'False Idols: How Diversion Is Destroying Democracy' picks up where Juvenal left off. The book is a journey through contemporary America and it illustrates how the concept of “bread and circuses” is as powerful and as relevant now as it was in the days of ancient Rome. It examines the deliberate distractions that are created by the cultivation of false idols. The distractions include the adoration of celebrities and parasocial interactions, the economic culture and the implicit belief systems contained within it, sports and the adoration of athletes, the political system and structure, the art, music, and literature we spend our time listening to and watching, the internet and social media that occupies so much of our time, and the video games that occupy the minds and much of the lives of so many people. As long as everybody is chasing and distracted by these bread and circuses, they are willfully negligent to the goings-on in the very fabric of the social network that is of our society, government, and country. The more negligent they become, the more the democracy continues withering and dying. This book systemically deconstructs a modern society that seems designed to consistently pull us away from rather than draw us toward the creation of a better existence for all.
Kurt Warner, LMSW graduated summa cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in English literature from King’s College in Pennsylvania and graduated with a master’s degree in social work from Binghamton University. He won both of the English awards in his class and has been published in the King’s College literary magazine. Warner has been published in the academic journal 'Disability in Society'. He has also been published in a book entitled 'Same Time Next Week: True Stories of Working through Mental Illness'. His book, 'Utopia Realized: In Search of a Just Society', is under contract. His book, 'Victory in Every Fall: The Antaeus Approach to Overcome Disabilities' is also under contract. He was the writer for the Mental Health Association of Cortland County. He is currently working as a psychotherapist with individuals struggling with mental health issues.