Friday, March 28, 2008

Master Tong

Excerpt from the Diary of Master Geneticist Tong

Identify. Quarantine. Spray. Inoculate. The formula worked perfectly. In the twilight hours of the 2lst century it was easy to see the wisdom of such an initiative. The AIDS plague had started out with a whimper, then roared through Africa, and finally left a trail of corpses through Europe and the US. But when those last remaining people with AIDS had been quarantined it was very easy to slip the noose around the beast and kill it. Disease is not so much a failure of genetics, but as a failure of the geneticist.

Despite the bizarre anti-vaccinators AV, who themselves were a rare and dying species, we had a near perfect record of wiping out all disease. This was the start of the real Golden Age of Medicine and the era of Bio-Eugenics. Granted, 84% of the population had succumbed to the last plague, but with an intensive vaccination and quarantine program we were able to save 16%. With a population of forty five million it was much easier to track who was infected and who was not.

The Office of Absolute Health was raised from a minor department to one of the major offices. No decision regarding health, education, or even defense was considered unless “The Office,” as it became known, had approved. Did “The Office” approve this action?’ ‘ No? Then, decision declined.

In each one of the domed cities New New York, New New Orleans, New Salt Lake, etc. “The Office” had the final say in who lived inside and who lived outside. Though, this was a still a democracy, it was a restricted democracy. Those who chose to live in the “Wilds” were free to. Periodically, The Office would spray the wild zones, as a benefit to them, but really to prevent even the remotest possibility of contagion coming from those disease active areas. Since they had refused to be vaccinated, used food grown in natural untreated soil, allowed disease and illness to be prevalent, then it was understandable that they couldn’t be part of the Domes and were an island unto themselves

The Domes were a brilliant gift to humanity. The deadly ultraviolet rays were filtered; synthetic light arose in pale orange colors at dawn, rose to a tan yellow noon, and faded at 7 p.m. every evening in a spectrum of violet and purple. A light, nearly invisible, mist filled the dome with “health and radiance.” The air was sampled every fifteen seconds, the ratio of bacteria, pollen, molds was analyzed, and the air was accordingly adjusted. Germ phobic? Hardly! There was always a certain proportion of allowable detritus to be present, but one could not expect to have a modern society where disease or even the possibility of disease was present.

Those who became ill or for some reason contaminated were removed to adjacent quarantine domes. Though we were ever vigilant and quite successful in eradicating disease, our greatest hope for the future was in the nurseries. Though a few mothers preferred the old fashioned method of insemination, pregnancy, and in some unusual circumstances-- vaginal birth; nevertheless, it was too un-scientific and imprecise. The more accurate way to conceive was with the in-vitro fertilization of sperm and an egg. Each was thoroughly analyzed for genetic variations, flaws in immunity, and when necessary we could modify and correct all of the inherent errors at the beginning of life. Then at that point, the embryo was nurtured in birth-containers, and the optimal level of warmth, comfort, and nutrients were administered for exactly nine months. In time, as more parents realized the absurdity of natural birth, we could eliminate illness and vaccinations, and each child would be free from the potential of disease and perhaps, mortality.

From the sky, which you never saw, unless you lived in the wilds, the domes looked like a series of budding yeast. Strange, which reminds me of that one year when the yeast itself stopped budding, the flowers were withering, and sparrows refused to fly. We could have become alarmed, but science prevailed as it has always has in the past. When the birds refused to fly, the solution was simple they needed to be removed from the dome. After all there was an adequate amount of disease free genetic material to create new birds. But why settle for ordinary gray and brown sparrows? Why not have scarlet, purple, or aquamarine green? It was only a matter of a slight genetic change and voila – the pale tan morning light was alive with bursts of color – a streak of purple and an aquamarine green offered a perfect accent to the day. With the realization that the people were again happy to see birds and ones of such vibrant color, then butterflies with wing spans a yard wide filled the air. Then the geneticists decided to have some fun and combined the lightening bug gene with the butterfly, so it would glow at night and shimmer phosphorescent colors that would explode with light. And the flowers? I always thought an artist’s impression of the flowers was more interesting and certainly a lot less allergenic than natural flowers. And so, like God, but only better – we made the birds in the sky without disease or frailty, we made the butterflies more brilliant and healthy, and flowers without flaws.

