The year is 2221. The world is run by The Sisterhood of Anarchist Collectives, mentored by a steering committee of wise elders. Peace, harmony and joy have reigned over the land since time immemorial.
Whilst working in the ochre pits, a group of young diggers unearths a giant foot, surrounded by all manner of strange objects made of unknown materials and having no conceivable use.
The wise elders are summoned to decipher the mystery, but they are none-the-wiser. Just one wrinkled old lady has retained the faculties needed to enlighten the curious youngsters:
“You have unwittingly stumbled across a ‘Landfill’ – Sacred Burial Ground of The Cult of Things. According to folklore passed down from generation to generation, sometime long, long ago, the cult spread like wildfire across the entire globe, devouring all in its path, leaving nothing but a trail of devastation in its wake. Monolithic centres of worship known as ‘Shopping Malls’ were erected in every town and village, where devotees would flock to satiate their spiritual cravings. Followers crammed every corner of their palatial homes with religious icons called ‘Consumer Items’. The most revered deity of the cult was Gina – the Goddess of Stuff, a semi-mythical being.”
“Please tell us the whole story,” begged the circle of avid listeners.
“Well, first came the animals, followed the plants. Some of the animals liked making things, like nests and burrows and bowers. Then came the humans who started making even more things, then they thought of making tools for making more things, then machines for making more tools for making more things. This was excellent, especially if you loved things and just couldn’t get enough of them. The machines were much better at making things than the humans. They didn’t need to sleep and they didn’t get bored. They worked all day and all night without so much as a toilet break or a smoko, for no pay! But they did need to be fed – a lot! They didn’t like normal food like potatoes or grass. They wanted one thing, and one thing only: Fuel. So we fed them fuel: solid fuel, liquid fuel and gaseous fuel. They loved it. They couldn’t get enough of it. They worked faster and faster. They seemed to know exactly what we wanted before we even knew we wanted it. Everything they made made us happier and happier. They whizzed us all over the planet at breakneck speed. It was so exhilarating. We said: “Faster, go faster!” How we loved those machines!
They kept us cool when we got hot, they kept us warm when we got cold. They did everything we wanted. Naturally we got a bit lazy. We found it a real drag to brush our teeth, so the machines did it for us. We got sick of grinding coffee, we got sick of boiling the coffee, we got sick of drinking the coffee, so the machines injected it into our veins to wake us up in the morning.
We got sick of doing everything really. We became slothful and indolent. The only thing we liked doing in the end was designing faster, bigger machines and playing with our interactive devices.
Our love for our things and the things that made our things, grew and grew.
Some say it was becoming pathological, maybe even a bit weird. When the machines made even better things to play with: bright, new, shinny things, we took our old, out-of-date things to the sacred burial site, and laid them down reverently next to their friends, where they could rest in peace for all eternity.
Everything was going swimmingly, but the machines were getting greedy, demanding more and more fuel all the time, and fuel doesn’t grow on trees you know, and we couldn’t make the fuel, the machines couldn’t even make their own fuel, even though we told them to. We had to go out and find the fuel in some god-forsaken hole in the ground, like hunting truffles. Naturally, fuel was becoming harder to find, we had to dig deeper under the mountains and plumb the depths of the oceans. Naturally we turned to the Gods for help:
Adani – God of Coal, Exxon – God of oil, and Santos – Goddess of Gas.
To honor Santos we made a lusterous blue flame that never went out. Children would come from near and far to toast marshmallows in her munificent radiance.
To honor Exon – God of Oil, we made a beautiful lake of rich dark crude. Every morning at break-of-day a comely maiden would immerse herself in the sacred pool. As she emerged, we sprinkled her with gold dust that glistened in the morning sun. Select devotees were then allowed to lick her entire body clean.
To honor Adani – God of Coal, we built a mountain of a man, 10 metres tall, of solid black coal, roughly hewn from the earth itself. The embodiment of all the awesome power that coal has given us: The power to build a world of our own making. A brave, new, invincible world of glass and steel and concrete. Stronger and better and more glorious than the weak, tired, exhausted, delicate, sensitive, sickly natural world that we left for dead!
Well, it didn’t work, did it? Something went wrong. Everything fucked up!
Personally, l blame the government!
The whole damn place got really hot and sticky and unbearable, and wild and unpredictable, and downright dangerous. Whole species were dropping like flies, even the flies were dropping like flies. We burnt all our fuel trying to keep cool, but it just made it worse. The air got so thick with acrid smoke the sun was just a pale lemon orb lost in a sea of grey. Then it got cold, really cold. We needed stuff to burn: coal, oil, gas, and lots of it. But there was none left, not a skeric to be scrounged, all gone!
So here we are, the motley crew, eking out a humble existence inside active volcanoes, fumaroles, pools of hot bubbling mud and decaying nuclear reactors, living off algae, salamanders, brine shrimps and old boot laces, keeping in touch via our crystal sets. The survivors of the great experiment.
There is precious little to show for our herculean efforts to reshape the world in our image. The concrete has crumbled into the jungle. The eldest of the elders have but the vaguest memory of those heady days, but no one believes them anyway.
This foot is all we have to prove it ever happened!”
Ben Boyang 2021