ping...
Ray Bradbury was well ahead of his time and spot on with many things. Books don’t need to be burned these days, which makes it easier and more sinister. All we need to do is edit the internet and things dissappear.
There were people memorizing whole chapters of books, The Holy Bible, Shakespeare, classics, etc. What if suddenly all our electronic medias disappeared?
Pray God will have mercy on America, and forgive our wayward, ways and trespasses, bless us Father, for we repent of our trespasses. in Jesus name, amen.
There were people memorizing whole chapters of books, The Holy Bible, Shakespeare, classics, etc. What if suddenly all our electronic medias disappeared?
Pray God will have mercy on America, and forgive our wayward, ways and trespasses, bless us Father, for we repent of our trespasses. in Jesus name, amen.
PINGPINGPINGPING!!!!
This can’t be said enough!
My only beef with the article is that America has never been a homogeneous culture. Even in our colonial times, the Puritans and the Georgia penal colony were as far apart, culturally, as you could get...
451 is now always associated with censorship and the police state, but Bradbury gave a great interview, that was included in the some of the anniversary edition paperbacks later on, where he explained that his primary message when he wrote the book was about how our obsession with television was destroying literacy. The police state destroying books came about because the society was so far past literacy and into electronic media that they considered literacy abhorrent.