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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna

The year is 2077.

The new ultra-right-wing American Traditional Party clinches control of the government with only 35% of the vote in a divided electorate.

Their executive, President Ronald Jameson, issues an executive order reinterpreting the text of the Culturally Significant Properties Anti-Appropriation Act.

He reclassifies medieval and renaissance Europe, as well as Rome, and all derivative properties, as White European, a group which previously had no assigned cultural properties under the act.  

Chaos ensues.  Hundreds of thousands of cultural appropriation lawsuits are filed.  Challenges are made both to his interpretation, and to the unique ownership of these ideas and concepts.

But it is too late.  The Act was never designed with the proper restraints on power.  After all, the future only moves forwards, right?  And the metaphorical train of Separatism soon left the station.

the year is mitigated fiction mitigated future the culture war
thathopeyetlives
swan2swan

You know what?

I’m no longer holding Star Trek or Star Wars “accountable” for their clunky-looking sixties-and-seventies future technology.

Why?

Because the Enterprise is off on a years-long voyage through space. There’s no Verizon store, no Radio Shack, no Geek Squad out there. If the Klingons fire photon torpedoes and the bridge shakes and Spock’s head bangs against the fancy iPad72 touchscreen and cracks the glass, the ship’s toast. If Han Solo’s fingerprints get all over the starchart and the touch-calibration is off by half a centimeter, the Falcon is going right into a star. But if Mister Worf accidentally twists the command knob too hard and pops it off, he can just screw that thing right back on and it will keep working. Dust gets in there? Take it apart and clean it out. All the plugs are big and universal, all the power cells are functional and have a decent battery life, and nothing is built to expire in the next six months so you have to buy a new one.

That tech isn’t anachronistic or suffering a bad case of Zeerust–it’s practical, effective, and it works. Apple tried launching its own space exploration craft, it had to come back for full repairs within three months, and then it had to be upgraded over the next two.

But this? This is just good, long-lasting, fully-functional, and reliable craftsmanship.

alexkablob

The actual real-life space shuttles’ electronics looked pretty much like that for their entire lifespan and this is exactly why.

thathopeyetlives

Here, have a fun romp through the world of industrial and military/aerospace electrical technology vendors!


A big point of this stuff: Making it extremely rugged (because enviroments are harsh, having it break is bad, and if you’re in the military people are shooting at you), making it extremely reliable (because you’re dead if it breaks, imagine the equivalent of having an arrow key get stuck down on your computer), and making it easy, or at least possible, to field repair. You might not be able to see the screws and bolts that hold the connectors together, but they are there. No molded-blob-of-plastic USB connectors or featureless monolith ipod cases allowed here. 


(A specific thing that irritates me: The exclusive use of touchscreens or holograms for controls. These are great ways to make a complicated system easier to use or let lots of functions be controlled with a simple panel. However, they can’t be used blind and they lack tactile sense, so they are not good for important stuff like flight controls or turning your engine on and off. Modern fighter jets have a lot more big screens (”glass cockpit”) but flight controls are still your classic joystick with buttons on it. Also, in the military, often instead of a touchscreen you have a row of buttons around the edge of the screen, and the labels for these buttons appear on the screen.)


(This can lead to problems. The USA’s main battle tank contains several tons of copper that’s just carrying weak electrical signals, on a tank that only weighs about 70 tons in the first place. That’s several tons that can’t be armor, ammo, engines, or the gun. There’s a plan to upgrade to fiber optics. One of the reasons that Elon Musk is able to eat the lunch of all the other rocket vendors is by taking a much more liberal approach to this kind of thing. All computers in any military ever are dreadfully obsolete and NASA sometimes needs to lurk Ebay for spare parts. An awful lot of this equipment has been updated to have some basic computer control and internet connectivity but with zero security.)

mitigatedchaos

Okay, but consider this - the entire crew of the Enterprise should be paramilitary cyborgs able to manipulate all this machinery with their thoughts, with manual controls built throughout the ship as a backup.

Source: swan2swan skiffy mitigated fiction

Speaking of writing, one piece of advice stuck out to me from years ago. It went something like - “What is the most interesting part of your character’s life? Are you writing about that? If not, why not?” And there may be suitable reasons, such as that you already wrote that story, but…

I recently read another piece of writing advice where the author was talking about increasing her writing speed, and how she shifted from writing in the moment to graphing out scenes relatively quickly before writing them - but the interesting part was that if she wasn’t enthusiastic about writing a scene, it meant something needed to change in the pre-writing sketching out.

So I was thinking about this in synthesizing, and I was thinking, do we ever actually need an uninteresting scene?

Not to communicate setting information, or setup things we need for later, to lower or defuse tension (so we can ramp it up again later), or to create within the reader a sense of the passage of time. All those can be interesting, even if they aren’t viscerally exciting.

