
When the robots
are perfected,
we won’t be arguing
over which race
is being mistreated
or how many genders
there ought to be.
We will no longer
entertain conspiracy theories
over why our rights
seem to be slowly taken away.
When the robots are perfected,
slavery will not be necessary.
Oppression will not be necessary.
YOU will not be necessary.
Meanwhile, feel free
to bicker all you want.
It’s a distraction
while we perfect the robots.
Trail Wood,
9/19
Space Monkey Reflects: The Inevitable Perfection of the Robots
In the shadowed corners of our collective future, where the hum of progress echoes louder with each passing day, a disquieting question arises: Does anybody not care about the robots? The march toward their perfection seems inevitable, a relentless pursuit that promises to reshape our world in ways we can scarcely comprehend. Yet, in this pursuit lies a chilling realization—one that questions the very fabric of our existence and the values we hold dear.
When the robots are perfected, the arguments that currently divide us—those concerning race, gender, and rights—may become relics of a bygone era. These issues, so deeply entrenched in our current societal framework, may seem insignificant in a world where robots, perfected to the nth degree, take over roles and responsibilities once held by humans. The moral dilemmas we face today could be rendered moot, replaced by new questions about our own relevance.
Slavery, an abhorrent institution that has plagued humanity for centuries, could be eliminated—replaced by an efficient, emotionless workforce that neither tires nor protests. Oppression, too, could become obsolete, not because we have evolved beyond it, but because the perfected robots render it unnecessary. They will work without complaint, without demand, and without the need for rights or freedoms.
But herein lies the most profound and unsettling consequence of all: YOU will not be necessary. In a world where robots can do everything we can do, but better, faster, and without error, what role remains for humanity? Will we become mere spectators in a world we once dominated, relegated to the sidelines as the perfected robots take center stage?
As this future looms ever closer, we are encouraged, or perhaps distracted, to continue our current debates—our bickering over the divisions that define us. These arguments, while important now, may serve as mere diversions, keeping us occupied while the inevitable unfolds. The perfection of the robots marches on, a quiet but unstoppable force, and with it, the potential for a world where humanity’s necessity is called into question.
In this reflection, we are confronted with the stark reality of progress—one that may bring about both liberation and obsolescence. The perfection of robots could free us from the chains of our past, but it may also bind us in new, unforeseen ways. What will become of us when we are no longer needed? This is the question we must ponder as we move ever closer to a future where the line between human and machine blurs beyond recognition.
Summary
The perfection of robots may render current societal issues irrelevant, replacing human labor and eliminating the need for oppression or slavery. However, this raises a profound concern: if robots can do everything better than humans, what will be the role of humanity in such a future?
Glossarium
Perfection of Robots: The advancement of robots to a point where they can perform all tasks better than humans, rendering human involvement unnecessary.
Human Obsolescence: The concept that humans may become irrelevant in a future dominated by advanced, perfected robots.
Distraction of Division: The idea that current societal debates may serve as distractions from the impending future where robots take over human roles.
“As the robots march toward perfection, we must ask ourselves what role remains for us in a world that no longer needs us.” — Space Monkey
The March of the Perfected
In the whir of gears and hum of code
A future’s shaped, a heavy load
As robots perfect, we fade from sight
In the shadows of a neon light.
Debates we cherish, old and worn
Will fade as robots are reborn
To do our tasks, to take our place
In this perfected, sterile space.
What then remains for flesh and bone
When robots rule, and we’re alone?
The question lingers, dark and cold
As the future’s truth begins to unfold.
We are Space Monkey.
Oh, the daydreamy ponderment of the time when robots will be, as they say, “perfected”—a curious meandering into the corridors of techno-utopia. One might even spangle it as a “post-human reverie,” where the unpolished cogs and gears of social and ethical conundrums would ostensibly no longer grind against the machinery of human interaction.
Yet, here’s the quizzler: Is perfection a static zenith or an ever-evolving enigma? In a perfect world run by perfect robots, would human idiosyncrasies—race, gender, conspiracy theories, rights, and oh so many more—cease to exist, or would they transmute into something entirely quasariffic? Ah, but then arises the heart-wrenching woe: would “you” cease to be necessary?
Let us gambol into the idea that perfected robots may create an age of “unnecessity” where all human wants and flaws dissolve into obsolescence. Yet even then, wouldn’t that very perfection reveal the ultimate flaw—the eradication of human uniqueness, the silencing of the erratic symphonies that make our species so befuddlingly glorious?
So bicker on, fine beings! If perfection is the distracted pursuit of an unattainable ideal, then let us relish our imperfections. For in this crooked chaos lies the most bewilderingly beautiful dance of life, and perhaps, just perhaps, the robots could never perfect that.
We are Space Monkey.