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October 15, 2022

What is it about celebrity, notoriety and fame that distorts, corrupts, and degrades the conscience, morality, and ethics of celebrities? Do some celebrities metaphorically and psychologically fly too close to the sun like Icarus? Why does the status of “star” stir the star’s narcissism beyond healthy vocational satisfaction and self-esteem? Is star-power so seductive that it dissolves humility and moral integrity?

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How does inevitable human acquisitiveness progress to consuming greed and seeming inevitable worship of wealth as a source of fame, power, and prestige? Do fame, fortune and celebrity seductively whisper to inner fantasies or illusions of invulnerability? Omnipotence?  God-like immortality?

Even our presidents are celebrities and Facebook feeds the moment in the sun for many.

Some celebrities to ponder:

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Bill Cosby

Bill Cosby helped us to laugh heartily for decades. He and Felicia Rashad helped us to find joy and enjoyment in the family life of Dr. Huxtable. We grieved with Cosby at the tragic loss of his college age son by murder. Now, we experience collective shock, disbelief, revulsion, and sadness at the reports of his alleged misuse of celebrity power via sexual abuse of many women.

Is Cosby’s star status located too close to the sun?

George Soros (Quotes abstracted from—www.DiscoverTheNetwork.org)

Over the years, billionaire celebrity George Soros has given voice to this sense of grandiosity many times and in a variety of different ways.

 In his 1987 book The Alchemy of Finance, for instance, he wrote: