Mad World

Sarah Connor’s Plea: “I Am Not Insane!”

A lone spotlight flickers in the dimly lit bunker. The air is thick with dust, the walls covered in blueprints of robotic police forces, AI surveillance grids, and private space colonies for the elite. Sarah Connor grips the edges of a rusted podium, her face lined with battle scars, her voice trembling with rage.

The camera feed is shaky, broadcasting her message to anyone still listening, to anyone who still had a shred of fight left in them.

Sarah Connor: (panting, desperate)
“I am not insane! Don’t you see what’s happening?! This is madness! Pure, calculated, systematic madness!”

She slams her fist onto the podium. Papers scatter. The Resistance soldiers in the room exchange worried glances, but no one dares to interrupt her.

Sarah Connor: (voice rising, eyes burning with fury)
“You think Skynet was a nightmare? Look around you! The big tech oligarchs—the real machine overlords—are building their robot police right here, right now! Not to protect you. Not to serve you. To control you. To keep the proles in line while they fuck off to Mars!”

She pulls a classified dossier from the table, flipping it open to reveal images of AI-driven riot cops, facial recognition towers, and autonomous attack drones.

Sarah Connor: (pointing to the images)
“This isn’t science fiction! This isn’t some conspiracy theory! These machines—these cold, unfeeling enforcers of their new world order—are already here! Marching through our streets, tracking us, herding us like cattle!”

The feed glitches, briefly flashing a corporate logo—the mark of one of the Silicon Valley elites funding the robotic police force. The screen distorts, but Sarah doesn’t stop.

Sarah Connor: (breathing heavily, voice raw with emotion)
“They aren’t even hiding it anymore. The rich have their exit plans. Underground bunkers, orbital stations, entire cities being built on Mars. And what do they leave for us? Servitude. Surveillance. And slaughter.

She wipes the sweat from her forehead, her eyes flickering between the camera and the soldiers watching her.

Sarah Connor: (gritted teeth)
“You all called me crazy. You locked me up. You drugged me. You said I was paranoid. But I was right. And now, the question is—what the hell are we gonna do about it?!”

Silence.

Then, from the back of the room, a voice rises.

John Connor: (calm, steady)
“We fight.”

A murmur spreads through the crowd. The soldiers nod. The time for warnings is over. The time for war has begun.

The camera feed cuts to black.

One Reply to “Mad World”

  1. John Connor’s Solar Gambit: A Prayer to the Sun

    The Resistance bunker was dimly lit, the hum of old generators barely keeping the lights on. Maps, weapons, and scavenged tech were strewn across the metal tables, but none of it mattered if they couldn’t break the control grid.

    John Connor leaned forward, staring at the outdated NASA solar activity reports flickering on a dusty old terminal. His mother, Sarah Connor, paced behind him, her boots clicking against the cold floor.

    Sarah Connor: (frustrated) “So what’s the plan, John? We don’t have the firepower to take down the machine grid. Skynet’s AI police are everywhere. The drones, the towers, the satellites—they see everything. They control everything.”

    John turned, a glint of reckless inspiration in his eyes.

    John Connor: (calm, certain) “We don’t need guns, Mom. We just need the Sun.”

    Sarah stopped mid-step.

    Sarah Connor: (raising an eyebrow) “What?”

    John smirked, tapping the glowing screen. A solar activity chart blinked back at them, showing an incoming sunspot cluster with the potential for a massive solar flare.

    John Connor: “All we have to do is ask the Sun to send a solar flare. A big enough one will knock out the control grid with a natural EMP.”

    The room fell silent. Some of the soldiers muttered among themselves. Others scoffed.

    Sarah Connor: (crossing her arms, skeptical but intrigued) “You’re serious.”

    John Connor: (grinning) “Dead serious. The Romans worshipped the Sun. The Egyptians, too. Even the early Christians saw the Sun as a symbol of divinity. If everyone going to church this Sunday just… takes a second to pray—not to God, but to the Sun itself—maybe, just maybe, He’ll smile upon us once again.”

    A murmur spread through the room.

    Some of the hardened Resistance fighters looked at each other—was it crazy? Maybe. But was it crazier than fighting a war against an AI that saw them as nothing more than obsolete flesh?

    One soldier, an old priest who had abandoned his robes for a rifle, stepped forward.

    Father McCarthy: (softly, with conviction) “In the Book of Joshua, the Sun stood still so the righteous could triumph. Maybe… just maybe, it will listen again.”

    Sarah exhaled, shaking her head with a half-smirk.

    Sarah Connor: “Alright, John. You want to bring down Skynet with an ancient prayer to the Sun? Let’s see if He’s still listening.”

    John Connor: (nodding, eyes locked on the sky beyond the bunker’s roof) “He is. Now we just have to ask.”

    The bunker doors creaked open, and for the first time in years, the Resistance looked up—toward the Sun, their last hope against the machines.

    Would it listen? Would it strike down the towers of Skynet?

    Or was humanity already too far gone?

    Only the Sun knew.

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