2010-07-20

When The Money's Gone

In this nonfiction-within-a-fiction, the main character struggles to distinguish self from nonself, past truth from future truth and multiple storylines from the only one storyline.

Bird talk leads to tree insect talk blocking out road traffic hiding the silent speech of the planet, not a single word spoken.

Where to store one's visibly invisible body while gathering secret information publicly?

In a political system protecting free speech, is a nondisclosure agreement legal? No. All belongs to all, Apple.

Free enterprise prevails. You'll see.

Oil drilling companies, in this fictional world, would, like all other environmentally compliant firms, maintain live update websites broadcasting their ongoing work so citizens could see at a glance who is skirting the law and threatening the population at large.

Union Carbide might regain its goodwill by sponsoring a conference to set standardised industrial process update software guidelines to drive ingenuity sold to China/India in revolutionising the transparent green movement.

Imagine websites protected by law that let workers air their grievances and concerns about safety violations. Or international laws that protected global citizens' desire to create and maintain 'wikileaks' type websites for the benefit of the whole species.

When the species counts protection of itself within its ecosystem(s) over artificial barriers of commerce and tribal war, your children's freedom to promote the best aspects of your subcultures is preserved indefinitely.

Hard work, but notice that many species migrate over thousands of miles, some generations not living to see the whole journey. Such is our species' path ahead.

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