It Could Happen Here - CZM Book Club: Hermetica, by Alan Lea, Part Three

Episode Date: August 17, 2025

Margaret brings you further along into the tale of Hermetica, the generation ship. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an IHeart podcast. Hey guys, it's AZ Fud. You may know me as a gold medalist. You may know me as an NCAA national champion. You may even know me as the People's Princess. Every week on my new podcast, Fud Around and Find Out, I'll be talking to some special guests about pop culture, basketball, and what it's like to be a professional athlete on and off the court.
Starting point is 00:00:23 Listen to Fud Around and Find Out, a production of IHart Women's Sports in partnership with unanimous media. on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. Have you ever looked at a piece of abstract art or music or poetry and thought, that's just a bunch of pretentious nonsense? That's exactly what two bored Australian soldiers set out to prove during World War II when they tricked the literary world with their intentionally bad poetry, setting off a major scandal. We break down the truth, the lies, and the poetry in between on hoax,
Starting point is 00:00:54 a new podcast hosted by me, Lizzie Logan, and me, Dana Schwartz. Every episode, Hoax explores an audacious fraud or ruse from history. Listen to Hoax on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Our IHeart Radio Music Festival, presented by Capital One, is coming back to Las Vegas. Vegas. September 19th and 20th. On your feet. Streaming live only on Hulu. Ladies and gentlemen.
Starting point is 00:01:20 Brian Adams. Ed Sheeran. Fade. Chlorillaurella. Jellyroll. John Fogarty. Lil Wayne. L.L.
Starting point is 00:01:26 Cool J. Mariah Carey. Baroon 5, Sammy Hagar, tape McCray, the offspring, Tim McGraw, tickets are on sale now at AXS.com. Get your tickets today. AXS.com. Every case that is a cold case that has DNA. Right now in a backlog will be identified in our lifetime. On the new podcast, America's Crime Lab, every case has a story to tell.
Starting point is 00:01:52 And the DNA holds the truth. He never thought he was going to get caught. and I just looked at my computer screen. I was just like, ah, gotcha. This technology is already solving so many cases. Listen to America's Crime Lab on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. CoolZone Media Book Club, Book Club, Book Club.
Starting point is 00:02:21 Hello, and welcome to the Cool Zone Media Book Club, the book club that I started introducing by chanting which made sense back when I was reading to other people and they would chant with me and no longer make sense because I no longer do that. But I feel compelled by inertia to continue to introduce book club by chanting, book club, book club, book club. I'm your host, Marker at Kiljoy, and this is the only book club that you don't have to do the reading because I do it for you. There are probably other book clubs that do reading for you, but they're not read by me,
Starting point is 00:02:51 are they, unless I have other book clubs. But I'm not aware of that. You know, if you're listening to this in the future, who knows what would happen. But do you know what else is in the future? Is our story, our story Hermetica, which seems to be set in the far future. And it is taking place on a generation ship. It's called Hermetica. It is by Alan Lee, which is the pen name of the usually otherwise nonfiction author, Peter Gelderlose.
Starting point is 00:03:22 And we are on part three of this book. It's getting good. Y'all just wait. It's coming in. We got all that set up. What's going to happen with it? Well, you'll find out. All right.
Starting point is 00:03:35 Here's part three of Hermitica by Alan Lee. Published by Detritus Books. Oh, yeah. By the way, if you're like, wait, what just happened? Days had just pulled out a piece of newspaper hidden behind a panel in the wall. And, okay, I'll just read the last sentence of the last weeks. Along the top, there was a date. June 12th, 2023.
Starting point is 00:03:58 Below a yellowing margin, an article began. As vaccine hopes falter, choking sickness, here to stay. All right, now we're back. Days looked closer at the sheet, twisted an edge of it. It seemed to be made of some kind of fiber, and not one they were familiar with. Well, they'd have to do this the old-fashioned way. Squinting.
Starting point is 00:04:23 Health officials warn that America may have to get used to semi-perman confinement measures as results from the latest vaccine trial at the University of Washington failed to deliver good news to a nation that is still grieving the catastrophic mismanagement during the first two years of the ARPV-20 pandemic. Recent studies confirm early fears that the virus may mutate too quickly to allow for long-term immunity. Officials underscored that confinement is a positive measure compared with the inferno the virus left in its wake during the period of governmental
Starting point is 00:04:58 inaction. We will not go back to the horrors of the party system, putting the comfort of the few before the survival of the many, said Dr. Goa, speaking from the steps of the National Health Administration. We are currently expanding the parameters of our modeling, looking for inative solutions to this crisis. Believe us when we say, increasing human life expectancy across the board for all Americans is our number one metric.
