Be careful of technology. Do not embrace it wholeheartedly. Besides the fact you – and the society you live in – may become so dependent upon it, that you may find it impossible to survive without it. In addition, in the hands of corrupt leaders, it can allow them to impose a control so total that we may never be able to break free of it.
In addition, when interacting through the medium of technology, unless highly disciplined, you could find yourself separated from your surroundings, and, as a result, wondering who or what the heck you are. It brings things and people that are distant far closer, but also distances those that are close. It encloses you in a bubble of electro-magnetics, of high-frequency energetics. Doors open as you approach them, toilets flush when you rise, taps turn on when you place your hand under them. After a day of relating to a virtual world via a computer screen, arrive home to sing into fantasy world of on-line streaming and games. In the end, you will live vicariously in a reality of someone’s else… not your own.
By the removal of access to resources as basic as food and water, housing and employment, the populace becomes disempowered. This is done by the forced introduction of the “laws” of private ownership into societies that held all their basic resources in common. Once this concept enters into the space of communal resources, it breaks down a basic tenet upon which many of these societies were built—that human needs like water, and often land, could not be “owned”. How could any own the very water that was so essential to all beings? That was an absurd concept. This water is sacred and should be treated as such by all living beings.