Well, isn’t this a surprise?
I’m writing a blog post on a Saturday for the first time in quite a while, because at the last minute, the boss sprang on us the notion that he needs us to start coming in on Saturdays again. Things have been a bit slow the last few weeks, and a company with whom we had made a recent contract has apparently stiffed us a bit. This is hardly our fault, of course—we had no input in the decision-making process—but we are going to be bearing the brunt of it.
Unfortunately, the coworker with whom I used to alternate Saturdays has already been picking up some shifts at his bartending job on Saturdays, so he cannot work, at least for the foreseeable relatively near future. So, I’m going to be coming in on Saturdays, it seems. Because, of course, he has a wife and young daughter to care for and with whom to spend time, whereas I have absolutely no one, so I am expendable.
I admit that I don’t do very much on weekends at the house, but if there was one good thing, it was that on Friday nights I could at least take some Benadryl and force myself to sleep in a little bit on Saturdays. It’s not ideal rest, of course, if it’s achieved via well-known side-effects of antihistamines. But it was the best I’ve been able to do, and that extra rest, however far from ideal, did me some good.
I can’t sleep in on Sundays, because I need to do my laundry on Sunday mornings, and I don’t want to have to go traipsing through the other parts of the house while the other renters are up and about. That’s more stressful than getting up early.
I swear, there are times when I suspect that my boss wants me to kill myself. If so, I wish he would just say so. I’m amenable to the idea, especially if I could get some help to make it go easier.
This has not been a very good birthday week for me. In fact, I don’t think I exaggerate by saying that the birthdays that passed while I was in PRISON were better than this week. At least then, I could hold on to the delusional idea that, once I got out, life would be better.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!!
I think more and more often—or, well, it feels as though that’s the case—that I ought just to embrace my innate nature as a destroyer and commit myself to the destruction of the entire human race. We have no business contaminating the rest of the universe with our presence, or with the presence of our emissaries, if we create some AI-based self-replicating robots or whatever to send out. We can’t even manage the minor issues of our current “civilization”; what business have we trying to colonize the galaxy, let alone the universe?
We could wipe out everyone—and probably lots of other species—with another mass extinction, and then nature has plenty of time to develop another technological civilization if it’s so inclined before the sun goes red giant. Of course, whatever they might be could be no better than humans are. There’s no reason, for instance, to imagine that any kind of animal currently alive on Earth would manage things better if they were suddenly granted the capacity to have a technological civilization. But at least it would be out of our hands. We would be laid to sleep like the children in the nursery rhyme prayer, dying before we wake.
We certainly are not awake now. Look around you. The most powerful nations (ever) on Earth are in the hands of collections of moral imbeciles. As always, as Yeats pointed out, “The best lack all conviction, while the worst / are full of passionate intensity.” There are logical, causal reasons for this fact, but they do not make it easier to stomach.
I hate this fucking planet. I hate this fucking species. In fact, I’m not fond of the universe overall, at the moment. If I could imagine a way to trigger a vacuum collapse that would wipe out everything, I would consider doing it. But that’s at best a hypothetical possibility.
I guess I have to start somewhat smaller.
Contrary to popular imagining, there is no danger in creating, for instance, a small black hole in a particle accelerator, even if we had an accelerator with that capability. Small black holes disappear almost instantly, vanishing in flashes of Hawking radiation. Even if they didn’t, a miniature black hole would almost certainly just sink to the center of gravity of the Earth and perhaps do a bit of extra heating of the core.
Black holes don’t magically suck things into themselves, they merely gravitate just like anything else of equivalent mass (which would be tiny indeed for one produced from a particle accelerator). Yes, anything that passes the event horizon cannot escape, but for a subatomic black hole, that horizon would be unimaginably tiny. Even a black hole with the mass of the whole Earth would only be the (outer) size of a pea.
One could and can, of course, create thermonuclear reactions without requiring a fission explosion (which requires rarer materials) to trigger it. A network of lasers triggering local fusion in appropriately placed samples could direct that energy toward a lithium deuteride* core and generate enough heat to trigger a growing chain of explosions. But such a “bomb” would need to be large and stationary.
Still, one could set up a dummy corporation with branches in numerous large cities throughout the world and build those bombs, maybe also setting them up in “research outposts” in Antarctica and/or the Arctic, to melt the polar ice caps. Possibly putting some similar “research facilities” near the thin-points of various volcanoes and super volcanoes would also enhance the outcome.
Alternatively, one could use a particle accelerator to generate anti-matter and store it. Now this would be quite a technical challenge, since one cannot store neutral antimatter easily—it annihilates if it touches any normal matter, and so it is generally stored in electrically charged forms such as positrons and antiprotons, in evacuated chambers, contained by powerful magnetic fields. It’s not an efficient way to do things, but one could, possibly, store enough of it that, once one released the magnetic containment, one could unleash an explosion that would make the Tsar Bomba look like one of those little paper poppers we used to play with when we were kids.
There are other ways, of course, to do things. I’ve mentioned before that it wouldn’t be all that hard to use rockets to redirect the orbits of large asteroids so they were more likely to collide with the Earth. Or one could genetically engineer and mass-produce a more hardy and virulent form of anthrax (for instance) and disperse it aerially over major cities.
I guess the point is I’m not in a good mood, and it would probably be better for all of humanity, as well as for me, if I were to cease to exist. I’m so tired of everything.
I hope you’re having a nice weekend.


*Although, for the lithium to be converted to tritium most efficiently, on needs a source of neutrons, which are handily provided by primary fission explosions in usual thermonuclear weapons. I suspect one could arrange alternate sources with only minimal effort.

Well I’m not going to encourage this sort of thinking by liking it. But I’d like to say a few things:
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