T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1022.1 | No Feds in my neighborhood... | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Available Ferguson | Mon Oct 14 1991 14:16 | 15 |
| Even in the USA, the line between governments and corporations only
looks nice and solid when you're not doing anything which crosses it.
The cyberpunks I've read were pretty straightforwardly extrapolating
from the "paranoia" which any student of the CIA may reasonably feel,
and from Japanese coporate loyalties. Since both the CIA and the
"Japanese way of working" were on the upswing during the '80s, I can
understand their interest.
Obviously they got off on the violence, but I think they justify it in
sf terms. The easy violence wasn't aimed at nice middle class mallrats
but at slum-dwellers, "criminal types", and whistleblowers. Sounds
like real life to me.
Ray
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1022.2 | I'm a space cowgirl, bet you weren't ready for that | TINCUP::XAIPE::KOLBE | The Debutante Delirious | Mon Oct 14 1991 20:50 | 17 |
| There's also the bottom line of getting someone to buy your book. Little House
on the Martian Prairie isn't going to attract the average (usually young
male?) SF reader.
I believe the "lone cowpoke" image is also valid. It's the mythos of the USA
and attractive just for that reason. The whole world loves cowboys and the
instant karma of Colt justice. That's what TOS is in a "pretty" future and
what "Mad max" is in an ugly one.
"Catspaw" by DeVinge does a credible combo of corporate world and cyberspace
that seems (after suspension of disbelief) resonable. Given my own addiction
to the net I can relate to characters that have lost themselves in cyberspace.
It's an addictive world even now. Just imagine a few technological advances
that would allow you to immerse yourself in the net.
The big question in the corporate world future would be whether the technocrats
would be loyal to the corporation or to the net. liesl
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1022.3 | The possible Future... | VIRGO::TENNEY | Time will tell... | Wed Oct 16 1991 20:32 | 23 |
|
Curious... Out of all the SF material you've personally experienced
which material do you see as a possiblity for our future?
Mad Max ... Anarchic Society with the theme of kill or be killed.
Star Trek ... Progressive Technology.
To me it could be either. It all depends on what happens today. If
the bombs start flying and everything is destroyed I envision a fight
or die type future. People trying to find food and water that isn't
effected by nuclear fall out. People killing neighbors for the family
cat for supper... a very depressing future indeed. I'm sure the
government will probably still be in power but only in distant and
remote areas. With time their forces will slowly grow because they
will have capitalized on the clean food and water.
OR
A Star Trek type future where we go beyond where no man has gone
before...
Please tell me your thoughts of OUR future...
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1022.4 | Somewhere between the two | CRATE::HAZEL | Marvin the Paranoid Android was right | Thu Oct 17 1991 04:41 | 15 |
| Personally, I find Asimov's future worlds most believable. Humanity
will grow technologically, yet still remain caught between the Mad Max
and the Star Trek possibilities.
So far, throughout history, the study of issues related to technology
(which is in turn related to comfort and an easy way of life for the
majority) has proved of far more interest to us than the study of
issues related to sociology. So long as this continues, the Star Trek
outcome will remain unreachable, while the Mad Max outcome will remain
at bay due to the efforts of those people who strive to avert it.
Just my thoughts on the matter.
Dave Hazel
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1022.5 | Huh, say again? | ELIS::BUREMA | Clever phrase. | Fri Oct 18 1991 05:07 | 13 |
| As an aside, what does the title of this topic allude to. A book title?
A film title? Popular expression?
I ask this because I was completely surprised by the content of the
discussion going on. Not that it's not fascinating, but I could not
realy relate the two.
Would someone explain, or should the title be changed for dimwits like
me?
Wildrik
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1022.6 | Nit | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG1-2/W10 | Fri Oct 18 1991 15:09 | 6 |
| Just an aside - I think Raytheon, rather than Digital, is
Massachusetts' largest employer. I'm not sure if this is by headcount
or revenues.
len.
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1022.7 | | TECRUS::REDFORD | Entropy isn't what it used to be | Fri Oct 18 1991 20:17 | 4 |
| re: .-2
The title referred to the topic in the base note, which was how
the US gov't seems to disappear in a lot of near-future novels. /jlr
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1022.8 | Another trend? | TARKKA::MOREAU | Ken Moreau:Sales Support,Palm Beach FL | Sun Oct 20 1991 23:53 | 45 |
| For an interesting (IMHO) angle on this one, read the Chtorr series by
David Gerrold. Books 1 and 2 are from the point of view of someone working
with the "Feds" trying to re-establish control after society falls apart
(no spoilers), while book 3 deals in large part from the point of view
of one of the gangs outside of the control of the "Feds". This is an
interesting way of merging the two concepts: from certain people's point
of view the government is still present and functioning, though admittedly
not as well as before. But from other people's point of view, the government
is totally non-functional because they are outside of the area where it is
strong.
