POLYESTER--A New Religion!
Since the early days of humankind, man has looked to the stars, to the
sea, and to the earth in wonder and amazement. Such awesome beauty, all
around. The serenity of a perfectly calm lake, the power of a
thunderstorm in flatlands, the indredible ability of ants to organize
without even grunting at each other, and the crying of a tiny infant in a
wife's arm.
And, since these early days and the ability to wonder at such things
came to be, so also did the ability to be curious about them.
Why does a great light flash and a big boom sound sometimes when it
rained? Why is there a great ribbon of colour splashing across the sky
when it rains,and then immediately suns? Why does a baby pop out of a
wife nine moons later after you boink her?
Their puny intellects simply couldn't comprehend the facts. They
couldn't use the scientific method of empirical data gathering to prove
or disprove hypotheses. They didn't have telescopes, they didn't have
Newton, or Einstein, or tunneling electron microscopes.
This worried them. For, being curious, they wouldn't stop wondering
about these things until they could understand them. And this devotion
of mental power wasn't exactly helpful to their early crops. Great famines
ensued. Many, many friend died, and often, when they'd be staring up at
the sky wondering, they'd bump into each other annoyingly and feuds that
have lasted throguhout the centuries and beyond were started. (See
Atreides, House of, and Harkonnen, House of.)
There was a great leader of the time, and his name was John. Now, John
was a very curious man. But, he was also stunningly wise. Intelligent
beyond his years, and he knew that people bumping into each other and not
tending to their crops could never be helpful. He understood the need to
be curious, but he knew he had to do something about the dilemma his
people faced.
So, one day when the Great John was playing with his fingertoys, he
thought of a grand idea.
The next afternoon, he called a following together and spread the word
the there was a Great Man in the sky, playing with them, controlling them
all as he would playtoys! Everyone went away smiling, joking, and
laughing. Of course! Why didn't they think of that!
So everyone's curiosity was satisfied, except for a very few who
wondered how this Great Man came to be. Were there other even Greater Men
controlling the Great Man? John quickly put a stop to these "anarchists"
by throwing them in the first dungeons, much to the surprise of the
imprisoned people, and the first censors were born. (See Government
Censorship of Free Thought)
Many centuries later, after the now Not-So-Great John (his idea of the
Great Man was good, and occupied his people, but his idea of imprisonment
wasn't received too well, and he was quickly beheaded by angry mobs of
fishermen who claimed John was Not-So-Wise after all. Unfortunately, the
Great Man theory stuck) was long gone and dead, another Great Curiosity
struck the people. Science, then a strangely quack-like profession, took
over because of its odd ability to convince people that it could explain
everything. But, now that everyone thought it could explain everything,
some asked how the Great Man came to be. (The anarchists were released
after the death of John, and managed to spread their ideas before John's
son took over. And this time they weren't so vocal about the whole
affair.) Science delved deep into its misshaped imagination and decided
that the Great Man didn't exist after all. Instead, Universal laws and
theories replaced the Great Man idea. After all the confusion ended, the
curiosity of the people remained, and now the questions was not "How did
the Great Man come to be," but instead, "How the laws and theories came
to be."
Science, by this point, had become so fed up with the people they
threw up their hands and, learning from the Great John's ideas and
thoughts, came up with a new cheap material called polyester to occupy
the people with something other than Great Curiosity (See "Oooh Lookit
the Pretty Colours.") It turns out John was a Great Man after all. Or at
least his method of dealing with his subjects was. His dungeons were just
replaced with insane asylums this time around, and his Great Man theory
was replaced with polyester. A main difference between the Great Man and
polyester, is that polyester can be worn. Which makes it a much better
choice.
And the people were happy..
For the time being.
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