For me, schoolchildren shouldn't take mobiles into school at all. If they need to contact parents then go through the school channel.
- Log in to post comments
App attack!
A seasoned (or marinated) diarist, who was probably me, once wrote...
With a book in my hand and demonic android device in my bin, that’ll be the day that I die. And as I’m lowered into a hole amongst nettles where my bones will enrich Balkan soil, no photographs or video recordings will be allowed; not even where a tourist permit has been purchased. There may be an afterlife but I hope not, unless clergy can convince me it’s a place devoid of apps.
There’s no internet at home today. Visiting under-sixties people skulked, comparing the situation to having the brain removed, but maybe that happened months or even years ago.
Turlough
- Log in to post comments
Oh well, Orwell
I read your reply on my phone in the garden but I couldn't reply to it because my phone won't let me do comments and stuff on ABC. It's as if it knows we're talking about it here.
I wonder if George Orwell's grandchildren have smart phones.
I've got to admit that the navigating thingy is very handy.
Turlough
- Log in to post comments
Well said Harry and I totally
Well said Harry and I totally agree with you.
I don't even own a mobile phone, just a landline, even though I know mobiles can be handy in an emergency and give you independence, but they can also be annoying, I don't seek to know what others are doing, or wish to have my personal life plastered over the internet, I am quite happy pottering around at home minding my own buisness.
Thanks for sharing this great poem.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
I feel superior saying my
I feel superior saying my phone doesn't do that, which is most things, other than text and recieve and make calls.
- Log in to post comments
Great to see you are posting
Great to see you are posting on here again :0) Not being technological enough to have ever wanted a phone I cannot understand the addiction. Though I love having the internet, don't want to take it with me everywhere. I worry that phones are softening people up for AI and virtual reality, where nothing is free
- Log in to post comments
Thankyou for the link. I am
Thankyou for the link. I am not so hopeful as he is though, that anything Democracies say might hold it back, so long as there are party donations and lobbying
- Log in to post comments
The thing I am most worried
The thing I am most worried about is how much electricity this is using, and how much more it will use. It will not be possible to have renewable energy for the fuel we use now, as well as the added demands from AI. There is nothing that shows it can help with climate change - all AI can do is give more details on the destruction we know we are doing, while the power it guzzles speeds up climate change in ways unforeseen by those who first realised the effects of fossil fuels
- Log in to post comments
yes. And if you are one of
yes. And those who say it is wrong not to give young children access to such a powerful tool, I cannot think of ANY powerful tool I would want to give a young child? That quote about "power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely" We are taking away a child's capacity to be happy/aware/inspired in the moment, that is a kind of corruption, not to be able just to BE
- Log in to post comments
This is our Poem of the Month
This is our Poem of the Month - Congratulations!
- Log in to post comments