TEXT A American’s life has once
again been greatly changed by the new age of science and technology since the
Second World War. Everything has speeded up to a tremendous rate. Information is
immediate, nobody has to wait to hear any news. There is a television set in
every house. There is instant printing which has changed the way that offices
and the universities run. But perhaps the biggest change is the
telephone. People no longer write letters to one another. They pick up the
telephone. Every house has at least two, sometimes three, four and five
telephones. Every office bas many telephones. It speeds things up. And its cost
is not much. Perhaps the biggest difference is in the growth of
computers. Computers can think, can remember, can calculate faster than any
human brain. A computer can hold more than a million facts in its memory. There
are computers that are so big they would fill this entire auditorium with
machinery. Businesses and banks are now managed by computers. Parts of the
government are managed by computers. Students’ grades, their marks are all
managed by computers. However, if a computer
makes a mistake about one of you, it is terribly difficult to correct that
mistake. And sometimes a computer does make mistake, never learned by another
computer and the same mistake will go into other computers. So in many ways
people have become the servants of computers who are bigger and cleverer than
they are. Of course, computers speed up every operation because computers can
immediately record, remember facts and produce new information that it combines
with these facts. It makes science possible. Modem science would not be possible
without the computers to do the calculations: Life is
complicated. People need to know many technical skills to get money from a bank.
You have to know how to work the automatic teller that will give you your money.
You have to know how to use the new punch button telephones. Everything is very
complicated. Many Americans find it so complicated, that they try to escape by
drinking alcohol. Alcoholism is a major disease in America. Some people take
drugs and some people belong to strange religion looking for some meaning in
their life. I think perhaps you read about the terrible event in Guyana, when
people who belong to a strange religion all committed suicide. This sort of
thing would not have happened fifty years ago. It is a by-product of an age that
has become too complicated for people to live in happily. There
are many contradictions in American society. Because of the complex way of life
people are no longer the optimistic, self- reliant free people that they were
when they were pioneers, when they were conquering the new land. Now people are
becoming more pessimistic. Very often they are lonely. The doctors who have the
most work are psychiatrists trying to help people find ways that they can again
be happy. Often efficiency replaces good quality. We still have
two classes of people. Too much money is still in the hands of too few people.
The rich capitalists no longer wear black hats and stripped trousers. They have
faces that nobody knows because now they are called the "multi - national
corporations. "They are the great faceless companies like General Motors,
General Fords, United States Steel. There are no longer any faces like Mr.
Rockefeller or Mr. Ford. They have become faceless forces, which control our
government and control the money. The poorest class is still mostly made up of
black people, minority people, Spanish speaking Americans. And the poorest
people have not benefited from the new age of science and technology. So
Americans are no longer the happy care-free people that they once were. What makes American people more pessimistic
A.The fast pace and complicated way of life. B.Too much leisure time. C.Loose relationship between people. D.All of the above.