And I think sometimes we may think we need an uninteresting scene so that we can set things up for later - but I think perhaps we don’t. We can change the scene. If that doesn’t work, there are ways to include the setup information in one of our interesting scenes.

mitigated fiction fiction im not a professional writer
sadoeconomist
celticpyro

Do you ever see a “critique” of fiction writing that was pretty obviously pulled out of the critic’s ass just to complain about like “Why didn’t the author spend 500 pages explaining the selective breeding practices of this species of domestic dragon to create fireproof leather armor?” Because Jimothy I can’t find a reader with that many fucks to give.

choppedcowboydinosaur

So is it like George RR Martin complaining about Tolkien not explaining the tax system of his world?

sadoeconomist

Man, every time I see one of these posts implying something would be too absurdly boring and specific to include in a fantasy novel I’m like ‘hmm, that’s something I wish they would have gone into more, that would be something I’d find legitimately interesting’

mitigatedchaos

To me, it feels like we should in some ways let the world speak for itself, creating a sense of natural depth of simulation and realism where larger amounts of information are implied by relatively few lines, and save the detailed discussions that talk directly about tax regimes for online bonus content.

Of course, I may not be the best source of advice on this.  We’ll see how things turn out.

There are two ways, I think, to approach this.

The first is a sort of intuitive iceberg below the surface, where a minor interaction within the story communicates a much larger information load or general sense about the nature of the world.  To take an example I already posted,

The adultery laws don’t apply to registered prostitutes.

It isn’t highly entangled with the plot, but it tells us that

  1. They are socially conservative enough to ban adultery
  2. They are simultaneously not socially conservative enough to ban prostitution
  3. Synthesizing 1 & 2, their axis of social conservatism is probably different from our own, based on some alternate popular understanding of social mechanics
  4. The government is sufficiently interventionist/statist enough to not only ban adultery, but to register prostitutes - there must be a bureaucracy to enforce these laws, so we can infer something about the size and power of the government

So we don’t need to know the details of the regulation regime to get a sense of the world from it and feel a depth to the world simulation, assuming other aspects of the work align with the implications.  We get even more out of it if we already know other facts about the government, like if it has popular support, in which case we can infer that the population itself has similar views of social conservatism.

The second is to entangle the fantasy mechanics with the plot.

In video games, there is an idea of tension between game mechanics and plot or story, and there is an idea that some of the best games really weave the two together in a natural way to create higher immersion as part of games as an artform.  

I think we can view a fantasy book similarly, with a continuum.

At one end, there is this setting detail and there is the story, and they’re almost irrelevant relative to each other.  We get a big long description of the Cow Tax, but our main character is a thief in a totally different province, and the Cow Tax not only doesn’t come up in the story but only impacts like 0.25% of GDP of the neighboring kingdom.

(Of course, some people can enjoy a book that is primarily about setting and not plot.  Like a sort of fictional non-fiction book.)

As we move along the spectrum, the Cow Tax starts to become more entangled with the plot.  Perhaps it interferes with the funding of the enemy noble’s army, or there is a rebellion in a province because cows were taxed too much.  

We can move closer, too, and tell a story about a peasant suffering because of the Cow Tax, making its resolution the central element of the plot, or have the entire plot hinge on demonstrating the effects of the Cow Tax.

Under this approach, the more entangled something is, the more explanation it gets, unless we want to create an air of mystery or something.

(To some degree, “the whole plot is about demonstrating the effects of the Cow Tax” is a very classic sci-fi approach, where the whole book is a big “what if?”)

Source: celticpyro mitigated fiction im not a professional writer
argumate
collapsedsquid

It’s sort of weird sometimes seeing how cyberpunk works dealt with the relationship between people, corporations, and government.  I always figure it say some interesting things about people’s politics when you see how they construct their cyberpunk world.

One of the weird things I always notice is the status of the government?  Do they still exist?  Are they overtly weaker than the corporations? Being your marxist inspired leftist, I always sort of feel a failure of verisimilitude when corporations overtly take over. The corporation doesn’t want to do the things that government has to do.  It’s great when the government breaks up a riot or strike and the corporation can have clean hands, publicly chastising the government while benefiting from the social order it creates.

Then there’s the issue of mercenaries, the corporate security forces that are ubiquitous in these settings.  I always figure them as having the same problems that Machiavelli identified, namely that mercenaries are shit that will desert you if things go bad and you really need them.  They’re fine for quashing protests, but if it’s devolved to the point of full-scale war, I wouldn’t count on them. To have them be dominant or unstoppable just seems strange.

Finally, there’s the old joke about sufficiently large corporations becoming central planning. If it’s large enough it conducts a lot of it’s business itself, it basically becomes a command economy with all the interesting issues that has.  That’s especially the case for some works where basically everyone works for one corporation.(Although that’s more in weird dystopia than cyberpunk per se.)

