Lesson: ‘Think Like a Dinosaur’ Short Story Lesson: ‘Think Like a Dinosaur’ Short StoryAttached Files: ?Reading–Think Like
Lesson: "Think Like a Dinosaur" Short Story
Lesson: "Think Like a Dinosaur" Short StoryAttached Files:
- Reading–Think Like a Dinosaur James Patrick Kelley (Text).pdf Reading–Think Like a Dinosaur James Patrick Kelley (Text).pdf – Alternative Formats (165.457 KB)
- Read, annotate, and take notes over the short story attached entitled "Think Like a Dinosaur."
Discussion Board: "Think Like a Dinosaur" Analysis
For this discussion board, you will analyze the short story "Think Like a Dinosaur" by James Patrick Kelley.
Consider the three Kamala Shastris.
The first (and original) Kamala arrives at Tuulen Station scared but ready to complete her mission. She gets into the marble, but there is a malfunction. She gets out of the marble but then refuses to go back in. She believes she is going home, but Michael tricks here and pushes her out the airlock to kill her instead.
The second Kamala is the one who is actually translated to Gend when the Hanen think the marble is malfunctioning. She goes on to complete the mission but is killed when she is translated back to Tuulen Station at the end of her mission.
The third Kamala is the one who is translated back to Tuulen Station at the end of her mission. The reader meets her at the very beginning and very end of the story. When she returns, she barely remembers Michael, doesn’t know about how the first Kamala is killed, and is changed. She is harder with long nails (“claws really”) and a scar on her cheek.
Considering what you know about the Kamala’s experiences, her knowledge (or lack of information) about the situation and mission, and Michael’s actions and duties, do you think Michael has committed murder when he pushes the original Kamala out the air lock to kill her? Or is he simply doing his job? Is Michael Burr a murderer?
You need to include a full explanation for your analysis/claim with evidence from the story. You can paraphrase actions or include quotes, but you must include support for your claim. You need to write a full 250 words. You must explain. Do not simply summarize the story. Explain HOW your example proves Michael is innocent or guilty of murder.
You need to write in complete paragraphs with topic sentences, evidence (quotes or paraphrases), and full explanations.
Don't forget that you must respond to at least two of your peers (you may respond to more). When responding, list any evidence that you found that your peer(s) may have left out. Be sure you make it clear whether you think the evidence supports his guilt or innocence. As more evidence is discovered, you may even change your stance on Burr's guilt or innocence!
“Think Like a Dinosaur” by James Patrick Kelley James Patrick Kelly (born I95I) was told as a young writer by his teachers at the Clarion workshop that science fiction stories should be well thought out and well researched, and so he set out to write that way. Only later did he learn that many writers in the field don’t bother to work that hard. But by then, his habits were in place. He is not one of hard SF’s politically committed true believers, but rather is intrigued by the dramatic possibilities of hard SF situations. He has a dear graceful style and a willingness to do the work of making the science in his stories count. His stories are tight and polished and his narratives tend to have a strong voice and point of view that allow Kelly to play the drama of the situation he has chosen. “Think like a Dinosaur” won the I996 Hugo Award for Best Novelette.
Kamala Shastri came back to this world as she had left it naked. She tottered out of the assembler, trying to balance in Tuulen Station’s delicate gravity. I caught her and bundled her into a robe with one motion, then eased her onto the float. Three years on another planet had transformed Kamala. She was leaner, more muscular. Her fingernails were now a couple of centimeters long, and there were four parallel scars incised on her left cheek, perhaps some Gendian’s idea of beautification. But what struck me most was the darting strangeness in her eyes. This place, so familiar to me, seemed almost to shock her. It was as if she doubted the walls and was skeptical of air. She had learned to think like an alien.
“Welcome back.” The float’s whisper rose to a whoosh as l walked it down the hallway. She swallowed hard, and I thought she might cry. Three years ago, she would have. Lots
of migrators are devastated when they come out of the assembler; it’s because there is no transition. A few seconds ago Kamala was on Gend, fourth planet of the star we call epsilon Leo, and now she was here in lunar orbit. She was almost home; her life’s great adventure was over.
“Matthew?” she said. “Michael.” I couldn’t help but be pleased that she remembered me. After all, she had
changed my life.
