XaiJu
puddles4263
puddles4263

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Chapter 854

 ToC: https://www.patreon.com/posts/23899958  


After a slight deviation, back to regularly scheduled programing. We will try the Monday Tuesday, Thursday Friday schedule this week.


 

There were giant pink clouds floating above Randidly. They seemed profoundly puzzling. As he stared up at them, they seemed to wiggle and wave; despite the strange fogginess in his brain, he recognized this as strange cloud behavior. Very slowly, Randidly blinked. He sat up and brought a hand to his forehead.

Everything was… fuzzy. Why-

“Ah, good, you came awake quickly. It’s good to see you again, Randidly.”

Randidly twisted around and the surrounding space buzzed with his aggression. Simon, who was looking quite a bit older than when Randidly saw him previously, took several steps back. “Careful! The dream will tear if you think about it too much. Or experience too violent emotions. Or… well, I can sense your Willpower. Someone like you could tear it apart accidentally. Please allow me to deliver my message, and then I’ll be on my way.”

Randidly nodded slowly. The hills around him were more like waves, rising and falling as if there was a deep beast sleeping beneath-

“Hey! Don’t go thinking too deeply about things,” Simon interrupted Randidly’s thoughts worriedly. “This is your dream, so things you believe will come true. The ground was growing teeth there.”

Randidly considered the ground. It truly had grown teeth. They were sharp and yellow. But as he watched them, they morphed into candy corn. Randidly wrinkled his nose and dismissed that immediately; he hated candy corn.

Perhaps sleeping beneath the ground was a rabbit warren. Full of soft bunnies and nothing dangerous.

Thinking back, Randidly did remember deciding to sleep during the night before leaving to help Neveah with the things she hadn’t been able to do while she was in the South. Mostly, he could feel the strain of keeping Helen here start to wear on him and decided sleeping would alleviate that pressure.

Hopefully, she hadn’t immediately been transported inside himself when he fell asleep.

Slowly, Randidly’s gaze focused on Simon. Clarity returned to the core of his mind, while the edges remained blunted by the dream. This was a young man Randidly owed a great debt. But much of that goodwill had been squandered when Simon had seized the mantle of the Champion without consulting anyone. At the time, it was mind-boggling.

Now it just seemed foolish.

It was a desperate move of an idiot kid with a crush. But from small conversations that Randidly had with Alana, the powers Simon as Champion gifted the people of the Zone were rather useful. There had been a push for the recreation of the internet until people realized that a little practice with illusion could create even more immersive and useful tools for presentations. Besides, stats gave most humans enough processing power that they didn’t need computers in order to handle calculations.

They were more popular in Zone 1, but the other areas didn’t really see the need to reconnect into the worldwide web.

Those memories and emotions of Simon’s seizure of the seat of Champion set the surrounding hills to trembling once more. Wincing, Randidly forced himself to calm down. Slowly, the rumblings ceased. That was in the past. Time did a lot to give her perspective on the experience.

It was those sudden impulses that shaped history. Rather than being upset, Randidly now felt indifferent.

Simon sighed. “I can understand what you are feeling. Even through your dreams, it was clear to me that… you were still angry about my actions. I can do nothing but apologize; you were right. It was a dumb decision. I didn’t understand… how difficult this role would be. And I started out very poorly… there were times I didn’t understand the power I now wield.”

Randidly remained silent, feeling at the fuzzy edges of his mind with detached fascination. But he willed Simon to continue talking; he was right so far, there was nothing on which to comment.

Luckily, Simon obliged. “Which is why I came to you right now; I haven’t felt your dreams for… well, ever. And your dreams are very powerful, so I could come here in my entirety. We need to talk about Earth.”

Randidly frowned. Even with the fuzz of the dreamscape numbing him, that made his hackles rose. Why was Simon the one who wanted to come to talk about the fate of the Earth? Randidly supposed his ability was uniquely disposed to allow information gathering to be a breeze, Randidly was wary of Simon’s interference.

More sudden impulses from different sources...

Too many self-righteous cooks spoil a pot… Randidly thought sourly. But on the other hand, he wasn’t aware of much that was going on across New Earth. Alana had told him some things, but he had informed her that he would stop by Donnyton on his way through to join Neveah. Therefore, he advised her to just wait for that debriefing.

Were there other problems just as pressing as the ogre invasion…?