Keep in mind that in the Mad Max movies (specifically # 2) people had the
idea that even though things were totally out of control where they were,
other places were safer (ie, on the coast where they were going at the end
of the movie). We don't know that there was not a functioning government
which was slowly expanding it's currently limited sphere of influence.
But as an aside, which may need to be a separate topic, I have a different
observation on "general themes in near-term science fiction". One thing
that seems extremely common, whether in things-as-they-are scenarios or
in post-apocalyptic scenarios, is that the inner cities are lawless ghettos.
Specifically, the inner cities have gone completely to pot, with all of the
businesses and people with jobs moving out to somewhere else, and nothing
left in the inner city but violent gangs and their poverty stricken victims.
Examples are legion, but include:
1) Max Headroom TV series (contrast the places where Edison and Theora live
and the conditions of the Network 23 tower, with the lives of the Blanks)
2) Stephen King's Running Man novelette and movie (the novelette I think did
a better job of showing the despair and pain of the inner-city dweller,
but the movie did a good job showing the disparity between the viewers
of the television show and the conditions inside the "playing field")
3) Most cyberpunk fiction, but specifically the Sprawl stories by Gibson
What dis-heartens me about this is that I see the trends which will bring
this about occuring as we speak. Everytime the US Council of Mayors speaks
about the deteriorating conditions of their cities, while a *huge* percentage
of the people who can are fleeing the inner city to move to suburbs, and
noting that (here in Palm Beach County FL) some of the new planned communities
have high walls and gates around the entire community, with 24 hour patrols
and resident's stickers required, I wonder if this isn't happening as we speak.
-- Ken Moreau
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1022.9 | | TINCUP::XAIPE::KOLBE | The Debutante Delirious | Mon Oct 21 1991 13:33 | 12 |
| Ken, I think it *is* happening as we speak which is why it's such a common SF
scenerio. Remember that movie where NY is a prison? Perhaps the inner city will
become the future's version of Austrailia. But hey, that worked out OK in the
end. Come to think of it, I've read a number of books where entire planets have
been made penal colonies. Of course, that doesn't take much imagination, it's
just a rehash of how the rich and powerful have always dealt with problems of
the people kind. Head em up, move em out.
I believe the real test of an author's imagination will be to come up with a
future that seems possible and pleasant given today's trends. And to make it
a good read of course. I love ST but I can't say I see it as a likely future.
liesl
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1022.10 | One writer has done it | VMSMKT::KENAH | The man with a child in his eyes... | Mon Oct 21 1991 14:31 | 8 |
| >I believe the real test of an author's imagination will be to come up with a
>future that seems possible and pleasant given today's trends. And to make it
>a good read of course.
Arthur C. Clarke has done this with some success. Several of his
novels have stable, prosperous organized societies.
andrew
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1022.11 | | GAMGEE::ROBR | Its not easy bein' cheezy... | Tue Oct 22 1991 07:35 | 17 |
|
re: .8
yeah, read chtorr if you dont mind a non finished series. ive been
waiting years for the next book :'(.
i think with the amount of money the govt is putting into defense
compared to the space program, we're never going anyplace very quickly.
we need to resolve our problems on earth before we can look to the
stars and though it may come to pass, i dont think it will be for a
long time. we have more of a chance of going into a mad max type of
civilization with all the violence and the gangs andour problems with
other nations. if we all worked together we might actually accomplish
something other than building new missiles and planes. right now, this
is our only planet, it's really too bad we're such a destructive race.
|
1022.12 | | FASDER::ASCOLARO | Not Short, Vertically Challenged | Tue Oct 22 1991 10:06 | 11 |
| Rob,
I think a lot of people are beginning to think like you. The 80's were
the decade that showed the foolishness of spending on the military. In
the 90's I think we will see a VASTLY reduced defense infrastructure.
It really bugs me however that Bush wants 15 more B-2's funded @ $800M
a pop and we can only find $4M to fund the NASP (national aerospace
plane, X-30, single stage to orbit).
Tony
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1022.13 | | GAMGEE::ROBR | Sailing the seas of cheeze... | Tue Oct 22 1991 21:44 | 11 |
|
I have to admit, I didn't always think this way and it was just very
recently that I opened my eyes to what was happening, but the more
people that are aware, the better our world will be.
I know what you meant about the X-30, I was just reading about that in
Popular Science the other day. Too bad we just couldn't (scrap earth
'old_ships) and (build earth b2 5 0) eh? :')
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1022.14 | cities, art, comm tech | TECRUS::REDFORD | Entropy isn't what it used to be | Mon Dec 02 1991 23:35 | 65 |
| re: future scenarios of abandoned inner cities
This does seem to be a popular future, perhaps because SF is one
of the few art forms practiced by suburbanites. Its writers are
generally white and middle-class, and left the city long ago.