I’ve guided maybe three hundred migrations-comings and goings since I first came to Tuulen to study the dinos. Kamala Shastri’s is the only quantum scan I’ve ever pirated. I doubt that the dinos care; I suspect this is a trespass they occasionally allow themselves. I know more about her-at least, as she was three years ago- than I know about myself. When the dinos sent her to Gend, she massed 50,39I.72 grams and her red cell count was 4.8I million per mm3. She could play the nagas-varam, a kind of bamboo flute. Her father came from Thana, near Bombay, and her favorite flavor of chewyfruit was watermelon, and she’d had five lovers, and when she was eleven, she had wanted to be a gymnast but instead she had become a biomaterials engineer who at age twenty-nine had volunteered to go to the stars to learn how to grow artificial eyes. It took her two years to go through migrator training; she knew she could have backed out at any time, right up until the moment Silloin translated her into a superluminal signal. She understood what it meant to balance the equation.
I first met her on June 22, 2069. She shuttled over from Lunex’s L1 port and came through our airlock at promptly I0:I5, a small, roundish woman with black hair parted in the middle and drawn tight against her skull. They had darkened her skin against epsilon Leo’s UV;
it was the deep blue-black of twilight. She was wearing a striped clingy and Velcro slippers to help her get around for the short time she’d be navigating our .2 microgravity.
“Welcome to Tuulen Station.” I smiled and offered my hand. “My name is Michael.” We shook. “I’m supposed to be a sapientologist, but I also moonlight as the local guide.”
“Guide?” She nodded distractedly. “Okay.” She peered past me, as if expecting someone else.
“Oh, don’t worry,” I said, “The dinos are in their cages.” Her eyes got wide as she let her hand slip from mine. “You call the Hanen dinos?” “Why not?” I laughed. “They call us babies. The weeps, among other things.” She shook her head in amazement. People who’ve never met a dino tended to romanticize
them: the wise and noble reptiles who had mastered superluminal physics and introduced Earth to the wonders of galactic civilization. I doubt Kamala had ever seen a dino play poker or gobble down a screaming rabbit. And she had never argued with Linna, who still wasn’t convinced that humans were psychologically ready to go to the stars. . · .
“Have you eaten?” I gestured down the corridor toward the reception rooms. “Yes …I mean, no.” She didn’t move. “I am not hungry.”
“Let me guess. You’re too nervous to eat. You’re too nervous to talk, even. You wish I’d just shut up, pop you into the marble, and beam you out. Let’s just get this part the hell over with, eh?”
“I don’t mind the conversation, actually.” “There you go. Well, Kamala, it is my solemn duty to advise you that there are no peanut
butter and jelly sandwiches on Gend. And no chicken vindaloo. What’s my name again?” “Michael?” “See, you’re not that nervous. Not one taco, or a single slice of eggplant pizza. This is your last chance to eat like a human.” “Okay.” She did not actually smile-she was too busy being brave, but a corner of her
mouth twitched. “Actually, I would not mind a cup of tea.” “Now, tea they’ve got.” She let me guide her toward reception room D; her slippers
snicked at the Velcro carpet. “Of course, they brew it from lawn clippings.” “The Gendians don’t keep lawns. They live underground.” “Refresh my memory.” I kept my hand on her shoulder; beneath the clingy, her muscles
were rigid. “Are they the ferrets or the things with the orange bumps?” “They look nothing like ferrets.” We popped through the door bubble into reception D, a compact rectangular space with a
scatter of low, unthreatening furniture. There was a kitchen station at one end, a closet with a vacuum toilet at the other. The ceiling was blue sky; the long wall showed a live view of the Charles River and the Boston skyline, baking in the late June sun. Kamala had just finished her doctorate at MIT.
I opaqued the door. She perched on the edge of a couch like a wren, ready to flit away. While I was making her tea, my fingernail screen flashed. I answered it, and a tiny Silloin
came up in discreet mode. She didn’t look at me; she was too busy watching arrays in the control room. =A problem,= her voice buzzed in my earstone, =most negligible, really. But we will have to void the last two from today’s schedule. Save them at Lunex until first shift tomorrow. Can this one be kept for an hour?=
“Sure,” I said. “Kamala, would you like to meet a Hanen?” I transferred Silloin to a dina- sized window on the wall. “Silloin, this is Kamala Shastri. Silloin is the one who actually runs things. I’m just the doorman.”
