In between worlds, there is a bar.
In the bar, at the moment, there is a woman sitting at a table. She's scribbling in a notebook. Extant phrases include "abortion=surrogacy?" and "add sterile mosquitos to malarial areas"
In between worlds, there is a bar.
In the bar, at the moment, there is a woman sitting at a table. She's scribbling in a notebook. Extant phrases include "abortion=surrogacy?" and "add sterile mosquitos to malarial areas"
"Oh. OK. Well. That's less of a council but I guess at least it's distributed. And random housewives can be surprisingly capable. Sometimes."
Her expression suggests that she finds this feeling deeply relatable.
"Well. I'm not, um, an expert in geopolitics, but - do you need a hug or something?"
So Keturah gives her a hug. A good, long, supportive one.
"I don't think you've made any terrible missteps yet, anyway. People like healthy babies, and you haven't made any sweeping theological revelations yet, so you've thus far avoided the 'antichrist appears and leads the masses to hell' class of error, in addition to keeping your options open."
Gosh what a good hug.
"I can't just...leave things as they are, though. I mean, people are doing things because of me, and a lot of them are bad things, and even if not that, uh, this is still the kind of country that regularly forcibly impregnates people and then steals the babies. I can't just let that keep happening."
"Right! Sure! Of course. You just have to, like, stop and think about what your endgame is, so then you can do stuff that gets you there and not stuff that makes it harder to reach. Do you, like, know what that is right now?"
"This is I guess a sensible goal for some other universe's savior to have. - wow that's going to have all sorts of weird theological implications once people sit down and examine them. But, uh, I think it's a little on the vague side, as policy proposals go? You may want to try adding some bullet points."
"Well, I guess it's not really implementable in full--like, Heaven, at least my Heaven, really doesn't have a...geography? Things have...connections, more than locations. So everything is near the things it's convenient for them to be near and people don't have to interact with people they don't want to."
"That sounds really cool? But the lack of it would probably not be at the top of my list of ongoing things that are wrong with the world."
"- well, I think sometimes because they don't know how to not, because they want to do the right thing but there are lots of competing concerns and it's hard to juggle all of them correctly all the time? And I think sometimes because, like - I don't know how much of this world's theology your council of two has informed you of, but we're all, you know, fallen. No longer in sync with the game plan. We chose knowledge and power over being... simple enough, I guess, to only ever do the right thing. And so now we know what our options are, but we don't always have the strength to pick the right ones. Because, um, being good in a world where lots of other stuff isn't is hard, and it gets you hurt, and we're not really as constant as God is? So - it's bound to be hard, starting from sin and pride and selfishness and pain, to become someone who can take all that and only ever dish out love."
She pauses. "I, uh, I'm not like a theologian? I'm like the opposite of a theologian. So that may or may not have made sense."
...She smiles. "People are pretty much people wherever you go. I--the Garden of Eden didn't literally happen, in my world, there was no actual physical Snake and Apple, but people are pretty much the same. All you can do is try to line them up so they don't make too much of a mess when they fall over. Because people do. Everyone does, even me."
"That sounds like kind of a downer ending, in all honesty. But this isn't the ending. This is, uh, trying to navigate the chapter where space aliens come to visit. Which sounds like it could in temporal terms go either really well or really badly."
"Yeah. Maybe the answer is to go on television, resurrect some more babies, and then come absolutely clean about everything, and then announce that whether or not I'm backed by any kind of divinity I'm not planning to tolerate people being cruel in my name, or for any other reason I can prevent."
"So kind of a might for right deal? I - think I like the concept when Camelot does it. But I think Camelot was less divided on what 'right' was than we are, and it also had that thing where all the key players killed each other off or were forced to become nuns at the end. At least in the movie. I, uh, the point is I don't know how stable or sustainable even benevolent fallible absolute rulers are, especially you don't first win over the people who have to live with them."
"I don't want to be a ruler. I just want to tell people to knock it off when they're doing things that are really flagrantly bad."
"That's - kind of what being a ruler is, actually. Unless you're working in someone else's name, in which case it makes you a cop, a gang enforcer, or a kindergarten teacher. Although the last one is arguably a kind of ruler."
"Well. I am given to understand that getting people to actually reliably knock it off requires something akin to a state monopoly on violence, plus lots and lots of logistical stuff for figuring out which things people are doing and how they can be made to stop without breaking other parts of the system."
She considers. She takes a moment to breathe deeply and reflect on how insane the current situation is.
" - so I've never been a super powerful godlike Star Trek alien before, and you should take all of my suggestions with a grain of salt? But - if I were gonna nonviolently transition to something really good, and try not to stomp on truth, justice, and the American Way in the process, I'd - I'd wanna know if I could terraform Mars?"
"'Cause if you could terraform Mars then you get all this obviously bitoxiphosphene-free real estate that doesn't have an existing government to destabilize, and if you can teleport more people than just you, then you can get people out to your, uh, whatever you're running on Mars, and countries whose people have another attractive option have a lot less obvious power when you're trying to discuss what they should or should not within their own borders. And, uh, then you can take it from there without being totally dependent on existing deeply sketchy infrastructure. And you can accept as many refugees as you want, medium-term."
"That's probably the best solution I'm going to come up with. Although I have stripped the bitoxiphosphene out of Earth's atmosphere already, I did that first thing."