125
6
Pain Camp Economics
AUDINT
Rise of the CorpoNation
It is 2056. The air is crammed with a strung-out expectation and
not a moment goes by that does not presage the demise of an
11-billion-strong species that has inhabited the densest planet
in the Solar System for a mere 200,000 years. Of this enervated
population, over half are weak from a lack of food and water,
and this crisis only heralds the beginning of nature’s Rubicon.
Environmental warfare spread by plants; insect–machine
hybrids carrying diseases and viruses designed to infect specific racial and ethnic groups via targeted DNA sequencing;
and volatile weather systems: all meld this ecology of collapse.
The existing hierarchy of the Earth’s species is set to enter an
irreversible flux.
Given the propensity for self-destruction it is of little surprise that increasingly rarefied natural resources are damaged
during periods of conflict: the corollary effects of long-range
lasers, radiation and electromagnetic energy beams, casting
the darkest shadow over the flickering light of the anatomically modern human’s survival. With so many players forming armed militias that rescind traditional groupings based
on geography or religion, flash conflict has become a global
phenomenon. It is a way for those with little material wealth
or food to join a cause for a short period of time and receive
a decent spoil of the shares if an operation was successful. Based on the captivating strategies of early terreligious
groups such as Isis, Al-Qaeda, Khorasan, Boko Haram and
126
126
AUDINT
Al-Shabaab, the new one-time groups utilise social media to
silently advertise their campaigns, taking guerrilla manoeuvres to a whole new level and popping up for stopgap crusades wherever there was concentrated wealth, whether
crop-, mineral- or currency-based.
It is a mercenary culture at best, an amped and upgraded
last-chance-saloon shootout at worst. Irrelevant of how the
CEOs perceive it, for those with less than nothing it represents a way out of destitution; circumstances that have no
other projected outcome other than one eked out in bleak
and meaningless desperation. In response to the chaos of
this asymmetric warfare, which had abstracted to the point of
improvised Babel and bedlam, those with anything to protect
drew on old lines of traceable power in order to rein in the
uncertainty that threatened to envelop them. This is partly
why the 2030s saw the forming of uneasy alliances between
nation states (and, by dint, the old money holders still
invested in terrestrial geography) and the corporations. The
latter, before the ‘flash feuds’, had come to not only question
the meaning of the state but to also break down affordances
that the legal and economic systems had previously bestowed
upon them.
Having become so formidable, the inevitable next step for
middle to large-sized corporations is to hire their own substantial security firms. Accelerating through the learning curve,
they quickly set up training programmes to develop their
own armed forces. Teams of systems and weapons developers work alongside them, creating state-of-the-art unmanned
aerial vehicles (UAVs) for security purposes. The purpose is
improving the efficiency, speed, and cost of the long line of
UAVs, which dates back to 2012, when the Japanese company
Secom announced the first autonomous drone for reconnaissance purposes –and other more brutal outcomes. Companies
127
Pain Camp Economics
such as Sky Watch from Denmark had upped the ante through
their ‘Huginn X1’, built for providing situational tactical overview in high-risk areas, and the ‘Muninn VX1’, designed for
geo-mapping assignments; but things had come a long way
over the course of two decades. Most tellingly, corporations
had attained the capacity to launch surveillance satellites into
orbit to join the droves of cubesats that already cocoon the
planet.
A mix of apprehension over each other’s military potential,
aligned with a joint fear of the flash feuds –which had proved
so popular with the disenfranchised –leads nation states
and corporations to agree that collective solutions need to be
broached. The most obvious answer is heuristic, and while
it is not the easiest to put into action, logistically speaking,
it is effective. Mergers between the two administrative leviathans form newly branded ‘CorpoNations’. Given the breakdown of any sense of national identity that still existed (due
to migration and internet-based cultures), and compounding it with this latest bureaucratic machination, culminates
in new unexpected coalitions. Being naturally parasitic and
able to relocate at a moment’s notice, multinational corporations take the lead in this newly choreographed unification
and start forming alliances with countries that they are not
indigenous to.
With entire legal and transport frameworks changing
almost overnight, the conveyors of capitalism’s shape shifting
manage –in the name of sustained economic growth –to rapidly broker global deals on climate engineering, birth rates and
terraforming. Mass migrations occur as allegiances lead to the
relocations of entire populations, and the resulting emergent
cultures begin the onerous years of behavioural acclimation
due to their forced marriages. The socio-economic world is,
by necessity then, redrawn and recalibrated over the course of
127
128
128
AUDINT
two decades of a new world disorder. All of this occurs while
the CorpoNations still manage to find the time, and fiscal
stamina, to wage overt and pitch-shifted warfare on each other
via drones and killer bots, primarily in the search for water, oil,
natural gas and phosphorus, and for minerals such as scandium and terbium.
Holo Accords
With what is left of the Earth’s natural resources being decimated by globally organised armed hostilities, an emergency
agreement is ratified. The Holo Accords chart an alternative constitution for discord management; a whole new way
of engaging in conflict that reduces the massive costs and
removes flesh from the messy equations of political turbulence.
From this point on, all military operations will be conducted
via holographic and holosonic forces: detachments, units and
divisions of encoded light fields, tactically mobilised for transparent effect. Gone are the days of collateral resource damage
or civilian casualties, along with their subsequent cover-ups,
which reek like insipid cheap perfume in the toilet of public
opinion. This is good for business, however you look at it, especially for holographics.