Silloin looked through the window with her near eye, then swung around and peered at Kamala with her other. She was short for a dino, just over a meter tall, but she had an enormous head that teetered on her neck like a watermelon balancing on a grapefruit. She must have just oiled herself because her silver scales shone.
=Kamala, you will accept my happiest intentions for you?= She raised her left hand, spreading the skinny digits to expose dark crescents of vestigial webbing.
“Of course, I…” =And you will permit us to render you this translation?= She straightened. “Yes.” =Have you questions?= I’m sure she had several hundred, but at this point was probably too scared to ask. While
she hesitated, I broke in. “Which came first, the lizard or the egg?” Silloin ignored me. =It will be excellent for you to begin when?= “She’s just having a little tea,” I said handing her the cup. “I’ll bring her along when
she’s done. Say an hour?” Kamala squirmed on the couch. “No, really, it will not take me…”
Silloin showed us her teeth several of which were as long as piano keys. =That would be most appropriate Michael.= She closed, a gull flew through the space where her window had been.
“Why did you do that!” Kamala’s voice was sharp “Because it says here that you have to wait your turn. You are not the only migrator we’re
sending this morning.” This was a lie, of course. We had to cut the schedule because Jodi Larchaw, the other sapientologist assigned to Tuulen, was at the University of Hipparchus presenting our paper on the Hanen concept of identity. “Don’t worry. I’ll make the time fly.”
For a moment, we looked at each other. I could have laid down an hour’s worth of patter. I’d done that often enough. Or I could have drawn her out on why she was going: no doubt she had a blind grandma or second cousin just waiting for her to bring home those artificial eyes, not to mention those spinoffs which could well end tuberculosis, famine, and premature ejaculation, blah, blah, blah. Or I could have just left her alone in the room to read the wall. The trick was guessing how spooked she really was.
“Tell me a secret,” I said. “What?” “A secret, you know, something no one else knows.”
She stared as if I’d just fallen off Mars. “Look in a little while you’re going someplace that’s what…three hundred and ten light
years away? You’re scheduled to stay for three years. By the time you come back, I could easily be rich, famous, or elsewhere. We’ll probably never see each other again. So what have you got to lose? I promise not to tell.”
She leaned back on the couch and settled the cup in her lap. “This is another test, right? After everything they have put me through, they still have not decided whether to send me.”
“Oh, no, in a couple of hours, you’ll be cracking nuts with ferrets in some dark Gendian borrow. This is just me, talking.”
“You are crazy.”
“Actually, I believe the technical term is logomaniac. It’s from the Greek: logos meaning word, mania meaning two bits short of a byte. I just love to chat is all. Tell you what, I’ll go first. If my secret isn’t juicy enough, you don’t have to say anything.”
Her eyes were slits as she sipped her tea. I was fairly sure that whatever she was worrying about at that moment, it wasn’t being swallowed by the big blue marble.
“I was brought up Catholic,” I said, settling onto a chair in front of her. I’m not anymore, but that’s not the secret. My parents sent me to Mary, Mother of God High School; we called it Moogoo. It was run by a couple of old priests, Father Thomas and his wife, Mother Jennifer. Father Tom taught physics, which I got a ‘D’ in, mostly because he talked like he had walnuts in his mouth. Mother Jennifer taught theology and had all the warmth of a marble pew; her nickname was Mama Moogoo.
“One night a week before my graduation, Father Tom and Mama Moogoo went out in their Chevy Minimus for ice cream. On their way home, Mama Moogoo pushed a yellow light and got broadsided by an ambulance. Like I said, she was old, a hundred and twenty something. They should’ve lifted her license back in the 50’s. She was killed instantly. Father Tom died in the hospital.
“Of course, we were all supposed to feel sorry for them and I guess I did a little, but I never really liked either of them and I resented the way their deaths had screwed things up for my class. So I was more annoyed than sorry, but then I also had this edge of guilt for being so uncharitable. Maybe you’d have to grow up Catholic to understand that. Anyway, the day after it happened they called an assembly in the gym and we were all there squirming on the bleachers and the cardinal himself telepresented a sermon. He kept trying to comfort us like it had been our parents that had died. When I made a joke about it to the kid next to me, I got caught and spent the last week of my senior year with an in-school suspension.”
Kamala had finished her tea. She slid the empty cup into one of the holders built into the table.
