
Living at the Zoo
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Douglas "Doc" McBride dares you to step outside your door or go to a public area and find someone who does not have their face buried in a phone or some form of global information device. That's just one of his many observations in this book that reveals nuggets of wisdom, such as: ¿ the world and how it spins on a daily basis has changed-and mostly not for the good; ¿ younger generations are not taught the respect, pride, and the drive that we were growing up; ¿ today's parenting skills with the shunning of corporal punishment leave a lot to be desired. Libraries, toys that were interactiv...
Douglas "Doc" McBride dares you to step outside your door or go to a public area and find someone who does not have their face buried in a phone or some form of global information device. That's just one of his many observations in this book that reveals nuggets of wisdom, such as: ¿ the world and how it spins on a daily basis has changed-and mostly not for the good; ¿ younger generations are not taught the respect, pride, and the drive that we were growing up; ¿ today's parenting skills with the shunning of corporal punishment leave a lot to be desired. Libraries, toys that were interactive and not on a screen, cars without computers that you could actually fix in your driveway, and three channels on the TV-these are a few of the things that the author believes built a strong generation. Learn lessons from the past and get to the bottom of where we've gone wrong with the insights and observations in Living at the Zoo.