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Your grandchildren's future in 2050-2...

Chalanachithram.com DB » New TF Industry Related » Archive through May 07, 2019 » Your grandchildren's future in 2050-2060 (MIT tech review) « Previous Next »
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Ballasticmissile
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Username: Ballasticmissile

Post Number: 11853
Registered: 07-2012
Posted From: 132.252.192.67

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Posted on Sunday, May 05, 2019 - 11:24 am:       

while DB people complain about few bucks and UHC ...while whole generations life is at stake...what a pity....

...
Capacity vundi, laziness, and uninspired life is a waste of time.
YOLO kada....
But experiences is how you bring meaning to life. Worthiness should be earned with adequate efforts.
 

Ballasticmissile
Hero
Username: Ballasticmissile

Post Number: 11852
Registered: 07-2012
Posted From: 132.252.192.67

Rating: N/A
Votes: 0 (Vote!)

Posted on Sunday, May 05, 2019 - 11:22 am:       

A full life..
......................................................
By the time Rue reached 15 she had begun to measure her life by her many moves, the parchment of
her life torn into fragments, each one reducing the
integrity of the whole. Each small leaf then folded.
Folded and shaped until it became surreal origami.
Tear here. Fold there. This part became a house,
burning down. Tear here, fold again. This shred became a rusty
diesel truck, driving south. Tear again. Fold. This bit became an
apartment building, without a roof.
Tear here. Tear again. Make a casket.
Keep tearing.
Rue’s first move came when she was eight, her mother and
father selling the small-acreage farm they’d cultivated in a
Colorado valley. They’d been part of a late-millennial wave of
hipster farmers, fleeing the cities’ meaningless consumerism for
something more natural. They’d grown organic microgreens for
farm-to-table restaurants in nearby ski towns.
“We live like people are supposed to live,” her father said.
“Slower. More connected. Focused on the land.”
Then the Maroon-Treasury Fire burned Aspen. When the
smoke cleared, trees stood barestick black against hot blue sky
and the air reeked of char. Ski slopes drifted with ash moguls,
then slumped with mudslides.
In the aftermath, Rue collected trophies from amongst the
blackened Anasazi-like ruins of billionaire mansions, picking her
way through concrete foundation outlines. Aluminum puddled
in silver castings, rivulets of melt. Glass globs sparkled, treasure
gems, the remnants of picture windows.
At first, Rue’s mother and father had laughed, seeing people
who had complained about dirt specks in their radish greens fleeing an inferno that cared not for their wealth. A certain schadenfreude was inevitable. But other mountain towns were dying as
well, drought whittling away their picturesque scenery, thinning
their snowpack, and choking their summer skies with smoke.
Rue’s parents might have held on, but failing snows meant
inadequate irrigation water, and soon their domestic water failed
too, the aquifer below their home unable to recharge. Old-timers
laughed that they’d bought land with bad irrigation rights and
a crummy well.
“My dad says you should have seen it coming,” Rue’s friend
Hunter said. “Everyone knows how water rights work. ’Course
your water got cut off.”
“It never happened before,” Rue retorted.
“My dad says you should have known.”
They stopped talking because of that. Soon after, Rue moved.
Later, Rue heard that Hunter’s family went dry too—a family
that had ranched and farmed the same land for six generations.
Rue wrote a text asking if Hunter’s dad should have seen it coming. But she deleted it before sending.

