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- | | c o m m u n i c a t i o n s | |
- | |________________________________________________________________| |
- |____________________________________________________________________|
-
- ...presents... Condors, Ganja, Rah Rah Rah!
- by Clifton Royston
- and kEvin
-
- >>> a cDc publication.......1993 <<<
- -cDc- CULT OF THE DEAD COW -cDc-
- ____ _ ____ _ ____ _ ____ _ ____
- |____digital_media____digital_culture____digital_media____digital_culture____|
-
- "Before I speak to you, I must be sure that your editor correctly
- informed you about the conditions of this interview?"
-
- "Yes, I think so. He said that anything which you said was off-the-
- record could not be attributed to you under any circumstances. I do take
- confidentiality seriously, and I think I can write my article so as to give the
- impression that I was getting information from other anonymous sources."
-
- "Good. There may be a few things I tell you that I do not want repeated
- at all, on or off the record. Is that understood?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Then you may proceed with your questions."
-
- "Let me check my notes.... Let's see. Am I correct that this all
- started out as an attempt to preserve the California Condor?"
-
- "Yes. As you are probably aware, the loss of genetic diversity due to
- extinctions has been a serious concern to scientists in a variety of
- disciplines. One of the new tracks which some scientists have been taking is
- to try to preserve the DNA - the genetic inheritance - of species which are on
- the brink of extinction."
-
- "Would it be fair to describe this as a hopeful new development?"
-
- "More of a desperate last stand, I'm afraid. No one really knows whether
- we will ever be able to recreate a lost species purely from samples of its DNA.
- This was one of the reasons we considered Dr. Zymos's proposal to be so
- promising. As you may or may not know, attempts to reintroduce captive condors
- to the wild have been disastrous. They are simply not able to cope with the
- terrible changes to the California ecology. The same is true of the dwindling
- population of Andean condors."
-
- "I had read something about that, yes. I gather the birds are very
- vulnerable to psychological shocks. What was Dr. Zymos's proposal,
- specifically?"
-
- "He proposed, first, that we continue to raise a captive population of
- condors so that their original genetic material would remain intact; second,
- that we take a separate population and attempt some minor modifications to
- their genetics which would render them more adaptable to the present situation,
- so that they could be re-released. A kind of accelerated evolution, if you
- will. He proposEd some very reasonable specific suggestions."
-
- "Could you go into some detail, before we move on?"
-
- "Let me see if I can recall the original list. First, some importation
- of certain Andean condor chromosomes purely for diversity. The breeding
- population of California condors is so small that they had lost most of the
- diversity needed for a vital species. Second, some modifications to their
- brain and limbic system, based on recently completed gene maps of the gray
- parrot. The gray parrot is an extremely intelligent bird; if one may speak of
- a bird as psychologically resilient and resourceful, I think that is an
- appropriate description. He hoped that this would make the condor more
- adaptable. Third, he wanted to increase its fertility so that it could cope
- with a higher fatality rate in this rather risky modern world of ours."
-
- "Did he hint at his later plans?"
-
- "Well... he had a few vague platitudes in there about increasing
- predatory efficiency and enhancing its natural defenses, but nothing specific.
- I want to emphasize that quite strongly. He did not write, or speak to any
- scientist whom I have had contact with, about his actual plans. Let me also
- say that we were quite elated to have a scientist of Dr. Zymos's caliber
- working on this project. His talent was legendary, and his devotion to birds
- was also well known throughout the scientific community. Perhaps that led us
- to be insufficiently careful in our oversight of this project."
-
- "All right. Let me skip forward now to a few months ago, when Professor
- Zymos died. Was it in fact a heart attack? I have heard claims of suicide."
-
- "No. I think that only someone very foolish who did not understand the
- situation could have claimed such a thing. It was definitely a heart attack.
- What do you expect when a man in his 50's spends every night out dancing with
- this college student girlfriend of his, at these all night 'raves' as they call
- them. He was simply asking for a heart attack. And if I may say so, I think
- it was a very fortunate thing for all of us."
-
- "I have heard claims that Professor Zymos had been taking this 'Ecstasy'
- and other drugs on a regular basis. Do you have any comments on this?"