Starting point is 00:05:25 If we have to delete elements from the old system in order to fulfill that promise, we will do so. We ask all Americans to walk with us boldly into the future we are building. We will respect tradition, but we must cast aside the harmful habits that hold us back.
Starting point is 00:05:43 Officials are worried about a resurgence of last year's unrest amidst an uptick in terrorist incidents. All incidents linked to the loss of life have been connected to market extremists and traditionalists who, even after a million deaths, still deny the pandemic exists. More worrying for the administration, however, is the increase in sabotage incidents carried out by social extremists. Relative to the denialists, social extremists have more influence among the general population, and experts worry they could lead people astray
Starting point is 00:06:16 with unrealistic demands or magical solutions. Speaking from the White House, Dr. Hennessy, chair of the planning commission, warned that social extremist proposals were, quote, nothing but vestigial, anti-scientific superstition. They claim to speak for quality of life, but by adding archaic, non-quantitative metrics alongside quantitative metrics, they wreck the whole system. It doesn't compute.
Starting point is 00:06:42 Tell me, what is 15 times orange? This is intellectual anarchy. It's idealistic. It doesn't work. They need to get with the program. This is the 21st century. If you can't model it, don't propose it. Increasing quality of life metrics before the trial period ends will be necessary for the administration to carry the referendum early next year. Otherwise, the state of emergency will expire and the old constitution, which most experts agree is unworkable, would come back into effect. Meanwhile, the growing pool of pandemic orphans has required officials to increase social spending beyond.
Starting point is 00:07:19 what was earmarked for the fiscal year. Social officials promised to look into initive solutions. Speaking from the NSA's offices in Omaha, Dr. Ventura gave journalists a hint of a new project the social administration was exploring. At the NSA, we believe all life has value. Under the old system, orphans were just warehoused in substandard facilities until a family with means
Starting point is 00:07:43 could come along and adopt them. Need and capacity were inversely proportional. In a recession, more kids get abandoned and fewer families can adopt them. We are rolling out a new system in which the parent lists are given everything they need, including a top-of-the-line education, and in the meantime, we'll track their performance, collect data, and produce intellectual value that will be immediately useful for the rest of society. Everyone wants to contribute.
Starting point is 00:08:11 We'll give these kids the opportunity to contribute from day one, from the cradle. Ventura's comments provided a rare, optimistic note at a time when the scientific solutions promised by the Planning Commission seemed unlikely to bear fruit. Given the poor results of the vaccine program, commission aides, speaking on condition of anonymity, say that the plans for defunding the police will be delayed again, given expectations of a spike in civil rest. Continued on page 12. Days flipped over the sheet, but page 12, whatever that was, was no way.
Starting point is 00:08:48 to be found. The backside had a large illustration of some kind of wheeled vehicle in the beginning of another article. Planet Earth, our only hope? Mars probe results lead to pessimistic conclusions. In a much delayed report, NASA conceded that permanent human habitation on Mars seemed unlikely given the results from the last probe sent to the red planet. Obstacles include the toxicity of the Martian Regolith, with its high concentrations of percolites, difficulties in filtering out the ultra-fine Martian dust particles also toxic, and strong limitations on the availability of energy sources
Starting point is 00:09:25 and organic chemicals needed for terraforming. The report is grave news for sectors of the scientific community that have proposed accelerated terraforming on Mars as an answer to the cascading chain of catastrophes adversely affecting Earth's own biosphere. We will just have to accelerate the terraforming of Earth, as it were, to Dr. Stewart, chairperson of the climate advisory council. That means aggressively re-engineering the biosphere to design agricultural ecosystems
Starting point is 00:09:54 compatible with five-degree warming, rather than waiting for one to two million years of evolutionary adaptation to play catch-up. The report may also be a death knell for the space agency itself, one of the few to be kept on from the prior government. Perhaps realizing the report would spell trouble, NASA's leading scientists have been lobbying the planning commission to change the agency's mandate to a focus on orbital space engineering, with an eye towards climate mitigation. One of the agency's most popular proposals centers on the deployment of orbital mirrors to fine-tune the quantity of solar radiation that reaches the planet's surface. Continued on page 17.
