Tag Archives: chapter excerpt
A private message from Tehran
Hello, my name is Quinn O’Casey, a fellow embedded software programmer here on a worker’s visa in Iran.
You can’t see what’s going on but I think there is some confusion. The soldiers around me, non-Iranian, I believe, dressed in traditional civilian clothing of the local subculture, misunderstand my job title.
For some reason, they think that I was embedded in Iran for military action. They don’t understand the term “embedded software,” which puts both of us at a disadvantage.
I don’t know how to hack into the computer system they want to access in order to shut down a strategic part of an Iranian defense network but they won’t let me go because now they think I know too much.
Which is it? Do I know too much or know too little?
Thank goodness, they can’t tell that I’m sending out this message through an old RS232 link I sometimes use to diagnose my embedded software code.
How is it that I’m with the good guys and they think I’m a good guy, too, but they won’t let me go?
If I don’t return to my regular work after this extended lunch break, I’ll probably be fired and then lose my visa.
That alone will piss off my girlfriend who was just getting adjusted to life in part of the former Persian empire.
Am I calling you for help, you probably think? All I’m asking is that you inform my boss that I’m having a little difficulty with the local authorities so I won’t lose my job. He’ll sympathise.
Meanwhile, I’ve got to wiggle out of this situation on my own.
Now the guys are saying something about insurgents ready to detonate the diversions before they make their move. Also something about satellite-based attacks and railgun placements. Stealth bombers and EMP bursts.
If I don’t get back to the office before the end of the day, call my girlfriend and tell her to grab a bus for the Caspian Sea where we have a friend who’ll transport her safely out of the country. She knows where to wait for me in Russia. She can get you out, too, if you want.
The Future is Now
We captured this video of a world news organisation revisiting the past and determining how to best present to you a modern war on TV and Internet for highest entertainment value while lives are sadly “lost” in the process:
We tried but were unsuccessful… :(
Not only have we hackers tried to convince our tearless leader to put the past behind him and forget about his girlfriend who died 40 YEARS AGO, we’ve appealed to his former career as a life coach to hold his chin up high, find something funny to say about his sadness and move on.
We can’t repeat what he said to us in response.
The rest of the Committee isn’t helpful, either. They have no interest in blogging about their open secrets.
We apologize for our lack of psychological counseling skills and regret to inform you that your faithful blogger has moved on to another blogging website where he can be himself anonymously, free of ego boosts and social bonds of the online blogging community at wordpress that he fears will trigger his chameleon personality trait and consume him.
He has threatened to change his password again to keep us from posting our latest hacking achievements that he doesn’t always approve.
Talk to you soon, as long as we’re lucky that he’s too lazy to lock us out of this blog.
Stratford-on-Avon
Or is that Anon[ymous] on Stratfor? We aren’t telling!
We, the hackers who work for the Committee Chairman who usually authors these blog entries, have figured out his lame password (as if MostAwesomest#1EnglishWriter isn’t one of the most common passwords out there!).
While he’s off moping about lost loves and such emotional crap, here’s our funny picture of the day, titled,
SCIENTISTS CREATE ZOMBIE, MAKE HER A MEMBER OF THE U.S. CONGRESS
In science news today, a rogue lab released secret information that it had successfully created the world’s first verifiable political zombie and posted this image as positive proof:
The White House has sent staff from the NSA, TSA, DHS and Hamburger U to affirm or deny this amazing story.
Meanwhile, the esteemed constituents of Maloney’s U.S. House district wonder if they’ve been fed baloney, instead of the official meat byproducts they’ve learned to eat without tasting and call it delicious pastrami.
Little do they know the meat byproducts are actually the ingredients of an ancient voodoo recipe used to create zombies the old-fashioned way.
The Centers for Disease Control will release a statement as soon as its advance team can get past all the hot air and piles of [bleep] surrounding the U.S. Capitol building to investigate the start of what appears to be a scientifically-created zombie invasion.
The Genius in the Bottle
Reading blogs galore, psycholanalysing the personalities behind the writing, seeing the education (formal and informal), imagining the lifelong social connections (both good and bad) and then returning here.
A few days ago I received my first senior discount at a restaurant, getting a whole meal for $4.99 at Buddy’s BBQ in Lenoir City, Tennessee, USA, thanks to the assistant manager, Jackie Moore.
I was a senior in secondary school in 1980, a senior at university in 2001 and finally, a senior in life in 2012.
I have graduated.
I retired from the office/travel work life in 2007.
What is next?
YAWN!
A global society full of literate writers and savvy readers.
Crows have left the front yard. Now some small birds, their shadows blocking the Sun as they cross the window pane, search in earnest for morsels.
Bits. Nibbles. Bytes. Atoms. Molecules. Complex carbohydrates.
On the days when I’m only here as a switchboard operator to connect geniuses with their viable markets by hyperlinking them together, what do I do with the bottles after the geniuses are released into our world?
Does the number of syllables matter in counting one’s capabilities?
Must a medical doctor mumble jargon to feel worthy of the diploma on a wall?
Must a chemist talk in chemical terminology to be understood?
Despite my senior status, I’m still that ten-year old boy whose girlfriend of three years just died of a blood disease the boy doesn’t know how to spell or pronounce because he heard it only once or twice in the midst of his sorrow.