Like most middle-class whites, they're repelled by the stories of
crime and decay that they see on television, and are glad that
they don't face it out in their neighborhoods.
Historically, though, art has come out of the city, not the
country. Think of where music gets played and composed. Are
there distinctive suburban musical styles, even after fifty years
of suburban development? Think of where paintings get displayed
and sold, and where drama (theater, film, TV) gets performed and
created. All these take high concentrations of people,
higher than one usually gets in a suburb.
Writing is an exception, perhaps because it's an individual, not
group, activity. Fiction writers can live almost anywhere.
Non-fiction writers (including essayists and critics) still seem
to be concentrated in cities, perhaps because they thrive on
salon atmospheres.
But does it have to be this way for any art form? Maybe not, with
better communications. Notes files are electronic salons,
although there has yet to be an equivalent to the Lunar Society or
the Algonquin Roundtable. It could come. Through Notes you're
free to seek out the company of the like-minded without having to
rely on geographic proximity. You can write for as long as you
like (maybe too long in the case of this message) without being
interrupted by the more aggressive conversationalists. You can
be specific or general, succinct or rambling, and if others get
bored, there's always Next Unseen.
Notes are just the start. What happens when phones become as
clear as CDs? You wouldn't have to go anywhere to find someone
to play music with, nor to find live music to listen to. What
happens with good HDTV? You don't have to go anywhere to visit
an art gallery, although you would still want to actually have any
paintings you really like.
But this vast investment in communcations technology would just
bring us back to where city-dwellers are today. At great expense
we would get back the presence and immediacy that we already have
with live music, art, and drama.
[Digression: I wonder if, in fact, part of the economic problems
of cities are due to a very expensive communications technology
that they've been called upon to fund, namely highways. These
roads cost tens of millions per mile to build, and a lot of the
money comes from general revenues, namely city-dwelling
tax-payers. They mainly benefit suburban commuters and truckers.
It's income transfer from the cities to the suburbs. If anyone
has the numbers, I'd be interested to see what fraction of the
total government capital investment goes into roads.]
This sort of comm technology is a classic example of a
technological fix to a social problem: namely, getting the
cultural benefits of city life without having to mix with the
poor and criminal. The answer is obviously to have less poor and
fewer criminals, but that's about as useful as saying the answer
is 42. A useful answer would be real meat for an SF story, as
opposed to the techno-fix proposed above.
/jlr
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1022.15 | Buddy Holly etc were suburban... | TLE::MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Dec 03 1991 11:51 | 25 |
| re .14, minor point
Isn't the highway system funded in two ways:
o Initially as part of the defense program, to allow rapid
movement of people and goods in times of war or preparation
for war (this is the initial build-up of the interstate
system, which was explicitly modelled on Germany's highway
system);
o Currently by gasoline and diesel fuel taxes, which are a
rough approximation to a user fee.
I don't believe there is a substantial movement of tax funds
out of cities to pay for highways.
As for the main topic, Joel Garreau has written a non-fiction
book called something like "Living on the Edge", in which he
claims that the cultural "cityness" you refer too is in the
process of moving out from the old urban cores. He previously
wrote a book "The Nine Nations of North America" which would
be a great source of background for SF plots. (Note: Joel
Garreau is a journalist, not an SF author).
-John Bishop
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1022.16 | | FASDER::ASCOLARO | Not Short, Vertically Challenged | Tue Dec 03 1991 13:02 | 12 |
| minor nit to .15's minor nit of .14
Yes the highway system was initially justified as part of the defense
program. It is kind of hard to imagine how downtown freeways fit in a
defense arguement however. It is the 'INTERSTATE' system that was for
defense. Those cross state highways were to provide rapid mobility.
Currently the Federal portion of highways is funded by fuel taxes. The
Federal portion is 80% (or 90%, possibly, but I think 80) of the total.
There is no common definition where local matching funds come from.
Tony
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1022.17 | "9 Nations" & "Albion's Seed" | TECRUS::REDFORD | Entropy isn't what it used to be | Thu Dec 05 1991 01:09 | 23 |
| re: .15 and "The Nine Nations of North America"
If North America were ever to break up, it would probably be along
the lines Garreau described. Quebec seems to be on the edge
of secession already, but I suppose it has been since Wolfe
defeated Montcalm. There are lots of satirical possibilities in
imagining what Ecotopia or Dixie or the Empty Quarter would be
like on their own. I've heard of a post-apocalypse RPG, in fact,
where the a Jim Bakker type runs the South and AT&T runs New
England.
If you're interested in this sort of cultural categorization, you
should pick up "Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America"
by David Hackett Fischer. It's a fascinating historical study of
four initial groups of immigrants to the US: the Puritans (New
England), the Cavaliers (Virginia), the Quakers (the Delaware
Valley), and the Border People (the South in general). Each came
from a different part of Britain and brought a distinct set of
customs and attitudes with them. Aside from English and
Protestantism they seemed to have hardly anything in common,
but you can see how their beliefs have shaped the country.