Starting point is 00:10:36 Days was thoroughly confused. Shostakovich declaimed ominously like a fist on the door. Snookum sat watching. The dating and the geographical references were all Terran. Earth was an archaic name for Tara. Yet the choking sickness had been an event on Hermitica. Where was this sheet from? What was it doing here?
Starting point is 00:11:00 The events described were a muddle, some of them lining up with what they knew of Terran history, and others contradicting it flagrantly. Days decided to reach out to a friend. Message Zimp. Hey, are you still up? Do you remember from history? What year did her medica launch?
Starting point is 00:11:19 The reply came back a moment later, announced by an amiable rising tone. Days, how's it going? What a question. Zimp had been assigned to a different block after the aptitudes, but they still saw each other on video every now and then. The recording continued. You know, you could just ask library, but that's an easy one. Technically, it's a trick question.
Starting point is 00:11:44 Hermitica never launched. It was assembled in orbit, but it departed in Tehran year 2022. Seven years later, we left the solar system. And what year is it now? On Terra. Zimp replied, I guess it must be 2050. Why do you ask? Oh, just trying to work some things out.
Starting point is 00:12:04 Hey, do you think we could do a video call? Like soon? Sure. Good night, Zimp. Good night, days. Talk soon. And do you know who else would like to wish? you a good night, and would love to talk to you so soon.
Starting point is 00:12:20 It's the sponsors of this show. They always are there to tuck you in at night. In 1920, a magazine article announced something incredible. Two young girls had photographed real fairies. But even more extraordinary than the magazine article's claim was the identity of the man who wrote the article, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the man who wrote Sherlock Holmes. Yes, the man who invented literature's most brilliant detective was fooled by two girls into thinking fairies were real. How did they do it? And why does it seem like so many smart people keep falling for outlandish tricks?
Starting point is 00:13:08 These are the questions we explore in hoax, a new podcast from me, Dana Schwartz, the host of Nobner, blood. And me, Lizzie Logan, every episode will explore one of the most audacious and ambitious tricks in history, from the fake Shakespeare's to balloon boys, and try to answer the question of why we believe what we believe. Listen to hoax on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey guys, it's AZ Fudd. You may know me as a gold medalist. You may know me as an NCAA national champion and recent most outstanding players. You may even know me as the people's princess, but now you're also going to know me as your favorite host. Every week on my new podcast, fud around and find out, I'll give you an inside look at everything happening in my crazy life as I try to balance it all.
Starting point is 00:13:58 From my travels across the globe to preparing for another run at the Natty with my Yukon Huskies to just try to make it to my midterms on time. You'll get the inside scoop on everything. I'll be talking to some special guests about pop culture, basketball, and what it's like to be a professional athlete on and off the court. You'll even get to have some fun with the FUD family. So if you follow me on social media or watch me on TV, you may think you know me. But this show is the only place where you can really fud around and find out. Listen to Fud Around and Find Out,
Starting point is 00:14:27 a production of IHart Women's Sports and Partnership with Unanimous Media on the IHart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. I'm Noah. I'm 13. And as you might have seen from the news, I got a podcast. And I explain those fake headlines. like your uncle would
Starting point is 00:14:45 like your cousin would if he actually did the research honestly adults don't ask the right questions now you know with Noah de Barroso is a show about influence who's got it
Starting point is 00:14:55 how they use it and what it means for the rest of you it's not the news it's what the news should be if someone Gen Z or Gen Alpha made it
Starting point is 00:15:02 when I'm watching everything the majority of the youth 18 through 24 say they trust Republicans more than Democrats if on the
Starting point is 00:15:14 the economy. You kidding me. Politics is wild and I'm definitely not here to payment, but I'm here to make sense of it. Just what's happening, why it matters, and what it means for us. Bring your brain. Listen to Now You Know with Noah de Barossa on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast. Get fired up, y'all. Season two of Good Game with Sarah Spain is underway. We just welcomed one of my favorite people and an incomparable. soccer icon, Megan Rapino to the show, and we had a blast. We talked about her recent 40th birthday
Starting point is 00:15:50 celebrations, co-hosting a podcast with her fiance Sue Bird, watching former teammates retire and more. Never a dull moment with Pino. Take a listen. What do you miss the most about being a pro athlete? The final. The final. And the locker room. I really,
Starting point is 00:16:06 really, like, you just, you can't replicate, you can't get back. Showing up to the locker room every morning just to shit. We've got more incredible guests like the legendary Candace Parker and college superstar A. Z. Fudd. I mean, seriously, y'all. The guest list is absolutely stacked for season two. And, you know, we're always going to keep you up to speed on all the news and happenings around the women's sports world as well. So make sure you listen to Good Game with Sarah Spain on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:16:36 Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports. And we're back. The bed extracted with fresh sheets and days plopped down, cradling snookums against their chest. Sleep came fitful and late. The next day, Day's message that they wouldn't be going in to work. They tried sleeping longer, but it was impossible. Their brain wouldn't quit.
