Out to Save the World

Sarah Connor: My Friend of Misery

Dr. Silberman sat across from her, clipboard in hand, that same condescending smirk stretched across his face. He had heard it all before—the paranoia, the doomsday warnings, the rantings of a woman convinced she was humanity’s last hope. But today, Sarah Connor wasn’t playing the role of a patient.

She leaned forward, arms resting on the cold metal table of her confinement cell. Her eyes, sharp as ever, locked onto Silberman’s with unshakable resolve.

“You think I’m crazy, Doc? Fine. But tell me this—who’s crazier? The person who warns of a storm before it hits, or the ones who refuse to build shelter?”

Silberman sighed, adjusting his glasses. “Sarah, we’ve been through this. The machines, Skynet, Judgment Day—it’s a delusion. Your mind is protecting itself from trauma, creating a grandiose narrative where you’re the hero.”

Sarah smirked. “That’s funny. You know who else was called crazy for telling the truth?” She tapped a finger against her temple. “John Lennon. You remember what he said?”

Silberman didn’t respond, so she said it for him.

“Our society is run by insane people for insane objectives. I think we’re being run by maniacs for maniacal ends and I think I’m liable to be put away as insane for expressing that. That’s what’s insane about it.”

She let the words settle, watching as the doctor’s smug demeanor wavered for just a second.

“That’s what this is, Silberman. The whole world is walking toward a cliff, smiling, pretending everything’s fine. And when someone stands up and screams ‘STOP!’—they get locked up, drugged, silenced. The insane running the asylum.”

Silberman scribbled something on his clipboard. “And yet, here you are, in my asylum.”

Sarah let out a dry chuckle. “Yeah, well, Jesus got crucified, Galileo got locked up, and John Lennon got shot. The truth has a bad habit of getting people killed.”

She stood up, the chains around her wrists clinking. “You call this delusions of grandeur? Fine. I am here to save the world, Dr. Silberman. And if that makes me crazy, so be it.”

She walked to the window, staring out at the Los Angeles skyline. The sun was setting, casting long shadows over the city. For now, the buildings still stood. The cars still moved. People still laughed, still lived in blissful ignorance.

But she knew better.

Somewhere, in the heart of a military lab, a computer was waking up. It wouldn’t be long now.

Sarah sighed. “Enjoy your sunsets while they last, Doc.”

She turned back, fire in her eyes.

“Because when the sky burns, you’ll be the one who was insane for not believing me.”

T2 vs Metallica (Blackened)

Open Letter from Linda Hamilton to UN Secretary-General António Guterres

Dear Secretary-General Guterres,

I write to you not as an actress, but as a concerned citizen of the world. Decades ago, I portrayed Sarah Connor, a woman who saw the future and fought desperately to prevent a nuclear apocalypse. Back then, it was fiction. Today, I fear we are still teetering on the edge of that reality.

When The Terminator was released in 1984, the world was locked in a bipolar grip. The United States and the Soviet Union stood on opposite sides of a nuclear standoff, each capable of ending civilization with the push of a button. It was a world of fear, a world of fragile balance.

In Terminator 2, my character, Sarah Connor, was institutionalized for warning of a nuclear catastrophe. Her psychiatrist, Dr. Silberman, dismissed her fears as delusions of grandeur, as symptoms of bipolar disorder. But she was right. She wasn’t sick. She saw what was coming.

Today, the world is no longer bipolar. The Cold War may be over, but the nuclear threat has only multiplied. Many nations now possess the bomb. The weapons that once belonged to two superpowers have spread like a virus, and with them, the potential for catastrophe has grown. I fear for the children of the world.

Mr. Secretary-General, I implore you: Let us turn our nuclear swords into plowshares—not just in metaphor, but in action. Let us dismantle these weapons of destruction and repurpose them for the future of humanity. Imagine a world where the missile silos that once housed instruments of annihilation now launch satellites, space station modules, and ship parts for interstellar exploration. Imagine a world where the trillions spent on war are invested in the tools of life, not death.

And to America, my homeland, I say: Bury your guns, Mr. Trump. The world does not need more weapons, more war, more destruction. The people need land, seeds, and farm equipment. They need the means to build, to grow, to heal. End the Monsanto Madness before it is too late—before famine comes and claims what war has not.

The time for action is now. We have seen the horrors of the past, and we know the dangers of the present. But we also have a choice. We can continue down the road of destruction, or we can forge a new path—one where humanity thrives, not just survives.

Mr. Guterres, I ask you to lead this charge. The future is not yet written. Let us write it together.

With hope and urgency,

Linda Hamilton