Short Fiction Mack Reynolds (best ereader for pdf and epub .txt) đ
- Author: Mack Reynolds
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Freddy Soligenâs face worked, in alarm. âHey, Sam, listen here. Weâve been over this before, but may be not as thoroughly as we shouldâve. Sure, this is Peopleâs Capitalism and on top of that the Welfare State; they got all sorts of fancy names to call it. Youâve got cradle to the grave security. Instead of waiting for old age, or thirty years of service, or something, to get your pension, it starts at birth. At long last, the jerks have inherited the earth.â
The boy said plaintively, as though in objection to his fatherâs sneering words. âYou arenât talking against the government, or the old time way of doing things, are you Papa? Whatâs wrong with what we got? Everybodyâs got it made. Nobody hastaâ ââ
His father was impatiently waving a hand at him in negation. âNo, everybody doesnât have it made. Almost everybodyâs bogged down. Thatâs the trouble Sam. The guts have been taken out of us. And ninety-nine people out of a hundred donât care. Theyâve got bread and butter security. Theyâve got trank to keep them happy. And theyâve got the fracases to watch, the sadistic, gory death of others to keep them amused, and their minds off whatâs really being done to them. Weâre not part of that ninety-nine out of a hundred, Sam. Weâre two of those who arenât jerks. Weâre on our way up out of the mob, to where life can be full. Got it, son? A full life. Doing things worth doing. Thinking things worth thinking. Associating with people who have it on the ball.â
He had come to his feet in his excitement and was pacing before the boy who sat now, mouth slightly agape at his fatherâs emphasis.
âSam, listen. Iâm getting along. Already in my forties, and I never did get much education back when I was your age. Maybe Iâll never make it. But you can. Thatâs why I insisted you switch categories. You were born into Communications, like me, but youâve switched to Religion. Whyâd you think I wanted that?â
âAw, I donât know, Papa. I thought maybeâ ââ
His father snorted. âLook, son, I havenât spent as much time with you as I should. Especially since your mother left us. She just couldnât stand what she called my being against everything. She was one of the jerks, Samâ ââ
âYou oughtnâta talk about my mother that way,â Sam said sullenly.
âAll right, all right. I just meant that she was willing to spend her life sucking on trank, watching Telly, and living on the pittance income from the unalienable stock shares issued her at birth. But letâs get to this religious curd. Son, whatever con man first thought up the idea of gods put practically the whole human race on the sucker list. You say theyâre giving you comparative religion in your classes at the Temple now, eh? OK, have you ever heard of a major religion where the priests didnât do just fine for themselves?â
âBut Papa.â ââ ⊠Well, shucks, thereâs always beenâ ââ
âCertainly, certainly, individuals. Crackpots, usually, out of tune with the rest of the priesthood. But the rank and file do pretty well for themselves. Didnât you point out earlier that a Lower, in our society, never makes full priest? Not to speak of bishop, or ultra-bishop. Theyâre Uppers, part of the ruling hierarchy.â
âWell, whatâs all this got to do with me getting into Category Religion? Iâd think itâd be more fun in Communications, like you. Gee, Papa, going around meeting all those famousâ ââ
Freddy Soligenâs face worked. âLook, son. Sure, I meet lots of people on top. But the thing is, eventually youâre going to become one of those people, not just interview them.â He began pacing again in nervous irritation.
âSam, those on top want to stay there. Like always. They freeze things so they, and their kids, will remain on top. In our case, theyâve made it all but impossible for anybody to progress from the caste they were born in. Not impossible, but almost. Theyâve got to allow for the man with extraordinary ability, like, to bust out to the top, if heâs got it on the ball. Otherwise, thereâd be an explosion.â
âThatâs not the way they say in school.â
âIt sure isnât. The story is that anybody can make Upper-Upper if he has the ability. But the thing is, Sam, you canât make a jerk realize heâs a jerk. If he sees somebody else rise in caste, he canât see why he shouldnât. Thatâs why real rising has been restricted to Category Military and Category Religion. In the military, a man gives up his security, obviously, and if heâs a jerk he dies.
âIn Category Religion theyâve got another way to sort out the jerks and make sure they never get further than monk and beyond the caste of High-Lower. Gods always work in mysterious ways and anybody in Category Religion who doesnât have faith in the wisdom of the Godâs mysterious choices of who to ordain and who to reject, obviously shows that heâs not really got the true faith which is, of course, essential to a priest, not to speak of bishop or ultra-bishop. So obviously, the Gods were wise in rejecting him. In simpler words, the would-be priest who simply hasnât got what it takes, can be given the heave-ho without it being necessary for him, or his family or friends, to understand why. Itâs all very simple; he lacked the humility essential in a priest of the Gods, as proven by his rebellious reaction.â
Sam said, unhappily, âI donât get all this.â
Freddy Soligen came to a pause before the boy, sat down again abruptly and patted his sonâs knee. âYouâre young, Sam. Too young to understand some of it. Trust your father. Stick to your studies now. You have to get the basic gobbledygook. But youâre on your way up the ladder, son. Iâve got a deal cooking thatâs going to give us an in. Canât tell you about it
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