Rue was sad about that first move, leaving her small familiar town. She remembered the moving truck belching diesel smoke, reeking and clanking unlike the electric pickup they’d
used for the farm. Her mother told her they couldn’t take her
big clothes dresser with them.
“We can’t fit it in the Austin apartment, sweetheart.”
Her mother gave her a new phone, to console her. Rue couldn’t
take big furniture, but she could have her first phone. That, at
least, was portable.
On the drive south, Rue called her grandmother.
“Oh, sweetpea,” Nona consoled. “I know you’re sad. But
there’s a silver lining to this. There’s a big world to learn about.
Plus, you’ll get to see the bats.”
“The bats?” Despite herself, Rue was intrigued.
“There are bats in Austin. Lots of them.”
Seeing more of the world meant you were less ignorant than
if you just lived in one small place all your life, and that was a
good thing.
That’s what Nona said.
Nona never really approved of college kids being farmers, so
she was glad they were moving.
That’s what Dad said.
I n Austin, Rue’s mother played ukulele in a band and her father drove an electric delivery truck. Some nights
they’d walk along the Colorado River, watching bats stream
out from under the Congress Avenue Bridge to catch insects.
The city skyline glowed in the sunset, the buildings newly
covered with perovskite solar skins, all of them a little shiny
because of it.
Some people said things weren’t the same as before. Some
of the bats were invasive—bloodsuckers instead of insect eaters—but they were still bats, and Rue liked them.
Rue’s new school was big, with way more friends than just
Hunter. Also, there was a ballet class, and a tae kwon do class.
Plus an old lady with purple hair who taught rock drumming.
“You see?” Nona said. “Things work out.”
But then came a summer night when the electric grid went
down. A hundred and ten degrees at 3 a.m. Everyone already on
water restrictions. Pitch-dark in the middle of a city. Everyone
out on the streets, desperate to catch a breeze. Everyone complaining. Blaming environmentalists, battery companies, naturalgas companies, Austin Energy, federal regulations, Texas’s love affair with low taxes. Rue’s dad said Texas hadn’t anticipated
how record heat would stress their grid.
Rue got heatstroke; her parents decided to move. Rue’s mother
already had a job working remotely for a Miami-based mortgage
company. She could get a promotion if she moved in-house.
In Miami, Rue’s father drove a three-wheeled short-range
electric hauler, delivering iced fish to restaurants. Rue swam
sometimes in the ocean, when jellyfish and algae weren’t choking up the coast. It was okay.
During their weekly phone chats, Nona told her about cubanos.
“You see?” Nona said, when Rue tried one. “It’s better when
the sugar brews into the coffee. I first tried one when I vacationed in Cuba. But Italian espresso is the best.”
“How do you know all these things?” Rue asked.
Nona laughed. “Well, I lived a full life. And it was much
cheaper to fly back then. It’s harder now with all the aero-taxes.”
“I wish I could fly places.”
“Well, maybe we’ll save our money and go to Italy.”
Then Annaleen hit. The hurricane wasn’t serious by
Florida standards but it seemed big to Rue: Cat 4 on the New
Meteorological Scale.
“It’s nothing,” her father told her as rain lashed their apartment windows. “The new scale goes to 11.”
Her mother laughed and made an air-guitar motion. Rue didn’t
get the reference, so they showed her Spinal Tap on YouTube.
Rue laughed with her parents—because they were laughing
at the idiot guitarist and his amp—but the clip didn’t make her
feel safe so much as make her wonder what a hurricane that
went to 11 might feel like.
A month later, Carrie hit. Carrie accelerated from NMS Cat
3 to Cat 9 during two phenomenal days. The governor declared
a state of emergency. Florida huddled down, unable to flee.
Water boiled up out of storm drains and filled the streets long
before the worst winds hit. Miami’s brand-new seawalls disappeared, swamped on both sides. The sheer volume of water
overwhelmed the city’s new pumping stations. They shorted
and shut down.
Rue huddled with her parents and members of her mother’s
new band in their apartment. The Blue Palms was the safest
apartment complex in the neighborhood, built to endure the
New Meteorological Scale.
“The Blue Palms are rock solid,” her father said. “When we
moved here, I thought this through.”
Down on the street, the band’s van floated away. Literally
floated.
Rue watched people float away, too.
Before Miami could recover from Carrie, Delia hit. Just bad
luck, everyone said. But to Rue, it was starting to feel like God
was bowling against them. There wasn’t enough time to recover,
to breathe, to restock supplies. God just kept bowling. Delia
ripped the roof off the Blue Palms. Popped it off like a can opener.
By the time sunny skies returned, their windows were gone
and one wall had crumbled. Something big and heavy had blasted