Starting point is 00:17:07 After half an hour of tossing and turning, they found themselves locked in the reenactment of a fierce argument with the examiner. the day of the aptitudes. It was all imagination. They never actually confronted the examiner or anyone else. But since the day the results came back, thwarting their dreams, whittling their future down to nothing, they had spent many hours inside their head,
Starting point is 00:17:30 protesting the unfairness of it all. Who was to say that the examiner's tardiness had not disadvantaged them relative to other testing groups? As far as days' low teamwork scores, surely there was more than one way to measure teamwork, On the aptitudes, at three different moments, people's screens were linked in groups of five, and each group had to solve a common problem, communicating over their devices but not speaking directly. Days had not integrated effectively into the problem solving,
Starting point is 00:17:59 but building an effective team could play out differently if people were allowed to talk directly, make eye contact, if they didn't have a ticking clock hanging over their heads. Other aspects of the aptitudes were borderline shoddy, Day's could only remember one error, aside from the examiner arriving late. But still, an error on such an important test did not give a good impression. In a problem on emissions spectra, video of an experiment appeared on Days's screen, showing an unidentified compound burning bright green. Before anyone had gotten to that problem, the examiner had made another verbal announcement.
Starting point is 00:18:38 On Problem 41, there was an error and experiment preparation. Substitute the flame color you see on your personal console with the flame color pictured here. They gestured in a video of a dark red flame appeared on the main screen. But the exams were computer evaluated. How could days be sure the examiner was not the one who was mistaken? Puzzled, annoyed, they had skipped the question and gone on to the next one. How could it possibly be considered fair for their future to be determined
Starting point is 00:19:07 on the basis of such an errant instrument? In their head, they always won the question. those arguments, but when it was over, they still had to face up to the same reality. Annoyed, they got out of bed, called for a coffee, reluctantly declined the dose module offered, and then squared off again against the wall screen. Take me to the library. The wall screen came on. Show me hermetica.
Starting point is 00:19:33 A grainy schematic appeared, showing the image Days knew well from school. Hermetica was an immensely long, slender silhou. cylinder with a rounded nose and a bulky tail where the propulsion reactors were housed. Arrayed sequentially along its length were four rings, each connected to the central cylinder by Gossamer Spokes. Given the dimensions of the ship, days knew that each spoke must be incredibly thick, but in the schematic they always looked so delicate. The rings were modified Stanford Tauruses, rather than being a continuous loop, like a donut, as in a standard torus. Each ring held three immense platforms, evenly spaced about the circumference.
Starting point is 00:20:18 It was like a torus, but with three parts of the loop symmetrically blotted out. In profile, they looked like circular arcs with theta of 30 degrees. The rings rotated slowly, and all the blocks, every module, every person days had ever known, were housed on the inside of one of those 12 platforms held in place by the pseudogravity created by centrifugal force. If it weren't for the sky, they would have been able to look up and see Hermetica's central cylinder about 10 kilometers above them, bisecting their view, and on either side of it, even farther away, the other two platforms on their ring. Actually, days supposed, they would only see any of that if they turned off all the lights
Starting point is 00:21:00 on their platform, and if the material closing off the top of the platform from their frame of reference, the inside of the arc, was transparent. Otherwise, above them, they would see a massive reflection or glare. In any case, before her medica had even departed, its builders knew that mental health stats improved greatly if a sky were projected, diffusing light and replicating the heavens people had evolved under, on Terra. Days tried to remember which of the 12 platforms they lived on.
