keccers
@keccers.eth
âItâs a shame she didnât get enough work done this week, I really liked her. She always was nice to her neighborsâ the man in The Department of Labor Management remarked to his partner. He turned to his computer, double checked the work quota and pressed a key, silently sending a signal to the state mandated brain implant that shut down the womanâs body instantly. She felt no pain. Someone would pick her up in the morning to take her to be burned. A handful of bodies were used as fertilizer in the few farms that remained, but mostly everyone wound up in a giant silky dune of cremains. The technologists were working on ways to extract more from the bodies; scarce chemicals and compounds. Labor Management deaths were forbidden burials as it would take too much time away from work, for mourning. Plus while everyone knew it had to be done â nonproductive people with no other means had to die, society simply cannot support themâ no one liked to look it in the eye.
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Britt Kim
@brittkim.eth
What did you get done this week?
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keccers
@keccers.eth
Nothing. I was on vacation đ I think I just decided to write a sci fi novel tho đ
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kbc
@kbc
Love this section. Did the woman have family? What weâre the neighbours thinking when they didnât see her anymore? What work was she doing?
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netop://ăŚă¨ă
@netopwibby.eth
1984 vibes. I don't like it.
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Father Morwen
@alditrus
Same. Spent some time at the park, watched a movie, and played some vidya. I also managed to ditch Lastpass and moved all my logins to a new password manager, so there's that at least.
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