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The Boiling Frog Syndrome

Our Fate?

Stephen P. Watkins
6 min readSep 29, 2019

If you drop a frog in a pot of boiling water, it will of course frantically try to clamber out. But if you place it gently in a pot of tepid water and turn the heat on low, it will float there quite placidly. As the water gradually heats up, the frog will sink into a tranquil stupor, exactly like one of us in a hot bath, and before long, with a smile on its face, it will unresistingly allow itself to be boiled to death.

Version of the story from Daniel Quinn‘s The Story of B

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One of the advantages of having reached a certain age is that, if your memory is still working, you can remember how things used to be and you can see how they have changed over the years and decades.

One of the disadvantages of having reached a certain age is that, if your memory is still working, you can remember how things used to be and you can see how they have changed over the years and decades.

As a Baby Boomer born in 1952, I have vivid memories of growing up in Los Angeles, California in a Cold War world where air-raid sirens and bombs shelters, the “Communist Menace” and foaming-at-the-mouth right-wing rhetoric from the John Birch Society and their ilk, overt and subtle forms of racism, sexism, and homophobia…

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Stephen P. Watkins
Stephen P. Watkins

Written by Stephen P. Watkins

Top Writer in Politics. Author of “The ‘Plenty’ Book — the Answer to the Question: What Can I do to Make This a Better World?,” available on Amazon.com

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