Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Haldeman, Joe (2009-02-17), The Forever War, Macmillan, Retrieved on 2014-10-05
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  • Folksonomies: fiction science fiction

    Memes

    05 OCT 2014

     Relativity in Space Warfare

    "Most of you are too young to remember the term future shock. Back in the seventies, some people felt that technological progress was so rapid that people, normal people, couldn't cope with it; that they wouldn't have time to get used to the present before the future was upon them. A man named Toffler coined the term future shock to describe this situation." The commodore could get pretty academic. "We're caught up in a physical situation that resembles this scholarly concept. The result has...
      1  notes

    Having to travel at speeds of light means facing a future version of the enemy and that you are attacking them from the past.

    12 OCT 2014

     The Absurd Visions from a Post-Hypnotic Suggestion

    I hardly heard him for trying to keep track of what was going on in my skull. I knew it was just post-hypnotic suggestion, even remembered the session in Missouri when they'd implanted it, but that didn't make it any less compelling. My mind reeled under the strong pseudo-memories: shaggy hulks that were Taurans (not at all what we now knew they looked like) boarding a colonists' vessel, eating babies while mothers watched in screaming terror (the colonists never took babies; they wouldn't st...
      1  notes

    A character debunks all the crazy things running through his head with rationality.

    12 OCT 2014

     Calories as Currency

    When the world went on a single currency, they'd tried to coordinate it with the food rationing in some way, hoping to eventually eliminate the ration books, so they'd made the new currency K's, kilocalories, because that's the unit for measuring the energy equivalent of food. But a person who eats 2,000 kilocalories of steak a day obviously has to pay more than a person eating the same amount of bread. So they instituted a sliding "ration factor," so complicated that nobody could understand ...
      1  notes
     

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