Mankind was given reason and intellect to rule with dominion over the earth, and so The Office took that as their mission. When the air warmed too much and created the possibility for bacterial growth, the air was cooled; when the air cooled too much it was gently warmed; when the ultraviolet light changed in frequency it was modified; when a hint of an “illness” seemed like it was creeping in – then the water system was hyper-purified ten times more than it usually was; the air filters were scrubbed, the vents ionized, and everyone breathed a little easier. For forty-five years the system had been refined, perfected, analyzed, and perfected again. The only possible flaw in the system was - human. Though the sunlight could be tempered, birds and animals genetically modified with ease and sterilized for contagion, and the air purified—the random and unpredictable variable was the human. With over four million years of evolution there was a million miles of genetic programming that snaked its way around through each cell and in that enigmatic labyrinth there always lurked the possibility of a fifth column.

In the Office we were always vigilant for the possibility of disease or contagion, and frequently took genetic samples. If there was an anomaly, then the person was summoned, and that anomaly was rectified. It was so much easier with the younger people who had been bred in the bio-eugenic nurseries, but the older people’s bodies were too contaminated and always seemed like they were always breeding some kind of illness. No matter how frequently their systems were sterilized and ionized they still held on to a few stray bacteria and mold. Though some were reluctant to leave the dome or to opt for Departure. After all, Departure was very different than, well, you know, that word. There is life and there is… Departure. As clever as we were with moving life to its optimal level, so with Departure, we enhanced it to a sublime and perfect way to leave. Why stay trapped in a body that is old, diseased, feeble. In the Departure Lounge, every need and whim was met. If there was a desire for animal flesh, then it was synthesized, served as they like rare or medium well, thick, and dripping with fat. If they desired the hashish of their youth, then the Lounge was filled with the sweet fragrance, though our mixture Morpheus No. 5 was far superior to anything grown. Morpheus No. 5 offered the love sensation of ecstasy, the clarity of LSD, the slight surrealness of hashish, and the alertness of cocaine. A crude analogy, but the equation was based on the endorphin saturation and synapse flexibility of each person. In short, as the ancient phrase goes, ‘the perfect high.’ I sometimes wondered why more people hadn’t chosen that experience, two day of bliss, and at the optimal point of happiness...they vanished. Their earthly remains gathered, sterilized, and mixed into the gardens. A perfect life and a perfect departure. Could one ask for more?

As each season ebbed and flowed, science grew more clever, and each hydra headed disease entity that rose up was quickly lopped off. Life and departure were perfectly balanced. At all times there were exactly one million five hundred thousand people in each dome. Though each phase of birth and well was programmed, it was odd that first year when more decided for departure. There was no pain or disease, it was just a decision, a few days of bliss and then the garden. Initially, it was easy since there was more than enough eggs and sperm and the matter of creating another person was… well, child’s play to our geneticists. It had come to the point when synthetic sperm was now used, since it provided a flaw-free system, of course the template was taken from natural sperm, but without the mistakes. After all, the motto over the entrance to the Department of Genetics, “When God fails, we begin.” Of course, there was no real God, it was understood, that God was the Nature thing, the chaotic unpredictable amalgam of chance. In time, the portal to this department became the umbilical cord of life for our dome. When nature faltered or was in error, genetics came through, it always had, until this year. Even in the best of science there is the variable.

Human nature was the worst enemy of science. People were healthy, bio-scanners registered the overall population health index at 98.6. The data from 1.5 million people was continually analyzed—respiration, organ function, physiology, pathogen index, all of it was bio-metrically near perfect. But the happiness and mood factors index fluctuated. The colors of the sky were reprogrammed, the brightness of the birds augmented and when new flocks of robins were released we added a certain new perfection to their tune. Perfection, yes, that is what we wanted: Could one ask for more? Work was modest at three hours a day three days a week. There were more Pleasure and Recreation Parks then ever before in history. The Orgy & Sensual Pleasure Palaces were always rocking. So, why was there this change in this Republic of Joy? In the first few months of the New Year, four percent of the population chose Early Departure. Highly unusual! The Birthing Department handled the adjustment well and produced four percent more babies. In a sense, this was good, because as the older people departed it decreased the possibility of contagion. Then by June, when Synthetic light was in its full glory with brilliant cool sunrises and lush twilight, the Early Departures crept up to twelve percent. A summit was called, but no answers were found: Was there a flaw in psychic hardwiring? The geneticists worked even harder to find an answer. Pleasure Palace hours were already operating round the clock. The Orgy Palaces were always available, but people seemed to prefer the quiet peace and privacy of their cubicles bathing in the fragrant aphrodisiac fumes of Morpheus no. 5. Why choose departure? What had we overlooked? Or, did we?