/jlr
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1022.18 | He's Fed, Jim | DKAS::KOLKER | | Thu Apr 30 1992 17:39 | 14 |
| re .8
For example "Oath of Fealty(sp?)"
re .0
Read Robert Nozick's philosophical treatise "Utopia, State and
Anarchy". In this none easy read, he proves that in the absence of
government, various protection combines will arise which will lead at
somepoint to the minimal State, i.e. the state that acts as cop and
watchman but little else ( no welfare or redistribution).
Conan The Librarian
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1022.19 | | TECRUS::REDFORD | If this's the future I want vanilla | Thu Apr 30 1992 19:09 | 8 |
| re: .-1
Governments disappear all the time. We've seen several big ones vanish in
just the last couple of years. I'm hard-pressed, though, to
think of a case where private protection agencies arose to take
their place and maintain civil order. In what way, then, can
Nozick prove that such agencies will arise in the absence of
government? It doesn't seem to have actually ever happened. /jlr
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1022.20 | Hangem High | DKAS::KOLKER | Conan the Librarian | Tue May 05 1992 13:09 | 8 |
| re .-1, .-2
San Francisco 1873. The town had been run by gangsters and gunman for
some time. The good folks finally got tired of it and formed a
vigilante posse cometatus and hanged the bad guys. They then installed
a proper civil government and a legal police force.
|
1022.21 | | MILKWY::ED_ECK | | Tue May 05 1992 15:53 | 5 |
|
Perhaps the Pinkertons (private security agency), who were
used as strikebreakers?
E.
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1022.22 | SF went public, not private | TECRUS::REDFORD | If this's the future I want vanilla | Tue May 05 1992 18:48 | 18 |
| re: .20
It sounds like the citizens of San Francisco replaced a private
security force (namely the mobsters to whom you paid protection
money) with a public force, namely police. Isn't Nozick talking
about going the other way?
[digression: apparently the only police department in the US that
is not under direct political control is in Los Angeles. In the
fifties, reformers were able to get civil service tenure for the
police commisioner. This was intended to eliminate patronage
appointments. The result, though, was that the police became
accountable to no one. This is why Daryl Gates has been able to
hang on as commisioner in spite of universal condemnation. Given
the disastrous riots there, I expect to see commisioner tenure
disappear.]
/jlr
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1022.23 | Sic Semper Tyranis | DKAS::KOLKER | Conan the Librarian | Wed May 06 1992 14:40 | 21 |
| re .-1
There is a difference between paying protection (i.e. to thug
extortionists) and paying for protection (e.g. rent-a-cop). In the
first instance the failure to pay means violent retaliation and in the
second instance failure to pay means you don't get the protection.
Nozic "proved" that in an anarchic society with several protection
agencies and potential disputes among them, the problem would be
resolved by instituting an adjucating agency which would be defacto a
minimal government. Nozic's argument is very convoluted and it has not
been shown that all of his assumptions are factually substantiated.
I will review Nozic's book and open up a topic on Anarchism (if it does
not already exist) in the PHILOSOPHY conference where it more properly
belongs. Look there for Nozic stuff in the not too distant future.
--Conan the Librarian--
P.S. Maybe the Objectivists will be pertubed :>))-ha ha.
|
1022.24 | visit to Clint's Books in KC | TECRUS::REDFORD | If this's the future I want vanilla | Mon May 18 1992 22:00 | 24 |
| re: the base note
I was in a bookstore in Kansas City recently and counted not one, not two,
but six action series set in a post-nuclear apocalypse world.
And this was in the new books section. Mithra knows how many are
already running. They were all of the form
lone-hero-must-survive-in-newly-savage-world. I only recognized
one author, William Johnston, who did very funny (to a teenager)
Get Smart novelizations in the sixties.
I haven't seen these series in Boston-area bookstores. We also don't
see many Westerns out here, but there were plenty on the shelves
there. Their readership probably overlaps. They are to men
what Harlequin Romances are to women: anonymously written and
formulaic.
I talked for a bit with the owner. He said that he didn't sell
much SF any more; it was mostly fantasy and horror. Even a novel
like "Stations of the Tide", which just won the Nebula, didn't
move much. He had an excellent back stock of SF, though, probably
out of sentimental preference. I suspect that SF is becoming an
adult taste, and adults don't have time to read much.
/jlr
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1022.25 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | History is made at night | Tue May 19 1992 01:32 | 6 |
| I've seen these various series in Boston-area bookstores, but they
are more often found in the "Adventure Series" section (along with
paramilitary series, The Executioner, Nick Carter, ad nauseum)
rather than the sf section.
--- jerry
|