into the masonry and then flown away. A car? A tree? A bus? No
one could say.
They used bedspreads and sheets to cover the windows,
makeshift shelter while they waited for maintenance to fix things.
Then word came down that the apartment company was abandoning the building. Its insurance company was going bankrupt
from too many claims, so the apartment company was walking
away too, leaving everyone squatting in the ruins.
“Well, on the bright side, at least we’re not paying rent,”
Rue’s mother joked.
A dark bright side, because the mortgage company that
employed Rue’s mother was going bankrupt too. With insurance
failing, people were walking away from wrecked homes, leaving
mortgages unpaid, sending ripples through the financial system.
Why pay mortgage on a house that would never be fixed?
“Where’s FEMA?” her father complained as he pumped brown
water through a handmade filter of charcoal and sand and paper
towels. “There should be some kind of backup for this.” Sweating
and dripping with the work. Shirtless. He was skinny, Rue realized. Not as big and strong as he’d seemed when she was younger.
Just a scared skinny man, with new streaks of white in his bushy
beard. “There were supposed to be emergency funds for this.”
“They’re doing what they can with what they’ve got,” Rue’s
mother soothed. “There are other places that need help too.
They’re overwhelmed.”
That was the crux of the problem. God had gone bowling all
across the South. Fort Lauderdale, Tampa, and Mobile, Alabama,
all had been hit hard. Over in Texas, Houston had gone under
again. Corpus Christi, too. And that was just the big cities—the
places people could name. All the small towns? Maybe they were
there. Maybe they were drowned and gone. Who could say? No
one could get there to find out.
As for Miami, it was finally draining. The streets reeked of
ancient motor oil and fish and sxhit and garbage that had boiled
out of sewers and dumpsters and basements. Flies and mosquitoes and orphaned dogs swarmed over it. But at least the city
was draining.
Some people said Miami had enough money to survive.
Boosters were already imagining a future hurricane-hardened
version of the city. Now that they’d drowned, they could visualize
the armored Venice-like Miami they should have built the first
time. They’d make their buildings float, goddamnit.
Money liked Miami, Rue’s mom said, so maybe the city really
would make it.
New Orleans, on the other hand? New Orleans was a bathtub.
And money didn’t give a damn about New Orleans.
Money was racist—that’s also what Rue’s mom said.
Unlike money, mosquitoes didn’t discriminate. They loved all
the cities on the coast equally, and all the people too. Mosquitoes snuck through the broken windows, the high whine of their wings
always in Rue’s ears, the welts of their bites always on her skin.
Screening was sold out. FEMA mosquito nets had been hoarded.
Walmart kept saying delivery trucks would come soon, for sure.
Everyone got covered with bites.
They all got fever from it.
Nona said it was a new malaria strain, something the CDC
had warned about, but it hadn’t been faced because the damn
Republicans kept cutting funding. Now here the disease was,
just like epidemiologists had predicted. For some reason, kids
and old people survived better. Middle-aged people often died.
That’s what Rue’s dad did.
Nona cried when Rue and her mother Skyped the news.
“Why was Dad so mad at Nona?” Rue asked later. “Why didn’t
he want to live around her?”
Her mother made a reluctant face. Finally she said, “Nona was
always complaining about problems, but she never lived like she
needed to do anything about them. And she hated that we tried
to farm. I think she felt like we were insulting her. Judging how
she lived her own life.”
“But you were, right?”
“It bothered Dad a lot that Nona made certain choices.
Especially after you were born.”
“Like flying in airplanes?”
“And cars. And eating meat.” She shook her head. “Anyway,
that’s all a long time ago. Everybody did it, and they all made it
worse for everyone. Not just Nona.”
Later, Rue asked Nona about it. “Mom says Dad was mad at
you because he didn’t like how you lived.”
“Oh, sweetpea. This is the world we live in. We have to take at
least a little joy in it.” Her eyes were wet. “Life’s short. We have
to enjoy something. You should enjoy something too. I wish you
had something you could enjoy.”
She sent Rue some money on her phone, to buy something
nice, but Rue didn’t know what that would be. Their apartment
was a wreck and they were about to move again. Rue didn’t want
more things. Except maybe a mosquito net.
Rue wondered what it would have been like to fly to the far
side of the world. To go to someplace like Italy to drink espresso.
Or fly to Japan and see the temples of Kyoto, where Nona had
once gone to meditate. Nona hadn’t sent enough money for
either of those things.
Nona wanted them to join her in Boston, but Rue’s mom preferred New York. They went to live with her brother, Armando.
