I was at a conference for most of the week in Savannah, Georgia. So I didn't blog. I did end up watching lots of hotel television with endless Pawn Stars, History's Greatest Mysteries and the Curse of Oak Island (which is a series I've watched for several years but only in hotels...it is about treasure seekers at this island who don't seem to know when to give up and stop digging). I watched tons of programs about the Spanish conquest of the New World and their endless search for El Dorado. One thing I noted is that they never seemed to find it and when they did find gold, it was never enough.
And I noted that in ever village they passed through they asked where El Dorado was and the villagers always pointed to the next village. I'm thinking Conquistadors were not the sharpest sword in the scabbard because they kept marching on oblivious that the villagers just wanted them to leave without excessive pillaging.

Still people think that El Dorado is out there just out of reach. I always ponder this when I see the commercials that swarm Ancient Mystery and treasure programming. There are lots of offers to diversify and buy gold or silver coins as a way to have money in case everything goes to hell. The thing that baffles me is that gold and silver really are just metals we've assigned value to because they are fairly scarice (especially to Conquistadors). If the world went more to hell than it is now, wouldn't food and water be more valuable than a hunk of metal?
It is this line of reason that made me stop believing in religion in my early teens.






























