HIGH-SPEED INTERNET, A SIGN OF THE TIMES: But is it a good sign?

Researchers worry that constant looking at screens – television, computer, mobiles – can create, or at least aggravate, attention disorder problems in children.
The old joke about ADD standing for “Absent Dad Disease” may be truer than we like to think.
Given an upbringing with no functional father plus wall-to-wall electronic brain stimulation – little wonder if a youngster never learns to apply himself to reality, to set priorities or to resist impulses.
* * *
Politicians and vested interests insist that the internet needs to be high-speed. Anyone saying different would be considered a fruit loop.
But are not human beings, by and large, low-speed? And are not humans more important than the internet?
Really getting to know someone cannot be rushed. And it takes time learning to understand why a certain problem is dominating somebody’s life.
Yet don’t we all need — fairly often — to be understood and listened to?
Such help may be very scarce in a future with everybody’s minds high-speeded away from the wave-length of the human soul.
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Some Catholics join the Third Order of the Society of Saint Pius the Tenth.
Members of this order NEVER watch television.
They must say certain prayers every day and make their Confession and receive Holy Communion frequently.
Also they are encouraged to spend one hour before the Blessed Sacrament at least once weekly — kneeling in silence before the Tabernacle on the altar in their church, motivated by their belief that in that tabernacle Christ is truly present, welcoming us to himself.
But is an hour too long?
Well, doesn’t it take about 15 minutes merely to shake off the unspiritual distractions of the outside world?
Perhaps another 15 minutes to tune our ears into listening for God’s unobtrusive presence.
Finally, by God’s grace, one may enter into conversation with Our Lord . . . worldly things fade . . . at the end of the hour we’re reluctant to leave.
Having first found God in the Blessed Sacrament, then we can seek to find him in other people.


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