“Want some more?” I said. She stirred restlessly. “Why are you telling me this?” “It’s part of the secret,” I leaned forward in my chair. “See, my family lived down the
street from Holy Spirit Cemetery and in order to get to the carryvan line on McKinley Ave. I had to cut through. Now this happened a couple of days after I got in trouble at the assembly. It was around midnight and I was coming home from a graduation party where I had taken a couple of pokes of insight so I was feeling sly as a philosopher king. As I walked through the cemetery, I stumbled across two dirt mounds right next to each other. At first, I thought they were flower beds, then I saw the wooden crosses. Fresh graves: here lies Father Tom and Mama Moogoo. There wasn’t much to the crosses: they were basically just stakes with crosspieces, painted white and hammered into the ground. The names were hand printed on them. The way I figured it, they were there to mark the graves until the stones got delivered. I didn’t need any insight to recognize a once in a lifetime opportunity. If I switched them, what were the chances anyone was going to notice? It was no problem sliding them out of their holes. I smoothed the dirt with my hand and then ran like hell.”
Until that moment, she’d seemed bemused by my story and slightly condescending towards me. Now there was a glint of alarm in her eyes. “That was a terrible thing to do,” she said.
“Absolutely,” I said, “Although the dinos think that the whole idea of planting bodies in graveyards and marking them with carved rock is weepy. They say there is no identity in dead
meat, so why get so sentimental about it? Linna keeps asking how come we don’t put markers over our shit. But that’s not the secret. See, it’d been a warmish night in the middle of June, only as I ran, the air turned cold. Freezing, I could see my breath. And my shoes got heavier and heavier, like they had turned to stone. As I got closer to the back gate, it felt like I was fighting a strong wind, except my clothes weren’t flapping. I slowed to a walk. I know I could have pushed through, but my heart was thumping and then I heard this whispery seashell noise and I panicked. So the secret is I’m a coward. I switched the crosses back and I never went near that cemetery again. As a matter of fact,” I nodded at the walls of reception room D on Tuulen Station, “when I grew up, I got about as far away from it as I could.”
She stared as I settled back in my chair. “True story,” I said and raised my right hand. She seemed so astonished that I started laughing. A smile bloomed on her dark face and suddenly she was giggling too. It was a soft, liquid sound, like a brook bubbling over smooth stones; it made me laugh even harder. Her lips were full and her teeth were very white.
“Your turn,” I said, finally. “Oh, no, I could not.” She waved me off. “I don’t have anything so good…” She paused, then frowned. “You have told that before?” “Once,” I said. “To the Hanen, during the psych screening for this job. Only I didn’t tell
them the last part. I know how dinos think, so I ended it when I switched the crosses. The rest is baby stuff.” I waggled a finger at her. “Don’t forget, you promised to keep my secret.”
“Did I?” “Tell me about when you were young. Where did you grow up?” “Toronto.” She glanced at me, appraisingly. “There was something, but not funny. Sad.” I nodded encouragement and changed the wall to Toronto’s skyline dominated by the CN
Tower, Toronto-Dominion Centre, Commerce Court, and the King’s Needle. She twisted to take in the view and spoke over her shoulder. “When I was ten we moved
to an apartment; right downtown on Bloor Street, so my mother could be close to work. She pointed at the wall and turned back to face me. “She is an accountant, my father wrote wallpaper for Imagineering. It was a huge building; it seemed as if we were always getting into the elevator with ten neighbors we never knew we had. I was coming home from school one day when an old woman stopped me in the lobby. ‘Little girl,’ she said, ‘how would you like to earn ten dollars?’ My parents had warned me not to talk to strangers but she obviously was a resident. Besides, she had an ancient pair of exolegs strapped on, so I knew I could out run her if I needed to. She asked me to go to the store for her, handed me a grocery list and a cash card, and said I should bring everything up to her apartment, 10W. I should have been more suspicious because all the downtown groceries delivered, but, as I soon found out, all she really wanted was someone to talk to her. And she was willing to pay for it, usually five or ten dollars, depending on how long I stayed. Soon I was stopping by almost every day after school. I think my parents would have made me stop if they had known; they were very strict. They would not have liked me taking her money. But neither of them got home until after six, so it was my secret to keep.”