“What do you wish to talk about?” Randidly said softly.

Simon’s form was slightly amorphous in Randidly’s dream, but he could see the younger man press his lips together. “You don’t trust me. I suppose that’s understandable. But I wish to talk about something that… I believe is a problem. In our current world with the System… we are heading toward a time where those with political power possess personal power as well.

“The leaders of our world are capable, and by the same token, charismatic. That’s one of the benefits of a meritocracy; the leaders are respected. But I see laid out in front of us a slide from a meritocracy toward an established oligarchy of power. Aging no longer holds the promise of death that it once did… it is likely we will die eventually, but Stats extend that time frame.”

“You don’t need to beat around the bush; what are you asking for?” Randidly said slowly. But he could guess what Simon was getting at.

“They will not listen to me, but the will listen to you,” Simon said. “Currently the power in Donnyton is held by a privileged few. Most others are moving up beneath them, rising in position and influence simply because the influx of population is scaling up the entire organizational structure. But that influx will soon cease. The wildlands exposed to us now possess no people… or if there were people, the monsters were too high a Level for them to survive. What will these capable assistants and managers do when suddenly they find no other ways to advance?

“They will suffer for a while, but then they will begin to harbor dark dreams; I have felt the rumbles of it already. So I ask you to encourage those at Donnyton’s head to… step down. To create elected positions that run Donnyton. To give these dreamers hope.”

For several seconds, Randidly considered Simon’s proposal. Without baggage, Randidly examined the proposal. He was somewhat hampered by his limited mental capacity in the dream, but he could understand where Simon was coming from. There was a certain sort of internal logic to what Simon said.

Seeing the resemblance to truth inside of the statement but being unable to consider it fully in the dream, Randidly answered. “I’ll think about it.”

Simon frowned. “You aren’t taking me seriously, are you? I guarantee I have sensed these dreams-”

“Simon,” Randidly interrupted, looking at the young man. Truly, he was a child wearing the mantle of dreams fit for a man. But there was nothing that Randidly could do; sometimes fate thrust people into weird roles. “I understand what you are saying. I think you make a fine point about preparing Donnyton for the future. But all choices have costs.”

Because he could see in Simon’s comments that although unintentional, Simon was aware of the importance of an image of Donnyton moving forward. That was something that Randidly had given some thought to, and this other perspective was valuable to shape what Randidly understood about Donnyton. But this… this shift that Simon suggested possessed just as many problems as the future he warned against.

Besides, continuity and stability were more important now than ever. They were preparing to face the Calamity, and that should take their full attention.

Isn’t that always the excuse of those in power? Some snide part of Randidly commented. That change must be made but it cannot be now; the risks are too great. If not now, when will the change occur?

“The main issue,” Randidly said, interrupting his own thoughts. The hills were once more rumbling as Randidly shook off the trappings of sleep. “Is that part of this plan is based on the assumption that capable individuals who are disappointed will begin to conspire to take what they believe they deserve, regardless of rule of law. I would counter that even this plan will just shift the cohort of individuals who are disappointed; there will be just as many losers with an election system as there are now.”

“But they would have a chance,” Simon insisted.

Randidly felt strangely tired hearing that. His Crown buzzed in disappointment. “People may dream about the things they wish to have, but people mourn the greatness that they almost seized, most of all. Perhaps even more damning for your proposal, eventually there will be a response from the elected officials. Rather than being capable, the winners of the election will be those that are capable to those that have Skills related to being elected.”

Simon winced. “I remember some of the world leaders before the System arrived. But I think-”

“Worst of all, and the reason that I will not suggest it,” Randidly finished. “Is that inherent in view of the future is that people are petty children that will spoil from disappointment. Maybe some change should be made to Donnyton’s command structure, but it will not be premised on some worry that capable and respectable people will sour over time. It will be made to shift Donnyton into an entity capable of meeting the threats that continue to pile up. So-”

There was a dull crack and the world exploded.

Randidly woke up. Then he sneezed and shook his head.

Seriously? Losing an argument isn’t a reason to blow up a world… even if it is just a dream...


