@MLClark perhaps fuel for commentary, I’m curious to see your thoughts on The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas by Le Guin.
This is one of the most routinely discussed stories in SF, so "thoughts" on the topic can go in many directions! (Every few years, someone publishes a new story riffing on it too.)
Le Guin was inspired by a scene from my favourite novel, The Brothers Karamazov, in which Ivan argues that the concept of Heaven is unjust if it requires the tears of even one child in this lifetime.
Le Guin's story works because it doesn't explain what comes next. Just that *some* choose not to stay.
But what does @MLClark have to say about it? 😁 I suspect you’d go beyond Trolly Dilemma and Utilitarian critique. In this American election year those who leave remind me of those who refuse to sully the purity of their vote on someone they don’t agree with 100%. Is there a single word that encapsulates those who take the moral high ground while failing to engage in improving the things that disgust them? There’s one for observing them “shitenfrauds”. Okay, I just made that up. 😁💩
@CanisPundit
The perfect society would also ideally have an *excellent* bodily fluid replenishment program!