I’ll always be that boy, but now his innocence is lost, he has many scars, he’s seen and experienced happenings of immense displeasure and disappointment about our species’ behaviour toward itself and its place in the universe.
He’s still a boy, jumping up out of chairs, flailing on the dance floor, hiking in the woods, turning over rocks to see what creepy-crawlies are hiding in the shade or tunneling into the cool, moist dirt underneath.
Adulthood has always been boring to him, people simply older, pretending to be wiser, taking charge of large groups of people as if they have special powers or capabilities or simply desire to lead.
The boy doesn’t see himself in the mirror like he used to. There’s a white-haired, middle-aged man staring back at him now, youthfulness a memory, not a fact.
Sure, he could pay a cosmetic surgeon to create a false sense of security in turning back time by stretching skin or implanting prosthetics but the boy knows better than to feed the vanity of lost youth.
He is sad and happy at the same time.
Sad that his girlfriend never got to see life after age 10, sad that he didn’t get to see her reach maturity and become whatever she wanted and/or felt obligated to be.
Happy that she still exists in his memory, her parents long gone, her friends moving on and having kids of their own and some whose kids now have kids the same age as a ten-year young girl who died of something like leukemia.
Now that the boy is a senior in body if not completely in his thoughts, what’s next?
What’s left to discover that he hasn’t seen in one form or another all over again for the very first time?
He has no social obligations and just barely a sense of social responsibility.
He knows that if he thinks these thoughts and writes these words, billions of people have thought these words and many have written them, too, in thousands, if not billions, of symbolic forms.
He knows some will read these words and form their own interpretations, looking forward or looking backward along their thought trails, naturally comparing their lives to the one imagined here.
The boy looks at his email inbox and wonders why someone wants to sell penis enhancement drugs or the opportunity to become an anonymous ghost writer for someone else.
These aren’t the signposts of life the boy expected to see 40 years ago.
If these are the images his society wants to hold up to him as some sort of macabre mirror reflecting Life Writ Large, then the boy took a wrong turn somewhere.
What happened to his playground mates? Why do we all look like we’re 50 years old or older (except those of us who’ve paid for body modification procedures or those who’ve lived relatively healthy lives that have slowed the aging process by comparison)?
This boy who wanders the world in wonder, adrift in thought, letting whatever synaptic/neuronic connections make their electrochemical pathways circulate through a central nervous system made from part of a set of states of energy, sees many of the influences upon his molecular makeup so he shouldn’t be surprised that he influences others, even if he doesn’t want people to follow his happenchance lifestyle, such as it is, has been or will be.
He is a child of the universe who stopped caring about himself at age 10, letting the adults around him tell him what he’s supposed to do so the boy could hide himself in a virtual shell, far from the pain of change of life without his constant school companion — his 10-year young girlfriend — a pain that turned to numbness and eventually ennui.
Just like everybody else, he assumes.
Time to shut down this blog and move on to the next one, a cowboy rolling up his gear and hitting the lonely trail once again, hidden in plain sight, kindly thanking the people who stopped by while he was here…
The intersection of light and sound
In a hanging flower pot that was brought inside for the winter, a hickory tree seedling is sprouting. In a church down the road from me, a voting booth will be set up for the next election where I can choose candidates for many public positions like County Commissioner, Judge, U.S. Representative, and U.S. President.
Are the two previous sentences related?
Should a flower pot host a tree seedling? Should a church host a government public business voting booth?
Should I transfer the seedling?
Should I not vote for the first time since I was 18, taking a virtual stand on this country’s tradition of separating church and public business activities?
Aren’t there enough hickory trees in the yard without a need to add the seedling?
Aren’t there enough voters in this country without a need for my vote?
Return to humour and satirical observations about the concepts of a universe and the place our limited species has in it, I say — it’s what we understand best.
The saga of global management continues…
The Committee revealed today that it had convinced U.S. military leaders to show a soft side, a sympathetic position in its support of our species.
The military will soon divert resources to stop global warming by strategically triggering bombs and other military-grade devices underground, causing magma pockets to combine into giant high-pressure chambers under volcanoes around the globe.
Then, in a series of timed explosions, the military will set off volcanic eruptions that will spew ash plumes tens of kilometres into the atmosphere, blocking the Sun’s overheating power, thus reducing the greenhouse effect for several decades, allowing our species to maintain the status quo in current crop allocation ratios.
Negotiations with the airline industries over disrupted flight paths are ongoing at this time.
Meanwhile, the Committee is trying to address population growth issues, and may resort to taking “excess” babies from overproductive families and training the children to become future workers on offworld farms, easily expendable in the big picture, in other words.
The sooner the babies can be launched, the less fuel used and the better they will acclimate to the gravitational forces and emotional stresses of life on our Moon, Mars, and other celestial bodies.
The Committee is soliciting ideas for the perfect surrogate mothers to tend to these babies as they reach prime working age, around six or seven, and then will not need “formation years” nurturing any longer, converting the surrogate mothers to worker bots on the farms.
From Malaysia to New York
Three Data Points — Rational Economic Information
- Ahhh…refreshing.
- Do you have plus/minus 20 years for solar power payback?
- Do those who used BBS connections back in the day recognise this argument?
The more things change, the more they change things…



