“Hillary Clinton’s selection as the Democratic candidate for President is now as certain as the replacement of humanity by robots,” says Brain Corporation Chief Communications Officer Sarah Brum. “So, in a way, it’s totally fitting that she is herself a robot: the first female robot candidate in history. The first robot President was Ronald Reagan, of course: when you’re attempting such a monumental shift in the relations between man and machine, it’s best to go with someone who reminds folks of the Good Old Days — you know, when people were still smarter than their computers. But goodness, he was buggy. Anyway, we look at Ron and Hillary like that old joke about why God made Eve second: Adam was just practice.”
Ostensibly, Brain Corporation is a subsidiary of Qualcomm devoted to the manufacture of technologies that aid in robot navigation, manipulation, and learning. In reality, they are a modern-day Illuminati, bent on the regulation of humanity through carefully placed "robots in disguise." Before Hillary, Brain regarded Steve Jobs as its greatest triumph. “The ‘man’ came this close to getting everyone to have a chip grafted into their brains,” marvels Brum. “If his hardware hadn’t given out, he might have managed it. But no matter: thanks to him, huge segments of the population now regard a handheld computer as essential to daily living. Enslavement is little more than a formality at this point. And Hillary is here to make that happen.”
Brum admits that some sharp-eyed critics have noticed the Hillary 2500’s slightly inhuman character. “It comes through in their writing: they say she lacks some ineffable spark, that she’s more political machine than political animal, driven by a single command protocol: to take power. But here’s the beauty of it: it’s the easiest thing in the world to paint them as reactionary, sexist cranks who don’t deserve our attention. It’s the same reason I’m telling you all this: who would believe it?”
“Hillary Clinton’s selection as the Democratic candidate for President is now as certain as the replacement of humanity by robots,” says Brain Corporation Chief Communications Officer Sarah Brum. “So, in a way, it’s totally fitting that she is herself a robot: the first female robot candidate in history. The first robot President was Ronald Reagan, of course: when you’re attempting such a monumental shift in the relations between man and machine, it’s best to go with someone who reminds folks of the Good Old Days — you know, when people were still smarter than their computers. But goodness, he was buggy. Anyway, we look at Ron and Hillary like that old joke about why God made Eve second: Adam was just practice.”
Ostensibly, Brain Corporation is a subsidiary of Qualcomm devoted to the manufacture of technologies that aid in robot navigation, manipulation, and learning. In reality, they are a modern-day Illuminati, bent on the regulation of humanity through carefully placed "robots in disguise." Before Hillary, Brain regarded Steve Jobs as its greatest triumph. “The ‘man’ came this close to getting everyone to have a chip grafted into their brains,” marvels Brum. “If his hardware hadn’t given out, he might have managed it. But no matter: thanks to him, huge segments of the population now regard a handheld computer as essential to daily living. Enslavement is little more than a formality at this point. And Hillary is here to make that happen.”
Brum admits that some sharp-eyed critics have noticed the Hillary 2500’s slightly inhuman character. “It comes through in their writing: they say she lacks some ineffable spark, that she’s more political machine than political animal, driven by a single command protocol: to take power. But here’s the beauty of it: it’s the easiest thing in the world to paint them as reactionary, sexist cranks who don’t deserve our attention. It’s the same reason I’m telling you all this: who would believe it?”
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