惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

P
Privacy International News Feed
I
Intezer
T
Tenable Blog
S
Schneier on Security
Project Zero
Project Zero
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
小众软件
小众软件
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
博客园 - 司徒正美
The Cloudflare Blog
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
博客园 - 叶小钗
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
S
Secure Thoughts
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
博客园 - 【当耐特】
罗磊的独立博客
IT之家
IT之家
H
Hacker News: Front Page
I
InfoQ
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
S
Security Affairs
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
GbyAI
GbyAI
Jina AI
Jina AI
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
A
About on SuperTechFans
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
V
V2EX
G
Google Developers Blog
D
DataBreaches.Net
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
J
Java Code Geeks
W
WeLiveSecurity
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
T
Tor Project blog

IrishExaminer.com

Seriously ill in Gaza: ‘I wondered whether the cancer or a missile would kill me first’ Carole Coleman: Don't ask Americans about news or politics. They're done California dreamin’: Could a Trump-supporting Brexit cheerleader capitalise on Democrats' dithering? Ukraine saw 89 children killed in March. But we are sending them back? Louise Burne: Decade of squabbling over hospital leaves sick children in limbo Enda Brady: Charles did his job well this week, but will it be enough to sate Trump? 100 years of Fianna Fáil: Party must move from analysis to action to survive another century Margaret E Ward: Technology’s war on women — the new coercive control and confinement Ireland must act on fossil fuel phase-out Diversity and inclusion policies change lives — including mine Aoibhinn Ní Shúilleabháin: People care about losing the natural world — politics must catch up Ireland's towns bear the brunt of the urban/rural divide Our town centres cannot hold without reinforcements Free travel will help people fleeing abusive homes Workplace bullying is not rare — and the response is not improving Homeless figures don't count all those without housing Supports have improved for women in politics but there is more to do Cost-of-living crisis is impacting how we look after our pets Millennials have a moral obligation to avoid the Harry Potter reboot Sprucing up the truth: Schools should not be a battleground for vested interests Missing dogs tell a different story of greyhound welfare Mick Clifford: Nobody needs to 'lawyer up' to investigate treatment of Limerick gardaí Colin Sheridan: Has the world finally caught up with Lena Dunham's vision? We need a change in attitude to construction jobs if we are to deliver on housing and infrastructure Barry Andrews: Big publishers are ripping off our public libraries Losing my dad during covid is something I will never get over Tadgh McNally: Fine Gael has good reason to wish Leo Varadkar would just go away Major changes to espionage laws abroad sparks domestic review Louise Burne: Back and forth over shed laws shows unease still lodged between coalition parties Shed laws: New planning rules will cut red tape for homeowners Shed laws: We can't allow the creation of a shadow back garden rental market Small, practical measures can work alongside big ideas on solving housing crisis Fuel crisis shows Ireland cannot build a secure future on imported energy Adi Roche: Forty years have passed but Irish commitment to Chornobyl remains Singing together can help build community in divisive times Contraception is free, but it's not reaching everyone who needs it Seán Kelly: Viktor Orbán's loss is the EU's opportunity for a bold move on foreign policy TP O'Mahony: Link between religion and politics in the US is unique in the West Online abuse of politicians is a profitable business Power must be held accountable even in moments of pressure Ireland is addicted to contracting away all kinds of State capacity Here are the country's most senior civil servants running Ireland ‘I’m not a politician’: Clash with Pope Leo could prove dangerous for Donald Trump Global food systems are under fire due to a lack of political will Philomena's Law: Campaign steps up for UK-based survivors of mother and baby homes Are disruptive protests the new political force in Ireland? Fuel blockades expose state vulnerabilities From defiance to departure: 45 hours that changed everything for Michael Healy-Rae Louise Burne: All talk, no takeover — the problem with plotting Micheál Martin’s exit The tricolour is a powerful symbol of inclusion so let's reclaim it from those who use it to sow division Conviction of Scottish man in wife's suicide is a landmark case Our politics can't cope with TikTok's emotional instancy The Mick Clifford Podcast: Is Micheál Martin's leadership in peril? Conscription is being reintroduced all over Europe — where is the debate? Mediation should be the first resort for conflict resolution Fuel furore shows our systems are more fragile than we think New Deis strategy is not radical enough Paul Hosford: Healy-Rae resignation a shock but not a fatal blow for Government Ireland has a planning system, but it's not plan-led Cormac O'Keeffe: Fuel protests ignite concerns over security as EU presidency nears Conor McCabe: Protesters' grievances are real — they're bearing a heavy load Would Donald Trump threaten the Vatican over Pope Leo's anti-war stance? Anti-migration policies are threatening to dismantle human rights Who is Péter Magyar: Hungary’s next leader energised voters but is ‘a dark horse’ Paul Hosford: Life goes on in Kyiv as Russia's war on Ukraine grinds on Paul Hosford: Government fights back with €505m spend after social media posts fuel national crisis The hardest part of your dog dying isn't just losing them. It's that you decide when they go Shona Murray: EU faced with Russian trojan horse if Orbán gets re-elected Russia and White House doing all they can to prop up Viktor Orbán John Gibbons: I've changed my mind on nuclear power — we don't need it any more How this week's protests fuelled confusion and consternation at Leinster House Waiting for tide of public opinion to turn on fuel price protesters is a gamble Fuel protests are undemocratic and respect no rules If you want to object to building over Bessborough, you have one week Farmers need targeted supports as they're facing most pain Irish science's surprising role in the Artemis mission Dorcha Lee: Security will be the big challenge for Ireland's EU presidency Housing 'affordability' means different things in rental debate Our leaders must show courage in commitment to peace by keeping the triple lock Viktor Orbán blazed a trail for Donald Trump’s assault on independent media Don't let what's happened in London replicate itself in Cork Big Tech shouldn’t be writing the rules for AI €4 for a coffee is not expensive when you consider it’s a small miracle in a cup Why we’ve gone mad for puzzles The reality behind Ireland’s anti-submarine warfare plans Assessment of need reform will not fix wider crisis of accessing care and children will pay the price Teacher pay and school funding on agenda of conferences Enda Brady: Keir Starmer has set the clock running on Britain rejoining the European Union 'SSIA on steroids': Will the Government's new savings and investment account deliver? Seven deadlines and an AI dilemma: Is the new Leaving Cert fixing one problem by creating another? Marion McKeone: JD Vance needs all his Machiavellian instincts to avoid becoming Trump's whipping boy European Parliament vote creates legal vacuum in battle against online child abuse Why has it taken so long to return to the Moon? We don't just need to limit the number of TDs, we need radical reform of our electoral system Paul Hosford: Ukraine war merely another chapter in Russia's aggression against its neighbour The climate change warnings are getting louder — are we just refusing to listen? Our school meals programme must use community hubs and on-site kitchens cooking local produce Life goes on in Cuba despite brutal US blockade Paul Hosford: Ministerial meeting in Ukrainian bomb shelter reminds us of the stakes If Donald Trump were your ageing father, when would you take away his car keys? 'Drink‑driving is not an accident': Cork emergency consultant calls for urgent reforms to save lives
David O'Mahony: The real world is quickly surpassing any horror speculative fiction can create
David O'Mahony · 2026-04-11 · via IrishExaminer.com