Comments

I think the question is valid; the command structure will ossify if people live for hundreds of years, and then people won't deal well with change. I suggest that the people in charge ought to take four-year sabbaticals every twelfth year or so. Enough time for a newcomer to learn the ropes, get experience and drive through some new ideas, while the real office-holder gets time for their own projects, tourism, levelling, etc. You can stagger the sabbaticals so the staff is always 2/3 the same and 1/3 new. The office-holder can make the election some kind of official contest to which they design the rules (within reason) to make sure the replacement has the requisite qualities and skills. Like, there are fifty formally defined contests, and the office holder picks four from the list and designs a unique one for a fifth. (Probably, there ought to also be some kind of formal challenge structure, where a challenger can replace an incompetent official by literally beating them at their own game.) A group of people where each has had a term of Donnyton Officialdom would probably make a good core to form a new Village around - a village which would hold very Donnyton-like values. Probably each Village ought to make their own command structure, with more or less aspects of democracy and meritocracy. Then people can see which works the best.

Elaborate

Also note, the reason we use computer as in "a machine that does computations" is because they are what replaced computers, "a person that does computations".

EroNingen

You are not wrong but the problem is that that "machine" built out of minds and skills also has its own agenda, and would probably think that most tasks we usually give to computers are mindnumbingly boring. I would liken this to being a telephone operator back when that was a full time job for a human: It's not that humans _can't_ do the job, it's just that they don't want to: imagine your entire work day consisted of *incoming call*, *plug in headphones to correct slot*, "hello, who do you want to talk to?", "person X, please", *use cable to bridge connection between incoming and X*, *repeat for 8 hours*. Not only is this boring, it's error prone: it's very easy at the end of a long day of this to plug the wrong cable in the wrong hole and connect the wrong people. Then think of what would happen if it's voting season and you get an offer from one of the candidates to receive a lot of money to route specific calls in some irregular manner, what would happen then? Computers are the perfect fit for this problem, they make less errors than humans (none, most of the time), they don't have their own life or agenda to care about, and they can easily be set up to be redundant and scaleable.

EroNingen

It hilarious that Randidky is going to become the Spearman, not only in the position he holds over the world but also in how he orchestrated its future path. We’ll probably not, seeing as he has plot armor and at the critical moment will make a decision that ensure we the readers don’t come to hate him even as his world view keeps warping. Even more hilarious is how he keeps calling anyone with less knowledge - no information not knowlegde - than he does, a fool as if by simply possessing more information than the next person he is any wiser than them. But well, he is the flawed MC of an awesome web novel and so we persevere.

tehlu

Computers are merely machines built from metal and plastic powered by the flow of electrons. It is not unreasonable to assume that something could be built from minds and skills powered by mana which could perform the same tasks.

Alan McBrayer

I have to agree, one more thing that computers and internet do is information pooling and easy asses to that information. No illusion is going to replace the communication needed to get worldwide shipping done as we do it today, especially with the all the changes that has happened in the world of randily.

Manamaw

Thanks for the chapter.

Joshua Little

You can't just say "Computers and the internet are replaceable with Illusions and Stats", the internet and computers do so much more than that.... Can you replace Google? Wikipedia? Wolfram Alpha? Can you replace them without having a person "online" 24/7 to facilitate those services for others? One of the important parts of Computers is that the labour they give us is: * Buildable (You can make more if you need more. Harder with people) * Impartial (You tell it to do a thing and it does it, no fuckery (though fuckery can still be introduced, but in a way that is harder to hide directly, and harder to remove in order to avoid detection)) * Untiring (Both in terms of energy and in terms of boredom. People might not need to sleep and eat anymore, but I sure as hell wouldn't want to be a relay for peoples data, or do mindnumbing calculations all day) Some additional properties that are easily engineered given the above: * Scalable (You can throw more computers at a thing to solve it faster/better (extreme simplification, but essentially true)) * Redundant (You can make sure that the services stay online even if something fails. (what if someone kills that person who has specialized in calculations, and is altruistically doing it for everyone without bias?) Edit: You do address that Zone 1 are working in a more "sane" direction, but that the other Zones are fine with not connecting. Only (additional) issue I have there is "What if I want to talk to my Chinese friend, that I remember living in that prefecture that just arrived?" Edit2: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet</a> =P

EroNingen

Why is there a strain of keeping Helen? That doesn't make sense. She isn't originaly from his AC. The domain was so the system would bear the cost. but now there is a strain which is just like the original skill which the way I read it was temporary only when transitioning them to AC and back.

Chris

I’d honestly forgotten how much I dislike Simon. Thanks puddles, I hate it.

Thanks for the chapter!

Dsunier


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