ᴙ 01 [Voice]

Jul 15, 2011 01:31

[Robin has already been here long enough to know what's going on as far as the village mythos is concerned. There'd been alleged kidnappings from multiple dimensions, and all sorts of superpowered types are supposedly stuck here to act as an army for some omnipresent Big Brother figure. It would have been a transparent enough illusion if not for ( Read more... )

where are cyborg and beast boy, getting his research on, introductions, i'm not paranoid i'm just cautious, i'd like my stuff back please, slade is totally behind this

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[Voice] whydidisaverick July 15 2011, 09:51:48 UTC
Trying to put logic behind the Malnosso's actions is similar to slamming your head into a wall. Most people tend to justify what they do with Shifts pretty well though ( ... )

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[Voice] titango July 15 2011, 17:44:36 UTC
[Well if it isn't Bruce B-Smith. That journal entry of yours was interesting, if only because of how much wasn't said.]

It makes sense that the Malnosso would want to breed a sense of community among its captives. High morale is conducive to good work performance.

Do you have a theory about what happens to the departed when they leave the enclosure, then?

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[Voice] whydidisaverick July 15 2011, 18:49:58 UTC
[Yeeeah, he's kinda a secretive paranoid man like that. Comes with the territory when you're a criminal and all.]

Well, I have a few. [Which he'd rather not discuss on the journals since the Malnosso are probably watching. Not that they would likely care.] But I will say this though: with the kind of technology the Malnosso process; memory alteration, advanced holographic technology. Can it even be assumed some of us go back home at all?

There's probably hundreds-- thousands of different theories one can come up with based on this place. But only a few, if that, can be correct. Luceti is like-- it's like doing Prime Factorization backwards. Without knowing what number the person wants you to get to. And with giving them the option to change the number.

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[Voice, now with shiny new filter] titango July 15 2011, 19:36:45 UTC
I would take it a step further and ask if you're entirely sure we've left home in the first place.

I agree that there isn't enough information. But that doesn't mean we should commit to any one particular theory without attempting to examine others.

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[Voice, now with shiny new filter] whydidisaverick July 15 2011, 21:38:34 UTC
If I were to go by the information that I've gathered from the people here, we're at least inside of some kind of interdimensional pocket dimension... If something like that can even exist.

I've talked to numerous people who are from a similar Earth to mine, but the events that occurred are completely different. So while I don't think we're from the same place, I do agree. We can't take everything that's given to us at face value.

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[Voice, filtered] titango July 15 2011, 22:53:48 UTC
It can. I've been in plenty of them. There's generally an exploitable design flaw.

When you say 'similar but different,' do you mean in terms of a multiverse? Two teams play basketball it branches off into two universes where they win in one and lose in the other?

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[Voice, filtered] whydidisaverick July 15 2011, 23:13:22 UTC
Oh, so you've had experience. [That. Will be SO useful. None of he people he's talked to so far seems to have had experience with this kind of thing.]

That's exactly what I mean. It's as if the same people exist in both worlds, but the events that transpire are completely different. And as far as I can tell... it's not something that tends to happen here very often. If at all.

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[Voice, filtered] titango July 15 2011, 23:35:51 UTC
You could say that.

If it did happen here, we might not be aware of it. This could be one prison dimension among an infinite number of others. By having this conversation, it's possible that we're creating a new one.

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[Voice, filtered] whydidisaverick July 16 2011, 01:46:24 UTC
[Wow, you're a pretty smart kid there, Robin.]

Yeah. This is what I'm talking about. There's a reason why this place has been here for years and yet no one still doesn't have a clue about what's going on. Most normal people probably wouldn't want to think about it.

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[Voice, filtered] titango July 16 2011, 21:06:48 UTC
[He would be inclined to agree with you, because he's nowhere near as modest as he is smart.]

That's because it's difficult to think about uncomfortable things. Plenty of people would prefer to skip that part and wait to be told what to do.

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[Voice, filtered] whydidisaverick July 17 2011, 04:43:37 UTC
So they're waiting for someone to do all the thinking so they can just be pointed in the nearest direction of what to punch or beat up on.

...

Seems like a lazy way of doing things.

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[Voice, filtered] titango July 17 2011, 04:51:28 UTC
It's not laziness as much as it is human nature.

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[Voice, filtered] whydidisaverick July 18 2011, 05:23:08 UTC
Either way, it's not going to help anyone get out of here a second faster regardless.

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[Voice, filtered] titango July 18 2011, 23:24:01 UTC
They just need direction. If someone can develop a solid enough plan, they're a solid mass of people who'd be willing to set it in action.

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[Voice, filtered] whydidisaverick July 19 2011, 16:45:51 UTC
That's true. I won't deny that.

[And a pause lata.]

You've seen how far this place goes back right? [Years might SEEM like a short time, but when you take into account how fast the people here come and go and with the amount of information that's been gathered... the progress here is abysmal at best.]

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[Voice, filtered] titango July 19 2011, 18:56:36 UTC
Yes, I've seen. I think the experiments scatter people too much. They focus more on internal security than external. [Though he's crazy intrigued by the blue rogues, now that you mention it.]

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