Starting point is 00:21:30 Had that been taught in school? Zoom in. The perspective shifted vertigenously, diving in close, and suddenly Daze was looking at their block and the eight blocks that flanked it, four of them sharing a node with theirs. It was not much wider of a view than the one they were stuck in every day. Library, can I get a more intermediate view? Ship schematics? Since the destruction of the wiki, access to precise schematics for hermetica are compartmentalized on a need-to-know basis. Yeah, the wiki disaster and the infamous NTK.
Starting point is 00:22:08 Days had heard all about that, they sighed. Well, can you show me where we're going? Library switched to a live feed from a camera. Part of the screen revealed the observation window at the tip of Hermetica's nose. Most of it was the blackness of space dotted with a million pinpricks. Three of the pinpricks directly in front of them were noticeably larger. one of them twice as bright as anything else on the screen. Still, though, just a pinprick.
Starting point is 00:22:37 And Days would never get there, never see its planets up close. Can we get a view of Terra? The solar system is not currently visible from the cameras on the rear ring. Would you like the rear view anyway? Days sighed again. No, that's all right. Another thought occurred to them. Bring up Terra in history, the decades prior to time.
Starting point is 00:23:00 departure. A list of topic headers appeared on the screen. What do you have on epidemics? A long list scrolled by, listing names, dates, locations, death tolls. Days saw some they remembered from basic history, others that were unfamiliar, dengue fever, Ebola, cholera, swine flu, yellow fever, AIDS, Spanish influenza, typhus. What about choking sickness? Library. Library. paused. Choking sickness was not a terran event. Choking sickness, ARPV, was an event here on Hermitica. Would you like to see the entry? No, that's all right. I'm looking for terran epidemics. Was there anything else that might have been similar? What does ARPV stand for? Acute respiratory passenger virus. Passenger virus. Well, that certainly sounded like the name of a disease that would
Starting point is 00:23:55 break out on a ship. What's the last year you have entries for? in Terran history. 2022. Days looked at the sheet in their hand. One year before the article was published. One year. There had been a reference to something that had happened a year earlier. There it was.
Starting point is 00:24:17 Unrest. Tell me about political unrest from 2022. Um, in America. Here is the disambiguation on America. Please specify. Oh, scroll down. Yeah, that one. United States of America. There are no entries on significant political unrest in the United States of America in 2022.
Starting point is 00:24:40 Hmm. What about denialists? Here is the disambiguation on denialists. Please specify. There weren't many choices, and the first one seemed to be a simple dictionary definition, one who denies an empirically demonstrated fact. How about climate denialists? climate denialists were political pressure groups funded by hydrocarbon extraction industries who claimed that the significant increase in heat trapping gases in the planet's atmosphere would not trap heat in the planet's atmosphere. Hydrocarbon extraction industries in the United States began funding climate denialists sometime after 1968
Starting point is 00:25:18 when their research demonstrated conclusively that their product was in fact changing the chemical composition of Terra's atmosphere in a significant way. That didn't sound like what the article was talking about. It sounded like bad fiction. But the reference had to do with a pandemic, not with the atmosphere. Days shook their head, not sure if they were amused or appalled by the concept of a global hydrocarbon energy system. They thought back to basic chemistry.
Starting point is 00:25:45 Sure, it made sense to transport hydrocarbon fuel for the use in remote locations not reached by an electrical grid, if none of the vehicles involved were large enough to house nuclear reactors. But systematically burning hydrocarbons and vehicles that traveled standard routes each lugging the weight of its own combustion engines? Or to power the entire electrical grid burning the stuff? They had put tens of millions of years of sequestered carbon into the atmosphere in a century. What a relief Hermitica had left that place behind.
Starting point is 00:26:18 Days felt bad for the segment of humanity that stayed behind. Still, the present conundrum had not become any clearer. days had come up against a wall. The information in the article and the information in the library did not add up. Then they remembered the second article, the one on the back of the sheet. From the talk of failed probes, they inferred that Mars had not been settled in the Terran year 2023. But if Mars had not ever been settled yet, how did they manage to send off her medica, a full year earlier? Library, tell me about the human colonization of Mars.
Starting point is 00:26:54 After the first unoccupied probes landed on the Martian surface in 1971 and 1975, work began on a larger spacecraft that could transport human astronauts. By the time an assembly and launching platform had been manufactured in low Earth orbit in 1998, further probes to Mars had carried out all the mapping and chemical analysis necessary to begin planning the logistics of a human mission. Supply drops to the Martian surface began the next year, and the first occupied spacecraft was launched from the orbital platform in 2007, arriving safely with its 12-person crew 10 months later.
