Post #86534
November 19, 2016, 03:16:08 AM
Now that brings back memories of year 11. TED talks are great, and that art was gorgeous.
I'm very fond of dystopias and utopias as a fictional trope, but I've always figured making a perfect world is impossible (namely because my introduction to the concept was Animal Farm). Still, inventing them is a whole lot of fun.
For instance, take a world filled with monsters turned up to eleven, with zombies, skeletons, dragons, and the usual evil-monster fantasy tropes. Then, take a race of people that managed to de-fang these monsters by banishing and diluting their essense across the multiverse. The people thus have made a somewhat perfect world, at the cost of screwing over the rest of the multiverse.
Then, say some people disagreed with dumping their problems into other worlds and tried to find a better option, except they screwed up and instead broke part of the system, thus allowing some monsters back into World A.
Obviously the answer to this problem is to systematically kidnap thousands of people from millions of realities and force them to fight off the monsters. Because they aren't real people, right? They aren't "us" and "we" have families, brothers, sisters, parents, children to look after and "we" already faced their screams. And these people things from other worlds are easily replaceable, while "we" have fought for so very long against these demons, "we" deserve a break.
We deserve this.
Bottom line? Pushing your problems onto other people does not equal a perfect world. Heh. Inventing dystopias is fun, a lot more fun than utopias.