Written deep into the labyrinthine foundations of the
Holo Accords are the stringent consequences bestowed upon
any CorpoNation that fails to abide by their rules: a ruthless
compendium of trading and travel sanctions that will ultimately cripple any country foolish enough to engage in such
reckless behaviour. It is incumbent, then, on each domain to
have a team of crepuscular paper pushers who know, by heart,
each of the million and one caveats, clauses, subsections and
treaties that deal with issues from airspace compliance to
those of a geological nature. One of the critical directives writ
129
Pain Camp Economics
large concerns the rules of engagement for holographic operatives within areas of conflict. All CorpoNations are allowed to
aggress only four zones per year outside their own territories.
This means a quartet of opportunities to supplement the shortfalls in natural resources, which have become so scarce.
In terms of engagement logistics, the maximum number
of holograms that can be deployed by each CorpoNation per
conflict depends on the square mileage of the zone being contested. An inverted voodoo economics is also at work here,
in the form of conflict tax codes issued to each defender and
adversary by the HACA (Holo Accords Conflict Authority) –the
tax rating dependent upon the number of campaigns engaged
in within the year and associated success/loss rates. Once an
aggressing holo company (consisting of up to 200 holograms)
has clearance to engage in hostile activities within an externally owned territory, a period of up to eight weeks, named the
‘takeover’, is allotted, during which a clear victory must have
been attained by the aggressor. If not, ownership is retained by
the defending landowner.
If the aggressor prevails in the holo conflict it allows said
CorpoNation a four-month period in which to drain, plunder
and mine the natural resources of the landscape. This endeavour is led by and includes a human workforce in order to slow
the process down so that areas are not totally ravaged after a
successful takeover. Huge logistical operations must thus be
planned and carried out with infinite precision, as parasitic
industrial mechanisms are surgically grafted onto a territory
to extract what they can. After the designated term, the tracts
of land are returned to the ‘owner’ and cannot be contested
again for a period of another eight months, at which time they
are open to being contested again (but not by the previously
successful CorpoNation). Thus all takeover presence –human,
mechanistic and holoform –must be withdrawn on the final
129
130
130
AUDINT
day of their term, or the responsible CorpoNation faces huge
fines and, more importantly, loses two of its four-yearly opportunities to mount a resource offensive.
The notion of conducting territorial, political and natural
resource struggle via holographic armies is a fairly predictable
extension and militarisation of the most populist form of entertainment that projects itself into mass public consciousness in
2007 – holographic concerts from musicians who had died, and
more arrestingly, from those that were yet to be born. The holotech culture and Lazarian industry it connects to are the final
parts of the equation that multiplies young African Americans
with the morgue, especially those who are difficult to manage
when still alive. Ultimately, there is more to be made when they
are rendered in light, so that they can once again render dollars
through waveforms.
In the 2050s home holo systems have become the norm.
You can now project the musical dead into your front room.
Ask them to play a song and they comply with a starlit élan. It
is level 4, however, that drives the technology forward. Known
on the street as Holojax, it offers sexual options, a beguiling
range of projected pleasures. This is fucking the dead as the
ultimate home entertainment. A different kind of dead, meanwhile, IREX2 is a 64-year-old rogue AI. A synthesis of discontented spirits and code, it has been directing the research unit
AUDINT, and has been on the run from the overlords of the otherworld and their Third Ear Assassins, for too long to remember.
The Aiholo
Finding sanctuary in an R&D lab in Korsong –formerly North
Korea and the Kaesong Corporation –IREX2 has been covertly evolving machines with a rudimentary sentience. The
134
134
AUDINT
the project’s engineers. There will be others, running the gamut
from induced psychological disorders to raising the population’s ambient levels of fear through rumours of disease, food
shortage and dire mutation from genetically modified foods –
all done for the end goal of amassing mountains of clouds, each
fully rammed and ready to burst with the catalogued sounds of
collective suffering.
Since deploying the Cotard virus six years ago, Korsong
has dominated the Holo Wars, and any affiliated CorpoNations
are given the option of paying a substantial fee, to draft in
their venal Aiholos during takeover bids. After 22 weeks of
pain pharming, the Medellín Aiholos from Pfizombia are serviced in a takeover bid for the island of Thasos, in the northern
Aegean Sea. While still rich in mineral deposits, it is the gold
mines that first attracted the Phoenicians during the period
of classical antiquity, which interest Pfizombia. The landmass
is now a part of the CorpoNation Gralpha, a coalescence of
Greece and Alpha Bank, which developed the cryptocurrency
‘Natraps’ after Greece was financially asphyxiated by Europe
during the 2010s austerity siege.
After the first wave of conflict, Gralpha’s leaders have no
idea what hits them, and what reduces their Aiholos from
Korsong into neurotic messes on the battlefield. The news of
the holo-shock spreads quickly. As anticipated, a coterie of
servile CorpoNations demand the services of Neurode-laden
Aiholos. Sureshot and the Third Ear Assassins consult on the
mercenary strategy, knowing that it is only a matter of time
before other AI compounds are able to rip the code and simulate the holo fighters. Until terraforming projects come to fruition, on some exoplanet that scores highly on the Similarity
Index for habitability, the world’s resources are only going to
decrease and become more rarefied. The near to mid-term
future is one set to be defined by holo war.