Starting point is 00:27:32 They remained for two Terran years, overseeing construction of the research station and launch platform, returning safely to Terra in 2011. By that point, it was clear that Mars' chemical and circumstellar characteristics were unfavorable to Terraforming, and it was calculated that it would actually be cheaper and faster to terraform an exoplanet in the Goldilocks zone of another star system, even accounting for a journey of several hundred terran years. Activity based out of the Mars research station continued, carried out remotely, or by subsequent human teams.
Starting point is 00:28:09 Days scratched their head. They suppose the probes mentioned in the article could have been from subsequent attempts to explore other avenues of terraforming on Mars, in parallel to preparations on the Wiki and Hermitica missions. Still, it didn't say anything about a research station or any human presence on Mars, nor did it mention the two ships that had departed the year before, with millions of passengers between them. Something didn't add up. But do you know what does add up? All of the joy and satisfaction guaranteed to you by these products and services. Have you ever looked at a piece of abstract art?
Starting point is 00:28:50 or music or poetry and thought, that's just a bunch of pretentious nonsense? Well, that's exactly what two bored Australian soldiers set out to prove during World War II. When they pulled off what was either a bold literary hoax or a grand poetic experiment, publishing over a dozen intentionally bad but highly acclaimed works of expressionist poetry under the name Earn Malley in an incident that caused a media firestorm and even a criminal trial. The Earn Malley episode made fools of believers and critics alike, and still fascinates poetry lovers to this day. We break down the truth, the lies, and the poetry in between on hoax,
Starting point is 00:29:26 a new podcast hosted by me, Lizzie Logan, and me, Dana Schwartz. Every episode, Hoax explores an audacious fraud or ruse from history, from forged artworks to the original fake news, to try and answer why we believe. Listen to Hoax on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, guys, it's Azee Fud. know me as a gold medalist. You may know me as an NCAA national champion and recent most outstanding player. You may even know me as a People's Princess, but now you're also going to know me as your favorite host. Every week on my new podcast, fud around and find out, I'll give you
Starting point is 00:30:04 an inside look at everything happening in my crazy life as I try to balance it all, from my travels across the globe to preparing for another run at the Natty with my Yukon Huskies to just try to make it to my midterms on time. You'll get the inside scoop on everything. I'll be talking to some special guests about pop culture, basketball, and what it's like to be a professional athlete on and off the court. You'll even get to have some fun with the fud family. So if you follow me on social media or watch me on TV, you may think you know me. But this show is the only place where you can really fud around and find out. Listen to fud around and find out, a production of IHart Women's Sports and partnership with unanimous media on the IHart Radio app, Apple
Starting point is 00:30:42 podcast, or wherever you get your podcast. Get fired up, y'all. Get fired up, y'all. Season two of Good Game with Sarah Spain is underway. We just welcomed one of my favorite people and an incomparable soccer icon, Megan Rapino to the show, and we had a blast. We talked about her recent 40th birthday celebrations, co-hosting a podcast with her fiancé Sue Bird, watching former teammates retire and more.
Starting point is 00:31:08 Never a dull moment with Pino. Take a listen. What do you miss the most about being a pro athlete? The final. The final. And the locker room. I really, really, like, you just, You can't replicate. You can't get back.
Starting point is 00:31:22 Showing up to the locker room every morning just to shit talk. We've got more incredible guests like the legendary Candace Parker and college superstar AZ Fudd. I mean, seriously, y'all. The guest list is absolutely stacked for season two. And, you know, we're always going to keep you up to speed on all the news and happenings around the women's sports world as well. So make sure you listen to Good Game with Sarah Spain on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports. I'm Noah. I'm 13.
Starting point is 00:31:54 And as you might have seen from the news, I got a podcast. And I explain those fake headlines like your uncle would. Like your cousin would if he actually did the research. Honestly, adults don't ask the right questions. Now you know with Noah de Barroso is a show about influence. Who's got it, how they use it, and what it means for the rest of you. It's not the news. It's what the news should be if someone Gen Z or Gen Alpha made it.
Starting point is 00:32:17 and I'm watching everything. Sheesh. The majority of the youth, 18 through 24, say they trust Republicans more than Democrats differ on the economy. You kidding me.
