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#16 | |
Are you gonna eat that?
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"Night of the Living Dead shambled into cinemas during the Nixon era. Carter gave us two adaptations of Dracula. See that massive red spike in the '80s? That's when conservative superhero Ronald Reagan occupied the highest office, and a Night of the Living Dead remake, one sequel, two Return of the Living Dead movies and Reanimator occupied the cinemas. Then Clinton gave us Anne Rice. The connection is confirmed by academics who study the subject. What the hell?" "Actually, it makes perfect sense. Horror plays off of social anxieties of the times, and it's all about what the left and right are afraid of." Read more: 6 Mind-Blowing Ways Zombies and Vampires Explain America | Cracked.com http://www.cracked.com/article_19402...#ixzz1pibQrXla i'm into sword wielding warriors wandering the lands of a civilization/world in decline where mutants dwell and the rule of law is a distant memory. libertarian? centrist? ![]() Last edited by xg4bx; 03-20-2012 at 11:34 PM. |
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#17 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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(Warning: contains political content.) I'm with John Michael Greer on this one; I think it's nihilistic escapism.
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#18 |
Dyslexic Count
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@elfwreak - that variety of non-dingbat post-apocalyptic fiction, would probably not be that dissimilar to every day life in a developing country.
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#19 |
Grand Sorcerer
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#20 |
Chasing Butterflies
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I see it as a sort of "finding control in a control-less environment". I can't control the quality of the air I breathe, the water I drink, or the food I eat. I can't control how I'm treated at work, what assignments I'm given, whether or not they muck with my health care plan.
But by god, when the Zombie Apocalypse comes, I can decide whether to migrate north or south and which grocery store to raid for supplies. It's a Robinson Crusoe fantasy, at least for me. |
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#21 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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The very poor wouldn't sleep in wooden shacks; they'd sleep in gutted cars. And they would, at least theoretically, know to boil water before using it to clean wounds. The reason there were no microscopes in 1200 C.E. is that they didn't know it was worth building them, not that they couldn't make lenses that small or accurate. (Not that the hypothetical post-apoc society would need to make them; we'll have all the technological equipment we can use for decades, maybe centuries. Research labs aren't going to be high on the list of places to loot for survival supplies.) The reasons there were no guns is that nobody had figured out how to make them; even after the factories shut down, black powder & shot will be widely available. Penicillin can be made from blue bread mold, once you know what it does. And so on. I love the idea of stories set in a low-tech society with the remnants of high-tech resources. |
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#22 | |||
Sci-Fi Author
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Another great example of this comes from another book I read (forget the title though) where it's 100 years on from some big natural disaster (they don't clearly say what, but it pretty much torpedoed all modern life and its associated tech) and they tell how people at first died off in droves, there was all this mayhem and looting and the usual doomsday stuff. But as time went on, things settled down, people adapted, and everything returned to a mixed modern form of the old west blended with the modern. I think the neatest part of the story was how they told of the numerous ways that people used their knowledge to salvage or restore surviving technology and build new stuff that was old school in design, but necessary to make life easier. Just the ingenuity that went into it was brilliant. Quote:
Yup, agreed. |
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#23 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Few people have written about the possibility that, with all the information storage potential that everyone carries around in the simplest cellphone, we could see a post-apoc future where everyone is knowledgeable, and manage to bring recovery about that much faster... in fact, the only trick to survival would be finding working equipment that your cellphone told you that you needed... |
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#24 | |
Wizard
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#25 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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![]() More seriously, a lot of the high tech stuff that we rely on requires many levels of extreme specialisation. Anyone here setup to start manufacturing computer chips? What about batteries? Batteries have a limited life, even sitting on the shelf. Who's going to start making new ones to replace them? Then you have to get them into all these devices that are currently being manufactured to be thrown away before their battery die. This is a consumer society, our technology is not made to be used for 20 or 50 years while it waits for our technological capability grows to be able to manufacture new ones. So the more difficult question may be how long would it take to gain a population large enough to once again support that level of specialised knowledge and experience so that we can once again have production of our mod-cons in the brave new world. |
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#26 | |
Wizard
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I dont think that will be much of a problem... most of what would be required to get society back up to a "modern level" , cars, planes, etc is relatively simple to understand. Sure we might not be staffing the ISS again for a while, but we could easily get to mid 1900's very fast. There will be LOTS of computers, and other devices in surplus around the planet. If a large chunk of the population was removed we would a ton of surplus spare parts/etc to get things working again. I think the biggest key is power. Get power plants back online and we would quickly regain ground. |
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#27 | |
Dyslexic Count
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1632_%28novel%29 A chunk of the West Virginia goes back in time to Germany in 1632 and they set about recreating the USA, sorta. |
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#28 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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For more politics etc. on this topic, google "peak oil," which will first get you a bunch of sites about "peak oil debunked," which is much like "global warming debunked"--a whole lot of people are invested in the current system and spend a lot of effort convincing others it'll never change. You have to search for "peak oil survival" or similar terms to get the sites with facts. (And speculation. But it's speculation based on numbers, rather than the insistence that, since we found something to replace wood to power our stoves, of course we'll find something to replace oil to power our cars.) Back to bookish discussion: whether or not one expects us to rebuild our current culture, or something similar to/better than it, I am surprised at the number of post-apoc stories that assume we'll all plunge directly into the dark ages rather than *using* the resources we've got, both physical and informative. We have mass literacy, which was *never* the case in any previous collapse. We have libraries *everywhere,* and not just in big public buildings which, yes, are likely to be looted & burned for fuel. We have computers which, whether or not we get a network running, the Occupy movement showed you can power with a bicycle--a good collection of farming, weatherproofing, windmill/water wheels, and textile production info on disc could get an entire community set up in a village that doesn't need most of what modern life considers essential. E-ink readers with solar power could work for decades, and there's your new library-of-Alexandria in a six-ounce box. |
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#29 | |
Wizard
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Besides, if any of the nuke plants survive they have what 80? years of fuel.. thats enough time to build stuff. |
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#30 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I think that, while power plants will be around, and plenty of them will be functional (enough... although tech problems & meltdowns would be a lot more interesting), the infrastructure to get that power any distance away would be broken. No more repair teams making sure the wiring is connected to the next city; those lines work until the next tornado, earthquake or rat infestation, and then they're gone. So: little pockets of high-tech, surrounded by large areas of no electricity, with plumbing that works until it gets clogged somewhere down the line... and then you move to the next house, or the next block, because that's certainly easier than rebuilding or starting from scratch. Hmm. |
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