American Lifestyle: Fall in Love. Get Married. Fall Out of Love. Get Divorced. Rinse. Repeat.
by John Lawrence
Celebrities set the tone of American lifestyles, and most of them adhere to the serial marriage model. Except for those who have millions of dollars and prefer to go on fighting after the marriage is resolved like Johnny Depp and Amber Heard. It wasn't enough that Heard got a $7 million divorce settlement. She could have taken the money and gone home. I mean $7 million is a considerable chunk of change, but she chose to go on fighting even after the divorce. She wrote an article which defamed Johnny Depp. At least according to him it was defamatory. So naturally he sued her for defamation. Meanwhile, the media and the lawyers were getting rich. When there are so many more important issues that money and energy could be devoted to, much money and energy were poured into the issue of whether or not Amber Heard had defamed Johnny Depp or vice versa. So what. Who Cares. Even more entertaining than their movies. We are entertaining ourselves to death.
Then there's Taylor Swift with whom one can hardly keep up with all the songs she's written and records she's made off of her serial relationships. Not to mention all of her Swifty fans who cried crocodile tears over the fact that they couldn't get tickets to one of her concerts. Boo. Hoo. Children are starving in Africa, and people are feeling abused because they can't go to a Taylor Swift concert? What kind of values are these? People are all about emulating celebrities so when a Swifty actually gets into a relationship or a marriage, they must ask themselves, when the simplest problem comes up, "what would Taylor do". Why probably just drop the guy like a hot potato and then write a song about it. This trivializes human relationships. Of course money is not an issue regardless of what happens. Celebrities have more of that commodity than they know what to do with. At least what to do with it constructively like the man who took his fortune, went to Africa and repopulated a game reserve from scratch thereby creating jobs in tourism for the local population. He spent $100 million of his own money, but singlehandedly brought hope and prosperity to a great many people.
Mozambique's Gorongosa National Park was the envy of Africa. Wildlife drew tourists from around the world. But, beginning in the 1960's, a man made catastrophe (war) slaughtered the animals until, it was said, there was nothing left but mosquitos and landmines.Then Greg Carr decided it was his life's work to restore Gorongosa National Park to greatness and restore the local population to some semblance of a decent life. He educated the children, imported all kinds of animals that had previously made a home there, and by the miracle of sexual reproduction, the various herds of predators and prey animals returned themselves to their former glory. At least there are some millionaires and billionaires who want to do good deeds with their money. Then there are the self indulgent celebrities and all their followers who could care less about anything other than their own petty and expensive needs and habits.