Starting point is 00:32:32 Politics is wild and I'm definitely not here to payment, but I'm here to make sense of it. Just what's happening, why it matters, and what it means for us. Bring your brain. Listen to Now You Know
Starting point is 00:32:42 with Noah de Barossa on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get. your podcast. And we're back. Days looked crossly at the strange printed sheet. All published material was vetted and peer-reviewed by pertinent experts. Affirmations of fact were always qualified.
Starting point is 00:33:11 Results that had not been rigorously replicated included margins of error or the probabilities of some flaw in the design. Fiction, the old volumes of literature stored in the library, was clearly marked as such. To deliberately publish things that were untrue, that was censurable. However, stamping words and ink on some non-electronic sheet and stashing it behind a wall panel at that stretched the bounds of what could be considered publication. An uneasy feeling crept up, and a word sprang to mind. Sabotage.
Starting point is 00:33:45 No. Now Days was getting worked up. trying to find connections to explain something that didn't feel right. Their coping mechanism came to mind like a mantra. Name the pattern, break it, and change your mental scenery so you can relax. Days needed to move around and put the conundrum out of mind. They slid on their mask and went outside. The air was crackling, oppressive. They could tell the atmosphere was getting out of sync.
Starting point is 00:34:12 The meteorology people would have to do an intervention soon. Weather events were always scheduled and announced At least a day in advance, but days never checked. They liked the feel of intuiting when they were coming. Other people on the block didn't seem to notice. A dozen were out enjoying the hot, bright day. Keeping their distance, days made their way to the green. Colorful bunting had been stretched between the taller bushes.
Starting point is 00:34:38 The pole stood in the middle. What's the theme? They asked their neighbor, seated on a bench. May Day. It's a Scandinavian tradition. The neighbor tossed out the phrase like it was a truly interesting bit of information, though the careful way they pronounced the word
Starting point is 00:34:56 suggested they cannot quite remember from cursory geography lessons long faded in time where exactly on terra Scandinavia had been. Days nodded, recalling something about a dance, flowers, white dresses, colorful lengths of cloth wrapped around a pole. They wondered if they'd feel up for it the day the block party came around the air seemed to pulse angrily they nodded and turned around some days days enjoyed
Starting point is 00:35:25 spontaneous socializing but today was not one of them the regulation distance the superficial topics their neighbors pleasant apathy all of it got on their nerves walking back to their module they heard raised voices from one of the family units that was unusual the modules were effectively soundproofed someone must really be shouting, screaming, in fact. The sound was faint, but the tone was unmistakable. Not the low growl of anger, but the high shriek of desperation. Days stopped, looking at the door, four down from their own. Another neighbor passed by, homeward, head down, politely giving them all the birth they
Starting point is 00:36:05 could since Days was standing in the middle of the street. A minute later, another neighbor passed by the other way. No one acknowledged the screaming. trembling a bit in the pit of their stomach, Days drew themselves up and headed for the door. Something wasn't all right, screaming like that. They should check in, at least offer some help. Just as they raised their hand to buzz,
Starting point is 00:36:28 an electronic warble sounded from the direction of the green. It was a safety drone, whirring agilely past the maypole and down the street. Please return to your modules. A therapeutic intervention is inbound. Days backed away from the safety. drone, which took up a position at the door. The bitterness of early panic welling up from the pit of their stomach, they backed
Starting point is 00:36:49 away. The drone repeated its admonition, and Days retreated a little farther. Farther down, module opened their own door invitingly, but Days could not bring themselves to surrender the street just yet. They caught the gentle sound of a claxon from the far end
Starting point is 00:37:06 of the block, and a moment later glimpsed a sled and two medics coming out of the health center. They had trouble getting the sled past the green, what with the benches, the may pole, and a park container, probably full of decorations for the upcoming festivities. One of them spoke a command, and they pulled the pole out quickly and efficiently, laying it on the ground beside the benches. A warm body pressed against Dase's ankle. They looked down to see snookums, rubbing anxiously. I know, sweetie, it's scary.
Starting point is 00:37:37 They rubbed the cat along its cheeks mouth to ear, and it exuded appreciation. The medics were at the family unit now. The door opened up and they went inside, followed by the drone. A minute later, they came out supporting one of Daze's neighbors between them. One half of a couple, Days did not know so well. They had never kept a social appointment, though Daze had seen them bubbling away in the middle of the crowd at block parties. The person had a wild, exhausted look, their eyes unfocused.
