And, supposedly, they won't incur any moral culpability because they informed you of their plans and, by not stopping them, you "agreed to" to their implementation and associated consequences.
For you youngsters, that's some "Logan's Run" shit right there. Not to mention you had to commit suicide in the "Carrousel" [sic] at the age of 30. (in the book it was 21, but they had to accommodate the older actors for the movie)
Isn't this the plot of countless science fiction literature?
Cataclysmic event drives surviving population into cramped mega cities under totalitarian control.
Government tells everyone that the world outside the walls is poisoned/uninhabitable.
The protagonist manages to escape and discovers that everything is fine and the government was lying.
A lot movies over the last couple decades are starting to make more sense than ever
It's almost like they were trying to tell us something...🤔
Contract law. Informed consent. Terms of contract hidden in fiction.
And, supposedly, they won't incur any moral culpability because they informed you of their plans and, by not stopping them, you "agreed to" to their implementation and associated consequences.
Easy to predict the future when you're handed the script.
For you youngsters, that's some "Logan's Run" shit right there. Not to mention you had to commit suicide in the "Carrousel" [sic] at the age of 30. (in the book it was 21, but they had to accommodate the older actors for the movie)
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0074812/ (warning, trailer has spoilers)
Bullet three is a metaphor for what the world is kind of going through now.