By the end of the summer, Early Departure was outlawed. One only Departed in their due time. How could one run a society on random events? One could not expect to have an orderly and efficient use of resources with such a population flux. This was starting to look like a … please, don’t tell anyone I used this word, a plague. Yes, let’s call it what it is, a Plague of Departure. The air was now misted with Serenity Formula no. 8 and there was a lull and a peace for awhile. But the strangest most bizarre scenario soon arose: some actually chose to leave the Dome. Unheard of! Didn’t they know what lies outside? Everyone knew. Death! Disease! Hunger! Unfiltered sun! They were as naked to the raw chaotic power of nature as a babe set out in a forest of wolves. Why would someone choose that? But when the dome lights were dim and the pinpoints of starlight vaguely pierced the protective cover, the Heretics left. Our best wishes went with them, though I was puzzled and deeply troubled why someone would leave. One of the Heretics was my son, and despite my pleading he was intent to leave.

“Freedom!” he cried. “Freedom!” When he left with his family, we looked at each other more stranger than kin.

I wanted to tell him, here is life and all the good things. There is no freedom in disease, illness, or hunger. In the dome, there was prosperity and happiness in abundance, or at least until this year. It might have been pride or anger, but I simply shook his hand and wished him well, knowing that I could not see him again. Once he left for the wild zone, there was no way he could return.

With the lack of Early Departures, there was no alternative. The directive was clear, see the Mental Hygiene clinics, reprogram your neural networks, remove any residual emotional residue, and accept that this is as near to Paradise as any civilization has ever known. By the time the Harvest lights bathed our fair dome, there were rumors of ennui, and people were actually Departing in their own homes. Outrageous! Apparently, they discovered how to overdose on Morpheus. Bizarre! One person then dozens more chose to leave. The birth centers were too overwhelmed, even with double shifts of workers, there wasn’t enough time.

I noticed that it was more than that. I dreamed one night, about meeting my son and his family. They lived in the mountains, dressed in skins, looking filthy, the children with yellow mucous from their noses, and his wife’s belly round with a baby. I feared the contagion and looked into his bright blue eyes, and there was fierceness in his eyes that I had never seen in the pale eyes of the Dome Dwellers. The eyes seemed to scream, “Freedom. Freedom! Freedom!”

I washed thoroughly as I woke up in a cold sweat and allowed the ionizer to cleanse every pore that could have been contaminated in that dream. In the very distant I hear the pneumatic tubes as they quietly and efficiently shuttled people who had chosen Self-Departure. The team entered, placed the still smiling person in a wrap, and then placed him in the tubes for the Recycling Center.

How could there be hope for a new generation, when the old left? Year after year, the population grew smaller, first by the few, then into the tens of thousands. We adjusted for ever variable, monitored and re-evaluated each step, the geneticists ran the equations backwards, forwards, and sideways through the computer and still the answer came up—the inexplicable human nature. Human nature! Ha! That’s what science was for, to remediate the errors of nature, to remove the too human influences from life, and to ratch up the perfection factor. Smell the air! It’s a perfect mix of cleanliness, a hint of serenity, and the exquisite satisfaction of pure super filtrated air with scarcely a grain of mold or dust. Taste the water! No other dome had water at a 99.98% factor of purity. And the new bornes? Never a finer brood. Even God on her best day could not have done so fine. Though I am one hundred and four, in grade A-l perfect shape, can run a kilometer in under seven minutes, swim one hundred meters with ease, there is weariness in my bones, but I am still thirty six years away from my departure date. I was in the Orgy Palace for six hours last night and hardly broke a sweat, though that would be unhygienic. Something else was happening, an unspoken ennui. I spoke to hundreds of people to find out why so many were choosing departure and some of them were as young as eighty years old, fit and robust, but most saying, “Its time.”

But why, why does the air feel so strange. Why are the colors bleeding from the sky? Why are the birds no longer flying? Why?

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