Starting point is 00:38:07 The medics helped them onto a sled and strapped them in. The other neighbor came to the doorway, head bowed. Eyes wide, exuding worry, embarrassment, and fear. We'll take good care of them, days heard a medic say. If all goes well in a week or two, they can come back here. The neighbor nodded uncertainly, looking at their module mate, who by now was somewhere else, eyes pasted on the sky. We'll send a therapist to evaluate later in the day, the medic went on.
Starting point is 00:38:35 Just for secondary effects, stay home and try to relax. You're R&R'd from all work assignments and social appointments until you get an all-clear. The medics and the sled set off back towards the node. The safety drone flitted off once the neighbor went back into the module. The streets were empty. Days went in and had a long cry, cuddling snookums on the couch. It happened every now and then. Someone broke down.
Starting point is 00:39:04 Interstellar travel was hard on the human psyche, and her medic was the first crew to ever do it. They had to learn as they went, designing the best most supportive environment possible. despite being trapped together in a crowded ship with scarce resources. Once, when Days was an adolescent, an older person who worked as an instructor had a breakdown and had to be transported out of the school by an emergency team. It was an important moment for days because of the group counseling that came afterwards. The instructor heard voices that other people could not hear.
Starting point is 00:39:35 They had been told by therapists who came to talk to them and helped them process the troubling event. Some kids in their cohort had snickered, even though. though it was strongly discouraged to mock or disparage the mental state of other passengers. Encourage your fellow passengers' coping mechanisms, create a mutually supportive environment, and only report those behaviors and views that might enable sabotage. Those were the watchwords as far as mental health was concerned. What had been so important for days was to hear acknowledgement
Starting point is 00:40:03 that someone could have different perceptions than those around them, that even though such difference could be problematic, it was something that happened to people. the fact that therapists could speak about divergent experiences in a soothing way help days understand the stark, unmentionable differences they had been perceiving between themselves and their peers. From there, it was only a few more steps to realize that maybe what they experienced was legitimate, could even be healthy if there were a way to integrate it with the experiences and perceptions of their cohort.
Starting point is 00:40:35 What had the instructor been shouting? We should tell them! We should tell them! Maybe if they'd been able to share what the voices had been saying, they never would have had a breakdown. But that was an optimistic view. That instructor never returned, meaning they had never been able to reintegrate. They had been submitted to a permanent reconciliation process.
Starting point is 00:40:56 Hermetica tried to take care of all of its passengers, but some simply could not cope. Perhaps the dominant, unspoken view was accurate. It was the weakest passengers who broke down. And though they all needed to support one another, in the end, the only ones who would arrive at their destination were those who were fit to. Days could be pretty sure their genes would not be used in any of the restock cohorts that would make up Hermitica's future generations.
Starting point is 00:41:24 They wondered how much longer they could last. When would a medic team and a safety drone show up at their door? Dun-dun-ton-da-un! Catch us next time, Uncool Zone Media Book Club. If you want to hear more from Alan Lee, that is the fiction pen name of the nonfiction author, Peter Gelderlose. And Peter Gelderlose has a substack called Surviving Leviathan. And so, yeah, you can check out more of their writing there or check out any one of their many number of books. Their name is spelled G-E-L-D-E-R-L-O-O-O-S, Gelderl. All right, I will see you all next week.
Starting point is 00:42:05 When we continue, hermetica, dun-d-dun-d-dun. That should be officially in the title of the book, the done-dun-dun-dun. I actually don't know. It must have been a typo that detritus books forgot to include the done-dun-dun-dun. Bye. It could happen here is a production of Coolzone Media. For more podcasts from Coolzone Media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.com or check us out on the IHeard Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts. You can find sources where it could happen here updated monthly at CoolZone.
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Starting point is 00:43:41 In 1920, a magazine article announced something incredible. Two young girls had photographed real fairies. But even more incredible, that article was written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the man who invented Sherlock Holmes. How did he fall for that? Hoax is a new podcast for me, Dana Schwartz, the host of Noble Blood. And me, Lizzie Logan. Every episode, we'll explore one of the most audacious and ambitious tricks in history and try to answer the question, why we believe, what we believe.
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