東郷 一二三 | Hifumi Togo (
asaqueenshould) wrote in
prismatica2019-04-16 01:23 am
001 | text
As I believe we should all be more capable of thinking clearly now, I'd like to pose a couple of questions that have been on my mind for a while.
First is the matter of language barriers - or rather, the complete lack of them. Quite aside from meeting an American who admitted to no knowledge of Japanese (and my English certainly isn't good enough to fill in the gaps), I've had perfectly comprehensible conversations with people who aren't from Earth at all. Is it more likely that something about this world is translating for us on an individual basis, or somehow taught us all a common language without us noticing? Either way, can the translation effect be chalked up to Chroma, or is something else at play?
My second question circles back to Chroma itself, building off its local importance as both currency and energy source. We've been told that the locals see Chroma as the solution to their clean-energy woes (if only breaking oil dependency were this simple...). Our hosts believe that higher rates of Chroma generation will permit faster development of their technological capabilities, possibly including a means to return us to our worlds of origin.
How, exactly, do they intend to sustain that technological capability if all of us return to our homes?
I'll grant that that's a rather large assumption; there's a very real chance that this world is preferable to where some of us came from. However, a substantial majority of us refusing to stay here, once the means is in place, could still decimate Chroma production to the point where little to nothing that we help them make can be powered. That could potentially impact the ability to return everyone who wants to leave. If nothing else, it's something those of us who intend to get hands-on with the local technology should keep in mind.
First is the matter of language barriers - or rather, the complete lack of them. Quite aside from meeting an American who admitted to no knowledge of Japanese (and my English certainly isn't good enough to fill in the gaps), I've had perfectly comprehensible conversations with people who aren't from Earth at all. Is it more likely that something about this world is translating for us on an individual basis, or somehow taught us all a common language without us noticing? Either way, can the translation effect be chalked up to Chroma, or is something else at play?
My second question circles back to Chroma itself, building off its local importance as both currency and energy source. We've been told that the locals see Chroma as the solution to their clean-energy woes (if only breaking oil dependency were this simple...). Our hosts believe that higher rates of Chroma generation will permit faster development of their technological capabilities, possibly including a means to return us to our worlds of origin.
How, exactly, do they intend to sustain that technological capability if all of us return to our homes?
I'll grant that that's a rather large assumption; there's a very real chance that this world is preferable to where some of us came from. However, a substantial majority of us refusing to stay here, once the means is in place, could still decimate Chroma production to the point where little to nothing that we help them make can be powered. That could potentially impact the ability to return everyone who wants to leave. If nothing else, it's something those of us who intend to get hands-on with the local technology should keep in mind.

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The best solution is one that allows each of us to choose what we want to do, if and when the time comes.
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But if only some of can get what they want, I would prefer myself to be one of them. Sure, it will suck for the people who don’t but...
I really don’t want to go back.
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Given that, I can't fault anyone who'd rather be here.
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[Temple really doesn’t see how anyone can really know that for sure.]
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So, from your future, you mean?
Does that mean that people from the past can come here too, or does it only apply to people from the future?
[Sure, Temple had took a brief glance at the network post about that stuff but he hadn’t given it much thought. He hadn’t met anyone from his world here so it didn’t really apply to him and the poster of it wasn’t someone he recognized so it was easy to dismiss.]
[But now she’s said that to him, the meaning finally sinks in.]
[Biff.]
[If the moons can bless Biff, he can come here and be alive again and Temple can have his friend back. Temple has no idea how likely or possible it is but now, now, he has hope. A single shred of it but still, more hope than he’s ever had before.]
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[Temple wants to know all he can about this, now he knows it is possible. If there’s a way for him to get Biff back, he will do anything for it.]
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> Private
Is there someone you're hoping to see? [It's just that she can't think of any other reason why that kind of gap would be 'perfect.']
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How’d you guess?
[Temple’s surprised that she caught onto him.]
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Good luck. I'd imagine trying to summon specific people here would take at least as long to engineer as reversing the process, but in the meantime, another influx like the one that brought us here might do the same.
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[And Temple is glad of that. He can enjoy peace and quiet and relaxation but he always feels the most like himself when he has a purpose of some sort, something to work for or fight for.]
[Sure, it is not something he has likely to succeed at but even still, he figures it is better to try and not succeed than to not try at all.]
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I mean, if you don’t mind me asking, that is.
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I think the science and technology is important to learn about as well, so we can understand what they can do and what we can do and what can’t be done at all here.
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I don’t see why so many people want to leave, though. This is a pretty nice place.
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(Whatever else is going on here, it is not a grand conspiracy. I have seen the kind of manipulation it takes to get an entire city to go along with that kind of thing without complaint, and there would be holes. Sooner or later, someone would protest.)
That said, though, there are just as many reasons to choose to stay. This is, as you said, a very nice place; we've been given a fair amount of freedom, earning money is as simple as holding someone's hand, it's not an active war zone, it's relatively free of systematic oppression, and it could prove just as hard to leave new friends behind, if and when the time comes, as it is to be separated from people who didn't come here. I don't want to turn my back fully on my world - it's not without its problems, but if we don't fix them, who will? - but I certainly don't mind a break from both the dire situation I was pulled from and my mother.
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