Friday, June 1, 2012

THE PROBLEM WITH PREDESTINATION

Predestination is a tricky thing to deal with.  Gentle Reader, let's suppose you know something bad is going to happen.  Through the use of predestination, you know the time, place and the people involved.  You also have the ability to stop this horrible tragedy from taking place.  Gentle Reader, I'm not trying to insult you with unsubstantiated accusations, but rather this is hypothetical.  Suppose through the use of predestination you know the time, place and the people involved, but you do nothing about it.  You refuse to act upon your predestination because seeing innocent people suffer is fun, exciting and hilarious.  Gentle Reader, I'm not trying to attack you, but suppose you're suffering from writers block and seeing this predestination tragedy unfold is the only way to break through this writers block and financially benefit from this crime that you foretold through predestination.  In that case, you're just as guilty of the crime as the people who commited the horrible tragedy.  It's not enough to have the gift of predistination.  Gentle reader, having predistination is useless if you don't use it to prevent tragedies and save innocent lives.  Because only using predestination as a story telling tool is a pointless waste of talent.  As Spiderman once said, "With great powers comes great responsibilities."












































































































As I struggle to understand the basics of predestination as a tool for law enforcement, here are some photos of actress and rock star Kylie Minogue.

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