Uncle Armando said the people in Florida deserved what
they got.
“Those lame-ass seawalls! Some political appointee just made
up the standards! That’s why Manhattan used the European standards. Say what you want about the taxes here, at least we don’t
fxuck around with our science.” He shook his head at the stupidity
of Miami as he cut into his steak. “Of course they were fxucked,”
he said, gesturing with his fork as he chewed. “They were fxucked
from the moment they used those sxhitty American standards.”
“Please don’t say it that way,” her mother said, rubbing her
temples. She hadn’t touched the meat on her plate.
“Say what? Fxucked?”
“You know I don’t like it.”
“Five cities are underwater, and you’re worried about my
fxucking language?” He laughed in disbelief. “The language is
what bothers you?” He shook his head, gestured at her plate.
“Try the steak,” he said. “It’s Kobe Rainforest.”
“I’m not hungry.”
“Carbon-free? Cruelty-free? It’s right up your alley. You can’t
even tell it’s vat meat. Zero methane, zero deforestation. Your
husband would have loved this sh— this stuff. Give it a try.”
“Maybe later.”
“Suit yourself.” He cut another chunk for himself. “You like
the steak, Rue?”
“Yeah. It’s good.”
“Damn right it is.” He forked another bite. Returned to his
previous point, talking around the mouthful. “Some jackass lobbyist for some oil company wrote that sxhitty standard. Just like
lobbyists did with mercury and methane and all the other crap.
And then dumb-ass Miami just went ahead and used the sea-rise
estimates. Fxucked themselves, is what they did.”
“Armando,” Rue’s mother said. “There are real people involved.
It’s not just one of your investment spreadsheets.”
“You know I shorted Miami, right?”
Her mother glared. Armando subsided. But the word lingered
in Rue’s mind.
Fxucked.
She was more than old enough to know the word. She knew
how to say it in six different languages, thanks to the kids she’d
met in her different moves. They used it all the time: who fxucked
who; how fxucked-up the vocab test was; fxuck you; fxuck me; FxUCK
PRINCIPAL VASQUEZ—that was a Snapchat group. But the
word had been casual, and they’d used it casually. They hadn’t
felt it. They hadn’t understood it.
Miami was fxucked, and now the word finally sounded right.
Fxucked.
Hard and nasty and mean.
It described the world Rue experienced every day. The one
the grownups in her life seemed bent on pretending didn’t exist.
Like if they pretended really, really hard, they’d be okay. Like
they’d pretended the Miami seawalls were big enough. Like
Nona had pretended that flying on airplanes was fine. They’d
closed their eyes and pretended.
And now everyone was fxucked.
It was almost a relief to have Armando say it. To have that
word squat on the dinner table with the organic kale and the
arsenic-free brown rice. It gave shape to an unformed feeling
that had been lurking in Rue’s mind for some time. Something she’d been unable to name or describe because all the grownups
around her hadn’t been honest enough to speak it clearly.
It felt like a door being kicked open.
As soon as Armando said it, it felt blazingly obvious. And
now that Rue could see it, she could see it everywhere. In the
cost of bread and cheese and vegetables and chicken. In the
kids begging on the streets. In the storm warnings as winter
hurricanes made their way up the coast, dropping rain and jamming rivers with ice floes and slamming against Manhattan’s
own seawall barriers.
Rue’s mom had promised New York would be good for them.
It was where she’d grown up. But Old New York was different
from Fxucked New York. Armando was the only one with a job,
and things were changing, even for him.
All over the country, people’s homes were being destroyed
by sea-level rise, forest fires, droughts, storms, and floods.
People were going reffee, and leaving behind ruined houses.
And mountains of debt. So now, along with mortgage companies and insurance companies, banks started failing. Armando’s
shorting of Miami—he’d explained to Rue that “shorting” meant
“betting a place was going to get fxucked”—only worked if there
was a safe place to stash his winnings.
Six months after Rue and her mother moved to New York,
the FDIC collapsed, and the dollar fell off a cliff. Bank after bank
went down. Traders all over Manhattan went bankrupt. Whole
hedge funds. Wall Street ground to a halt. Checking accounts
froze. People lost their savings, lost 401(k)s, 529s, IRAs—
It was like all the money in the world evaporated.
R ue’s mom decided to send Rue to Boston. “I don’t want to live with Nona. I want to live with you,”
Rue begged as she hugged her mother goodbye at the bus station.
“As soon as I have a job, you’ll be back with me,” her mother
said, wiping her eyes.
Another bit of pretend. The grownups were all playing pretend. Everyone except Armando, who hugged her and shoved
a small sweaty wad of cash into her hand.
“Good luck, kiddo. Keep this for an emergency. Got it? An
emergency.”
“I will. I’m sorry about your job.”