-
- "Officially, on the record, I think that there is no evidence of any such
- thing. After all, many people go out dancing without taking any drugs. Off
- the record - I wish you to understand, this may not be attributed to me - off
- the record, I think it would explain a lot. Look what he was doing - he was a
- genius, but he was doing insane things. Only he could have done them, though."
-
- "Now this is where all my previous sources have gone vague. What exactly
- was he doing?"
-
- "He was modifying the condor's genetic material. I have read through his
- notes, over and over. He wanted to prove that he could produce a predatory
- bird that would compete in the modern world, and he wished to do so in the most
- thorough way. Oh, he had condors in the lab that had received the initial
- modifications he had proposed, but those were just for show. His real
- attentions were elsewhere."
-
- "But, what exactly did he do?"
-
- "All right, I will tell you. First, he made all of the changes I had
- stated above, only more so. They would have been larger and sturdier, like the
- Andean condor, and extremely fertile, raising two large broods every season.
- They would have had the condor's sharp senses, but the brain size and
- organization of the gray parrot. Have I mentioned that gray parrots are
- considered close to chimpanzees in intelligence? Finally, they would have had
- an extremely strong immune system to equip them to resist disease and
- pollution. That was the first round of changes. Then he began the second
- round. I must insist, I can find no evidence that anyone other than Dr. Zymos
- had any inkling of these changes. I mean, I would not have believed it was
- possible to do what he was doing by genetic surgery."
-
- "Is this off the record?"
-
- "No, no, I suppose it's better the public know. There will be hell to
- pay, but I believe it is time to have public debate on such things. I never
- would have thought such a thing before, but there it is. Where was I? Oh yes,
- composite plastics."
-
- "What?"
-
- "He worked out a way to modify some of the follicular cells so that
- instead of producing feathers, they would produce a composite plastic material
- - keratin fibers, thin bone-like crystals, all glued together - in an
- epoxy-like matrix. He believed that the condors would fare better with
- light-weight body armor. It's unbelievable. No one else would have dreamed
- such a thing, let alone accomplished it. I examined a full-grown one in the
- isolation cages when I took over the lab; its chest plates would stop a .32
- caliber bullet."
-
- "You're joking."
-
- "Oh, that was only the beginning. He made the beak and claws sharper and
- stronger, of course; that was minor. He made their olfactory sense and their
- eyesight sharper too. Those genes weren't even mapped! Somehow he enhanced
- their ability to smell blood; we think he was working with modified shark genes
- from a research lab in Monterey. Everyone was honored to have the famous Dr.
- Zymos take an interest in their work! And their sensitivity to the color red,
- too. He wanted them attracted to animals that were already wounded, so that
- they would have an easy time finding prey."
-
- "But, surely a condor couldn't attack an animal of any size?"
-
- "Oh, the Andean condors have reliably been reported to carry off small
- children occasionally, and dogs quite often. Let me say that I would not have
- wanted to face one myself, even without their chemical weapons."
-
- "Chemical?"
-
- "Yes. I think this - off the record - is where we can see that his mind
- was truly beginning to deteriorate under the drugs. He enhanced their ability
- to generate scent -"
-
- "Like a skunk?"
-
- "No, not like a skunk! Let me finish, damnit. He enhanced and altered
- it, combining it with the endorphin synthesis structures present in all higher
- animals. The endorphins are chemicals like opiates; they are drugs. His
- vision was that the condors would be able to subdue animals by sweeping over
- them, spraying them with these natural opiates so as to leave their victims
- totally dazed and unable to defend themselves. Then they would feed. Perhaps
- this led him to his last modification - God knows it makes no sense. THC."
-
- "THC?"
-
- "Tetra-hydro-cannabinol. The chief ingredient in marijuana. He somehow
- managEd to incorporate the plant genes into their chromosomes. He made them to
- synthesize it into their bloodstream, so they would be stoned all the time. It
- makes no sense at all biologically, it's a sick joke."
-
- "So what would he have done with these condors? Put them in a freak
- show?"
-
- "Don't you understand? He planned to release them into the wild, in the
- California hills and the Rocky Mountains. It would have been a disaster. We
- would never have been able to find them all and eradicate them fast enough.
