Just along from the everlasting tyre fire, was the electronic
goods dumpsite. That pyre of the First World's hard-wearing hardware effluvia,
loaded on to container ships and transported here for disposal. It was said
that the country formerly hosted the sole man-made object visible from space
(which was itself a fiction). Well now the country possessed the lone edifice properly
able to lay claim to such a boast. Only it preferred to make no mention of its
existence at all. A skyscraper of other people's scrap, was not held to be a
feat for reflecting glory on a nation.
The congeries consisted of computers, portable devices and
hard drives, e-readers, games consoles and mobile phones amongst other
erstwhile essentials of life. I-Pads and I-Pods stripped of their
individualising utility and discarded so as now presenting the collective
problem of global riddance. All were simply poured on top of the extant cloud-bursting
mound of the previous year's designs, like sprinkles on an ice cream sundae. Future
archaeologists would have had perfectly veined strata to sift through and
timeline our annual obsolescence precisely.
The sheer weight of the material served to compact the
already digitally compressed. Degrading under the fierce heat, it had
effectively formed a silicon compost heap. And one that also leached beryllium,
cadmium. lead, mercury and all manner of toxic polymers. A syrupy river oozed
out at the foot of the stack and coated the feet of the scavenger-workers. None
of whom wore protective clothing. Many of whom were too indigent to even have their
feet shod.
For there were tiny riches to be gleaned from the decaying
e-carrion. Gold and silver and other precious metals could be reclaimed from
the entrails. These could be sold to the itinerant scrap metal merchants. A
more personal trove were the letter buttons that broke loose from computer
keyboards. For in the few daylight minutes snatched away for breaks, the
salvagers would paint characters and symbols on to the individual keys as they
constructed mah jong sets of 136 of such tablet tiles. They were the
cyber-scrimshaws of the modern age.
However, most recyclers died before they could complete
their mah jong sets. Irrespective of the long-term toxic assault, they were
more immediately liable to surrender their lives when pulling at something
within the teetering pillar, or burrowing further in toward the middle of the monolith.
Such actions would cross the precarious tipping point and set off a
instrumental avalanche fatally swallowing them up in its tumulus.
Children with their sparrowlike mass and prehensile limbs,
were highly valued for scrambling up the scarp face. But often they dislodged
even a tiny component and sent it cascading back down the slope. Either lethally
picking off a fellow forager below them on the ziggurat, or hitting an adult
stood at its foot squarely between the eyes and killing them stone dead.
Yet such culls scarcely thinned out the workforce of
collectors. For continual waves of the impoverished arrived from inland as
frequently as the ships docked at harbour. The fresh grizzle-faced workforce
knew the location. The pilots of the monster ships were also navigating to the
destination with surety. Yet the rest of the world were seemingly not in the
know. The deaths went unreported, entombed in the secret location just like the
original builders of the pyramids of the Pharaohs. The downtrodden continued to
be trodden down by the weltering mass of the world's detritus. A detritus that interlarded
flesh and bone with the plastic and metal alloys.
Meanwhile, out in the online world formerly served by the
equipment currently littering terra firma on the other side of the planet, an
even greater albeit virtual tower was accreting at a yet swifter pace. A dump
site where an ever-accelerating rate of depositing was taking place and one
which fiercely, if not venomously, compacted and compressed its neighbours
within the unseen dark heart of the steepling megalith. A megalith become
cenotaph for the unknown souls impressed and lost inside. The middle strata
condemned to invisibility.
This tower was made up of words. Written on the ether. Typed
straight on to the face of the void. Since the First World required so much of
its electronic kit in order to extrude and present its words. Words which they
didn't conceive of as evanescent. Yet still in the main they disappeared
without trace, against all their producers' wishes. Pressed instantly back and
eclipsed by the next electronic onrush of published or broadcast verbiage. Overwriting
the overwritten. The words actually possessed two levels of insubstantial
chimerical existence. Firstly that effaced amidst the supersaturation of the
information superhighway. Falling through the gossamer mesh of the world wide
web. Compacted and pressed beyond sight by the heel of search engine
optimisation jackbooting it into touch. The second, still cached within the RAM
of those units heaped up in the electronic waste sites unseen. Virtual,
potential words, not even extant in the virtual world.
Those who wrote warnings and reproaches about the
exploitation and terrible conditions suffered by the landfill families, themselves
suffered compression and accidental suppression as their words were submerged
in the tidal flow. Their vaporous outpourings joined the virtual airfill,
though unlike that of its material cousin on the opposite side of the globe,
you couldn't see this from space. Or anywhere. Virtual container vessels docked
at virtual ports, loaded up with the refuse of airy compositions and set off
for the information dumpsite that exists, well where exactly? The last and lost
domain, that of the middle mass. Future archaeologists of the virtual world,
would have no possible way of unravelling these compacted layers.
12 comments:
Such a prophetic vision of our future. Brilliant.
Adam B @revhappiness
"interlarded" - ooh, new word for me, thank you!
I can totally see this. and yeah, it probably is mostly garbage as well!
The geek in me has to point out that RAM cache is cleared on power-off ;-)
not that that might not change by the time we come to your story's time, of course!
Fascinating idea - brings to mind Wall-E. I love the idea of archaeologists mining the strata.
I feel a little dirty typing a comment "straight on to the face of the void." Nice one.
Superb and visionary take on the future.I love the final few lines.. "The last and lost domain, that of the middle mass. Future archaeologists of the virtual world, would have no possible way of unravelling these compacted layers." Brilliant.. Check out a similar yet different flash this week by Alison Wells..her tribute to Ray Bradbury.
You've written an allegory for all of us here. I don't know if I can thank you for such a bleak vision, but it has certainly now caught in my imagination.
Like Icy, I was thinking of Wall-E, too. Nice work, Marc.
Prophetic look at the evils of proliferation. Squandered then scavenged. Bleak yes, but a necessary reminder of our constant folly.
A massively saddening ring of truth for the present, and a massively saddening prophecy for the future.
Awesome writing.
Virtual poetry, and one brilliantly written! A touch of the future so vivid it exploded in my mind and is bound to stay there and trouble me in my sleep.
Yes I had Wall-E in mind as I read this. A very cleverly written vision of the future.
Us older geeks call that virtual tower the "bit bucket." We joked about it overflowing and spilling, but what it if it actually happened? Those layers of words on the bottom, compressed and hardened, could spawn online horrors that not even Lovecraft could have imagined…
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