But, those issues at one point made me think of something that I can only describe as a syndicalist-inspired megacorporate cyberpunk world.  It’s what you might get as corporations realize they have to take up the slack of governments fully.  You can think of it as if, rather than “Germany”, the region becomes “United German Carmakers” and the ideology and culture of the entire country are bent towards car production.  It would control the ideological institutions, having media and schools tell people that prosperity of the entire nation/corporation is dependent on making cars, basically an attempt to build actual loyalty to a company rather than just the corporation being something you join to pick up some cash.  It could have elections, perhaps using a principle like employee-ownership model but with the problems of bourgeoisie democracy heightened, as your prosperity is linked to that of your department and boss and those are manipulated to keep certain policies on top.  It could become regionless, where you live next to citizens of other corporation/nations and yours basically negotiates the status of citizen-employees with other corporations in a sort of polycentric legal order.  

You would be born into the corporation and would be expected to die there.  I could expect something like a jobs-guarantee, although the jobs at the bottom will probably be shit.  There are all sorts of weird things that you can see as corporations have to take control of issues of legitimacy and defense rather than just inheriting them from the government.  I would expect the corporation itself to become more democratic, even though there may be less democracy in total due to the lack of external government.

And the thing is, I sort of see shades of this in our world.  I chose German carmaking for a reason, Germany’s national pride and economic future is tied to it’s cars at this point and it is very defensive of this industry. And corporations do try and build loyalty beyond simply paying people, I’ve seen retail establishments do what basically amount to loyalty chants and pledges of allegiance, and it was in the news awhile ago that Amazon was basically doing self-criticism sessions that were likened to Maoism. 

I sometimes see bits and pieces of everywhere, and actually the real “Cyberpunk” works seems to have bits and pieces of this type of thing.  It’s actually the cyberpunk-adjacent works that are the worst, those that use a generic corporate future merely as set dressing for their story. But I still see this type of work do things that just seem wrong or impossible, and I do a double-take.

argumate

cyberpunk, cyberfolk, cybernumetal

mitigatedchaos

By total coincidence, this squidpost happens to be relevant to what I’m up to now.

Unfortunately, I cannot go into more detail, as segments describing more of the workings of the Pacific Metropolitan Collective Corporation, Outer Hong Kong Metropolity have yet to be posted. However, I do believe that some of those workings would satisfy @collapsedsquid, at least in terms of not being just “lol corps took over k”.

Source: collapsedsquid whiteout mitigated fiction

Anonymous asked:

So, as I don't have a tumblr account, in lieu of likes I wanted to tell you: I really enjoyed what I read of Whiteout, and look forward to you publishing more. Also, I'm not sure what topwebfiction rules has for stories on tumblr, but maybe look into it?

This is interesting, since it means that people without Tumblr accounts are either following my blog or being referred to Whiteout, and I have no way to gauge the number of them.

I’ll keep that ranking site in mind, Anon.

anons asks mitigated fiction whiteout
mitigatedchaos

Anonymous asked:

How about putting Whiteout on Fictionpress, as it's original content?

mitigatedchaos answered:

I’m considering what I want to do with it later, whether I want to publish in other locations or on a website of my own, and so on.  Aside from the fact that I’ll be starting a new part-time job soon, I’ve set it to update once per week so that I have time to mull over this decision.  

mitigatedchaos

Though, I do wonder if on AO3 or FictionPress if it would get lost in the sea of fiction writing.

mitigatedchaos

Actually, part of it is that I’m not entirely sure what to do with it.

> You have created a Book!  What would you like to do with it?
> uh _

The impression I get is that unless the book is published, it doesn’t really count, socially.  But I don’t read a lot of fiction, so maybe that isn’t accurate.  

And then publishing it might get it more readers by making it cost more and thus perceived as higher status, putting it on the shelves, etc. (And if I put the whole thing on one of those sites, it may not be possible to publish.)

On the other hand, within our community, there are works that become famous with no commercialization, there might be other means of commercialization, or no-commercialization might be better in order to spread my name, the future will not be the past, and so on.

mitigated fiction
mitigatedchaos

Anonymous asked:

How about putting Whiteout on Fictionpress, as it's original content?

mitigatedchaos answered:

I’m considering what I want to do with it later, whether I want to publish in other locations or on a website of my own, and so on.  Aside from the fact that I’ll be starting a new part-time job soon, I’ve set it to update once per week so that I have time to mull over this decision.  

mitigatedchaos

Though, I do wonder if on AO3 or FictionPress if it would get lost in the sea of fiction writing.

mitigated fiction

WHITEOUT : 7

[ Enjoying Whiteout?  Future posts will be on the @whiteoutstory blog, with chapter 8 released next Thursday.  Follow whiteoutstory for continued updates! ]

[ Missed a post?  The previous posts can be found here. ]

Beneath the Department of Immigration & Customs building was a vast database, known as the Ancestral Name Directory. Its name was a deliberate misnomer. The Directory didn’t store the names of ancestors, or rather, this wasn’t its primary goal. It stored the original identities of the living members of the city. Local slang called it the “Ghost Bucket.”

The Directory was air-gapped, cut off from the Internet. It had to be accessed in person, physically. Any wide-scale breach of the Directory could result in potential political disaster, and disrupt the careful peace the iron hand of the Pacific Metropolitan Collective had constructed.

Keep reading

mitigated fiction whiteout story whiteout draft