- Then, once they bred sufficiently to move into inhabited areas - can you
- imagine it? A car accident on a lonely stretch of road, the driver or
- passengers bleeding, and the condors smell it from a thousand feet up. A flock
- of stoned condors - giant, armored, stoned condors - swooping low over them and
- spraying them until they are unable to resist, and then feeding upon them.
- It's a nightmare."
-
- "My god."
-
- "We would never have found out in time if he had not had that heart
- attack. I am not a religious man, but I think it was the hand of God. His
- notes say he was planning to release the first breeding pairs in May. When I
- took charge of the institute and saw what he had done, there was only one thing
- I could do. Despite what the animal rights groups have said, all the
- government pressure on me was to preserve them. The military wanted to
- evaluate them for training and use in missions, but I would not - I could not -
- allow the chance of their being accidentally or deliberately released."
-
- "I don't see how anyone sane could blame you. I will be calling you to
- verify my quotes before my editor runs the story, and... thank you, professor."
-
- ______________________________________________________________________________
-
- "HI THERE fans, this is Chatty Joe McDowell, and we're 4 hours and 26
- minutes into our fantastic pre-game show. The players will be pouring onto the
- field in under 154 minutes, so we're going to quickly review the lifetime stats
- of every player who ever played for either team so YOU, the viewer, will be
- able to make sense of this, the ONE-HUNDRED and SIXTH Rose Bowl, in glorious
- Pasadena."
-
- "That's right Joe, but first a quick look at the field, where the fans
- have been cleared off of the playing area, and the BATTLE OF THE BANDS is about
- to begin.
-
- "You know Stan, in this historic first Rose Bowl meeting between these two
- teams, I find it amazing that such an intense rivalry has developed. Why even
- the bands are ready to go at it!"
-
-
- "That's right Joe, I don't know exactly what started the tiff between the
- Marching Hoosiers and the Stanford band, but they're not going to hold anything
- back in this all-out monster brass BLITZKRIEG, and we're going to cover it
- right after this word from our sponsors."
-
- [ ..]
-
- "WELCOME BACK, sports fans, I'm Chatty Joe McDowell with Stan Lap, and
- we're covering the ONE-HUNDRED and SIXTH Rose Bowl, pitting Stanford against
- Indiana for the very first time."
-
- "That's right Joe, not only is this the first time these two teams have
- played against each other, but this is the first time their bands have played
- against each other in all-out musical WAR. Right now, the Stanford band is
- taking the field to fire the opening salvo in this exchange, and..."
-
- "STAN, LOOK AT THAT! What are those things strafing the crowd? Ladies
- and Gentlemen, this celebration has taken a frightening turn! Huge birds have
- descended from the skies and are flying low over the crowd, emitting noxious
- fumes! I can clearly see their silver forms reflecting sunlight against the
- red sea in the stands. Many of the fans already seem too dazed to move and are
- just sitting there. The Stanford band seems unaffected by the fumes, and is
- continuing to perform as if they were seeing nothing unusual. OH MY GOD! Some
- of the birds have descended into the crowd and are FEEDING on the crowd. OH
- THIS IS HORRIBLE!"
-
- "That's right Joe, in the last ten minutes we've seen more fans die in the
- stands than have died in all previous Rose Bowls combined!"
-
- "STAN! LOOK OUT, one's flying this way. It appears to be a humongous,
- mutant condor.... [Crash...Tinkle...Caw] IT'S KILLING ME!"
-
- "That's right Joe, it appears to be ripping your intestines out and making
- bloody curlicues from the resultant mess. I must admit that those are the most
- fascinating patterns I've seen in over twenty years of professional sports-
- casting. Hmmn, I've just recieved notice that the game has been postponed
- until next week, so until then, this is Stan Lap, signing off."
- _______ __________________________________________________________________
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- (' ') |ftp - zero.cypher.com in pub/cdc |ftp - ftp.eff.org in pub/cud/cdc|
- (U) |==================================================================|
- .ooM |1993 cDc communications by Clifton Royston & kEvin 07/01/93-#240|
- \_______/|Seven SUPER-CALI-FRAGIL-ISTIC-EXPI-ALI-DOCIOUS years of cDc. K! |
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