“Yeah, well, I knew I should have bought yuan.” He sucked his
teeth, irritated. “I got into this work because I swore I was never
going to dig ditches. Now I’m not even sure they’ll let me do
seawall construction. Too many reffees competing for that sxhit.”
He looked completely different now that his investment
company was gone.
T he bus to Boston passed through three Mass Pike checkpoints. They scanned her FamilyPass bar code again and again. Kids
with fake documents got pulled off the bus and sent back. Each
time State Patrol scanned her pass, she expected it would be her.
“I wish you’d come here sooner,” Nona said as she hugged
Rue in South Station. “I have room. I always had room for you.”
She hugged Rue tighter, and for a minute, in the middle of the
bustling terminal, Rue felt safe.
The T was sardine-packed, even at noon. Despite the migration controls, refugees swamped Boston. “Everyone’s trying to
get in,” Nona said as they sweated up the line. “I’ve been renting
my spare rooms on Airbnb. Rents are crazy. It helps with the
food prices, though. I don’t know how other people are affording
food with all the droughts.”
Nona cleared out a whole family from Alabama to give Rue
a room.
“I have to get back to the hospital,” Nona said as she changed
the bedsheets. “If you go out, watch out for muggers. There’s not
enough work for people.”
Nona was a psychiatrist who specialized in trauma. The state
paid her to prescribe antidepressants and anti-anxiety meds
to refugees. “Benzos are cheap,” she joked. “Hospital beds are
expensive. And the heat makes everyone crazy.”
Nona also said not to get too comfortable. Her single-family
house was being torn down for a density project. She was moving
to a high-rise. “They’ve got plans for this old place.”
Boston definitely seemed to have plans. Billboards called
Greater Boston a “City of the Future.” They’d banned cars from
Alewife all the way to the ocean. Only electric trams and occasional
emergency vehicles used the narrowed main roads. Remaining
streets were being converted into e-bike paths and gardens.
Climbing vines shaded walking paths for summer. Enclosed
skyways leapt from high-rise to high-rise for the winter. Not a
drop of gasoline anywhere.
Rue could see how pleasant the city was supposed to be, but it
was groaning under the weight of reffees from all the places that
hadn’t planned. The school Rue was supposed to attend—which
Nona said was excellent—was overflowing. Kids were being given
disposable tablets and asked to do Khan Academy instead of
assignments from living teachers. They sat cheek by jowl, crosslegged on the floors, with security proctors watching over them.
Rue started ditching, killing time down by the Charles River
with some other reffee kids. Jiyu—a girl from coastal North
Carolina—and Josh, a kid from Iowa who’d never lived in a city
before but who Rue had taken under her wing when she found
him making origami out of trashed McDonald’s wrappers.
Most days, they’d perch atop the new Charles River levees and
skip rocks across warm algae-choked waters, occasionally trading
hits on Josh’s asthma inhaler. Up in Canada, whole beetle-killed
forests were burning, and the smoke kept blowing south. Burnt
Canadians, they called it. They rated the Boston weather by how
thick the Canadians were, and how many asthma hits they needed.
A pair of joggers wearing fluorescent athletic gear and Nike
particulate masks pounded past, giving them dirty looks.
“How do they know we’re not from here?” Josh asked, taking
another inhaler hit. “What do they see?”
Rue had wondered about that too. She’d been chased by local
Boston kids multiple times, gangs of them intent on schooling
the newcomers. She wondered if maybe she and her friends held
their bodies differently. Like dogs that had been kicked too many
times. Instinctually cowering.
“Kinda makes you hope one of these levees breaks,” Josh said.
Rue could imagine it happening. Could imagine Boston—
despite its attempts to harden and adapt—drowning just like all
the other places she’d been. She wondered if it would happen,
or if Boston would somehow manage to do better, not play pretend, maybe do something right.
O n Rue’s way home, a crew of Boston kids jumped her, bursting out of a humid alley. She curled in a ball on the
pavement as they beat and kicked her. They left her bruised and
crying with final gobs of spit and warnings to go back where
she’d come from.
By the time she finally limped home, it was dark. Inside, she found
Nona peacefully asleep in her easy chair, the TV streaming Netflix.
Rue stood in the flickering darkness, tasting the blood in her
mouth and clutching her bruised ribs. Her grandmother shifted
in her sleep. The air conditioner droned, fighting the October
heat. Even with the doors and windows closed, Rue could smell
the Canadians burning. The world that had existed before, for
thousands of years, going up in smoke.
Rue tried to remember a time when something in her life
hadn’t been on fire, or underwater, or falling apart, and realized
she couldn’t. She tried to remember a time when she had slept
as peacefully as Nona.
Nona said she loved Rue, but all Rue felt was empty distance
between them—the shredded gap between the life her grandmother had enjoyed and the tatters that Rue had inherited. Her
grandmother had drunk espresso in Italy and meditated in the
temples of Kyoto. She’d lived a full life.
Rue imagined strangling her

...............................................

Paolo Bacigalupi is a novelist who often focuses on the
environment and sustainability. His latest novel about
climate change was The Water Knife, a thriller about
drought and water conflicts in the southwestern US.
Capacity vundi, laziness, and uninspired life is a waste of time.
YOLO kada....
But experiences is how you bring meaning to life. Worthiness should be earned with adequate efforts.

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