“Who was she?” I said. “What did you talk about?” “Her name was Margaret Ase. She was ninety seven years old, and I think she had been
some kind of counselor. Her husband and her daughter had both died, and she was alone. I didn’t find out much about her. She made me do most of the talking. She asked me about my friends and what I was learning in school and my family. Things like that…”
Her voice trailed off as my fingernail started to flash. I answered it.
=Michael, I am pleased to call you to here.= Silloin buzzed in my ear. She was almost twenty minutes ahead of schedule.
“See, I told you we’d make the time fly.” I stood; Kamala’s eyes got very wide. “I’m ready if you are.” I offered her my hand. She took it and let me help her up. She wavered for a moment and
I sensed just how fragile her resolve was. I put my hand around her waist and steered her into the corridor. In the microgravity of Tuulen Station, she already felt as insubstantial as a memory. “So tell me, what happened that was so sad?”
At first 1 thought she hadn’t heard. She shuffled along, said nothing. “Hey, don’t keep me in suspense here, Kamala,” I said. “You have to finish the story.” “No,” she said. “I don’t think I do.” I didn’t take this personally. My only real interest in the conversation had been to distract
her. If she refused to be distracted, that was her choice. Some migrators kept talking right up to the moment they slid into the big blue marble, but lots of them went quiet just before. They turned inward. Maybe in her mind she was already on Gend, blinking in the hard white light.
We arrived at the scan center, the largest space on Tuulen Station. Immediately in front of us was the marble, containment for the quantum nondemolition sensor array-QNSA for the acronymically inclined. It was the milky blue of glacial ice and big as two elephants. The upper hemisphere was raised and the scanning table protruded like a shiny gray tongue. Kamala approached the marble and touched her reflection, which writhed across its polished surface. To the right was a padded bench, the fogger, and a toilet. I looked left, through the control room window. Silloin stood watching us, her impossible head cocked to one side.
=She is docile?= she buzzed in my earstone. I held up crossed fingers. =Welcome, Kamala Shastri.= Silloin’s voice came over the speakers with a soothing
hush. =You are ready to open your translation?= Kamala bowed to the window. “This is where 1take my clothes off?” =-If you would be so convenient.-= She brushed past me to the bench. Apparently, I had ceased to exist; this was between her
and the dino now. She undressed quickly, folding her dingy into a neat bundle, tucking her slippers beneath the bench. Out of the comer of my eye, I could see tiny feet, heavy thighs, and the beautiful, dark smooth skin of her back. She stepped into the fogger and closed the door.
“Ready,” she called. From the control room, Silloin dosed circuits which filled the fogger with a dense cloud
of nanolenses. The nano stuck to Kamala and deployed, coating the surface of her body. As she breathed them, they passed from her lungs into her bloodstream. She only coughed twice; she had been well trained. When the eight minutes were up, Silloin cleared the air in the fogger and she emerged. Still ignoring me, she again faced the control room.
=Now you must arrange yourself on the scanning table,= said Silloin, =and enable Michael to fix you.= ·
She crossed to the marble without hesitation, climbed the gantry beside, eased onto the table, and laid back.
I followed her up. “Sure you won’t tell me the rest of the secret!” She stared at the ceiling, unblinking.
“Okay then.” I took the canister and a sparker out of my hip pouch. “This is going to happen just like you’ve practiced it.” I used the canister to respray the bottoms of her feet with
nano. I watched her belly rise and fall, rise and fall. She was deep into her breathing exercise. “Remember, no skipping rope or whistling, while you’re in the scanner.”
She did not answer. “Deep breath now,” I said and touched a sparker to her big toe, There was a brief crackle as the nano on her skin wove into a net and stiffened, locking her in place. “Bark at the ferrets for me.” I picked up my equipment, climbed down the gantry, and wheeled it back to the wall.
With a low whine, the big blue marble retracted its tongue. I watched the upper hemisphere close, swallowing Kamala Shastri, then joined Silloin in the control room.
I’m not of the school who thinks the dinos stink, another reason I got assigned to study them up dose. Parikkal, for example, has no smell at all that l can tell. Normally Silloin had the faint but not unpleasant smell of stale wine. When she was under stress; however, her scent became vinegary and biting. It must have been a wild morning for her. Breathing through my mouth, I settled onto the stool at my station.
