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Online usersPollWhat should the government do about ailing financial institutions? Nothing, except to back off and get out—as any Objectivist knows, intervention is treating the disease with the disease 83% Intervene judiciously—enough to avert a catastrophe that is otherwise imminent 3% Intervene massively—as it's doing 3% Nationalize the whole economy and be done with it. Bring on the USSA! 1% Something else (specify) 11% Total votes: 80
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Check elastic before jumpingSubmitted by Marcus on Thu, 2006-06-22 12:51.
Here is a very short fiction story from the latest issue of nature. Projecting dissatisfaction with current statist trends into the future. For those that don't know NHS = "National Health Service" and HSE = "Health and Safety Executive". Enjoy. Nature 441, 1026 (22 June 2006) Check elastic before jumping Standing before the museum display case, I listened to the cracking of stun rifles outside as CCM — Combined Corporate Military — engaged with the few government troops who could be bothered to fight. "It's a crappy world," said someone standing nearby. "Oh really," I said, peering into the case, and remembering my recent hospital visit, which had occurred just a few days before a crowd of some 500,000 drove everyone out of the EU Parliament buildings and then burnt them to the ground... It felt like I was using the scroll wheel on an old-style computer mouse to work my way down the list of news items, then it felt like I clicked the mouse button to select a news item — National Health Service software having some way to go to catch up with the new interactive displays and virtualities. Of course, I hadn't moved a finger since that moment I decided to flout the EU-wide health-and-safety ban on urban bungee jumping and miscalculated the length of my elastic My shattered skull and snapped spine had left me unable to do more than blink and swallow. A temporary cortical implant, fitted just before they epoxied my skull back together, provided the sensation of movement from my paralysed limbs and enabled me to use the entertainment system here. The news item played out in an 'Infinity Deepscreen' holographic display seemingly hanging in mid-air over my bed — this illusion provided by the multicoloured lasers, which were tracking my eyes from my comm unit, at present stuck to the front of my monitor suit. Apparently, Allied Energy was drilling for the carbon dioxide that had been pumped down into the gas and oil fields at the beginning of this century. The hope being that those megatonnes of gas released into the atmosphere will raise temperatures high enough to offset the coming Ice Age by another century. The Green Socialists, still retaining a majority in the European Parliament, were pushing for more stringent controls on energy usage, their contention being that the numerous wind-power projects, having upset the weather patterns of the planet, need to be dosed down. I sighed — I could manage that — and was about to move onto the next: news item when my consultant interrupted the display. "How are you today, Joe?" "Getting a little bored with the primitive entertainment here and rather concerned that you don't seem to know my name." I didn't actually speak the words, since they were a product of my implant and a voice synthesizer, which made me sound like Humphrey Bogart — the new virtual screen idol. In the display my consultant peered at his paper notes. "Okay, Joe, I'll give it to you straight." It must have been some sort of glitch in the system, since I'd commed others in the hospital and apparently this consultant program called all his patients Joe. "You're in here for the long haul. The new nerve tissue is growing well, but without invasive surgery, it will take some time for the breaks in your vertebrae to knit. You will have to spend a year in a motorized exoskeleton during..." "What about CT nerve-stimulus and keyhole bone welding?" I interrupted. "Ah yes, I see," he said, once again peering at my notes. He froze for a moment, which seemed to happen whenever he updated, then continued in a slightly different tone. "I see that then you were a European citizen, but now it appears you are a citizen of Ubermart?" "Yes, I certainly am — I'd rather my taxes went to a more deserving cause." Really, what had finally persuaded me to sign up for corporate citizenship was the last burglary of my apartment. The guy breaking in managed to stab him self with the screw-driver he tried to jemmy the door with and I called him an ambulance. The police arrested me for negligence and then helped the burglar to sue me for damages, Apparently he was 'disadvantaged,' unable to read or write due to ritalin abuse and dietary cerebral damage. Corporates tend not to suffer the same problems. Corporate police tend to take an old-fashioned approach to policing, usually in CCTV blackspots. "If you could confirm your Ubermart citizenship number?" I awoke amid dean sheets. Walked out of the hospital only an hour later.
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Nice. Reminiscent of Robert
Nice. Reminiscent of Robert Heinlein, especially the corporate citizenship thing.
Since NZ is the home of the bungy jump, and we have a pervasive health & safety culture, I've wondered how long it will be before a spate of accidents will cause the state to station an OSH inspector on every jump platform and require the use of a new bungy for each jump...
OK
Done.