She was working quickly, now that the marble was sealed. Even with all their training, migrators tend to get claustrophobic fast. After all, they’re lying in the dark, in nanobondage, waiting to be translated. Waiting. The simulator at the Singapore training center makes a noise while it’s emulating a scan. Most compare it to a light rain pattering against the marble; for some, it’s low volume radio static. As long as they hear the patter, the migrators think they’re safe. We reproduce it for them while they’re in our marble, even though scanning takes about three seconds and is utterly silent. From my vantage, I could see that the sagittal, axial, and coronal windows had stopped blinking, indicating full data capture. Silloin was skirring busily to herself; her comm didn’t bother to interpret. Wasn’t saying anything baby Michael needed to know, obviously. Her head bobbed as she monitored the enormous spread of readouts; her claws clicked against touch screens that glowed orange and yellow.
At my station; there was only a migration status screen and a white button. I wasn’t lying when I said I was just the doorman. My field is sapientology, not quantum
physics. Whatever went wrong with Kamala’s migration that morning, there was nothing I could have done. The dinos tell me that the quantum nondemoliton sensor array is able to circumvent Heisenberg’s Uncerrainty Principle by measuring spacetime’s most crogglingly small quantities without collapsing the wave/particle duality. How small? They say that no one can ever “see” anything that’s only 1.62 x l0-33 centimeters long, because at that size, space and time come apart. Time ceases to exist and space becomes a random probabilistic foam, sort of like quantum spit. We humans call this the Planck Wheeler length. There’s a Planck Wheeler time, too: 10-45 of a second. If something happens and something else happens and the two events are separated by an interval of a mere I0-45 of a second, it is impossible to say which came first. It was all dino to me, and that’s just the scanning. The Hanen use different tech to create artificial wormholes, hold them open with electromagnetic vacuum fluctuations, pass the superluminal signal through, and then assemble the migrator from elementary particles at the destination.
On my status screen, I could see that the signal which mapped Kamala Shastri had already been compressed and burst through the wormhole. All that we had to wait for was for Gend to confirm acquisition. Once they officially told us that they had her, it would be my job to balance the equation.
Pitter patter, pitter-pat. Some Hanen technologies are so powerful that they can alter reality itself. Wormholes
could be used by some time traveling fanatic to corrupt history; the scanner/assembler could be used to create a billion Silloins—or Michael Burr’s. Pristine reality, unpolluted by such
anomalies, has what the dinos call harmony. Before any sapients get to join the galactic club, they must prove total commitment to preserving harmony.
Since I had come to Tuulen to study the dinos, I had pressed the white button over two hundred times. It was what I had to do in order to keep my assignment. Pressing it sent a killing pulse of ionizing radiation through the cerebral cortex of the migrator’s duplicated, and therefore unnecessary, body. No brain, no pain; death followed within seconds. Yes, the first few times I’d balanced the equation had been traumatic. It was still…unpleasant. But this was the price of a ticket to the stars. If certain unusual people like Kamala Shastri had decided that price was reasonable, it was their choice, not mine.
=This is not a happy result, Michael.= Silloin spoke to me for the first time since I’d entered the control room. =Discrepancies are unfolding.= On my status screen, I watched as the error checking routines started turning up hits.
“Is the problem here?” I felt a knot twist suddenly inside me. “Or there?” If our original scan checked out, then all Silloin would have to do is send it to Gend again.
There was a long, infuriating silence. Silloin concentrated on part of her board as if it showed her first born hatchling chipping out of its egg. The respirator between her shoulders had ballooned to twice its normal size. My screen showed that Kamala had been in the marble for four minutes plus.
=It may be fortunate to recalibrate the scanner and begin over.= “Shit.” I slammed my hand against the wall, felt the pain tingle to my elbow. “I thought
you had it fixed.” When error checking turned up problems, the solution was almost always to retransmit. “You’re sure, Silloin? Because this one was right on the edge when I tucked her in.”
Silloin gave me a dismissive sneeze and slapped at the error readouts with her bony little hand, as if to knock them back to normal. Like Linna and the other dinos, she had little patience with what she regarded as our weepy fears of migration. However, unlike Linna, she was convinced that someday, after we had used Hanen technologies long enough, we would learn to think like dinos. Maybe she’s right. Maybe when we’ve been squirting through wormholes for hundreds of years, we’ll cheerfully discard our redundant bodies. When the dinos and other sapients migrate, the redundants zap themselves—very harmonious. They tried it with humans but it didn’t always work. That’s why I’m here. =The need is most clear. It …
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