A danger of writing speculative fiction — that’s anything from fantasy and science fiction to alternate histories — is that real life can catch up, and even eclipse it. And, regrettably, here we are.

If you saw our front page on Tuesday, Stolen Innocence (check the epaper if you haven’t, I’ll wait), you’ll have seen not just the suffering of children in so many war-torn countries, but their attempts to retain some elements of daily life in spite of, or alongside, conflict.

Read More

Something that struck me while choosing the images, and I remarked on it to my colleague Chani Anderson later, is that some of the children look like they’re living in post-apocalyptic wastelands. 

And in a way, they are — I think, for instance, of the girl in Ukraine doing her schoolwork while sitting in the shattered remains of a house.

Dystopian fiction

One of the most powerful forms, and one that offers the opportunity for the most useful mirrors to princes, is dystopian fiction. I’m thinking Blade Runner, 1984, The Handmaid’s Tale, Children of Men, V For Vendetta. All of these are commentaries on the times in which they were produced or written, and you can see when they’ve been adapted to other media that the commentary is similarly updated.

So, for example, Blade Runner leans more heavily into the cyberpunk aspect of the novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, with looming, brutalist architecture alongside environmental collapse, along with endemic use of technology in every aspect of life (you see some of this too in the film Minority Report, such as personalised sales avatars appearing to remind you of previous purchases because of obligatory eye scans).

The film version of V For Vendetta, meanwhile, while retaining the overarching Christofascist authoritarianism of its source material, is heavily reworked to focus more on American political changes in the early 2000s as opposed to the criticisms of Thatcherism and overall anarchist theme that features in the graphic novel, which was written in the 1980s. 

A key departure is that the protagonist, V, wants to return freedom to the people in the film, whereas he’s a more aggressively ruthless figure in the graphic novel who wants to bring about anarchy as a response to fascism.

Interestingly, in the graphic novel the British government uses a supercomputer called Fate to rule the country. I’m pretty sure the perils of giving AI such wide influence on daily life was explored in that documentary series called Terminator (we’re approaching the year Terminator 2 was set, so perhaps fiction will become fact soon).

Climate catastrophe, Christian-coloured fascism, technology making life worse for people, freedoms heavily restricted by authoritarian regimes, minorities persecuted, the oppression of women on the basis of “protection” (I’m looking at you, America – I mean, Handmaid’s Tale), endemic lying shaping the narrative (I’m looking at you, America – I mean, 1984), widespread apocalyptic nuclear damage (hopefully I’m not looking at you, America, despite the eyes your Dear Leader is making toward Iran).

I write horror fiction, and so know more horror writers than the average bear, and I can tell you that the world has got to such a state that some of them have given up writing entirely. The logic being, how can they come up with material that’s more horrific than what’s going on around us? 

One writer I share a publisher with released a novel set in a future civil war United States just weeks before Trump was voted in. I’ve also come across a writer who had a dystopian trilogy finished and ready to go but says it will never see the light of day because all its twists about who runs the world have come true.

In the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica series, mankind repeats the cycle of creating AI, ending up in a war for survival with it, and being exiled to the cosmos at least twice on different planets, with the strong assertion being that Earth is headed in the same direction.

And that, of course, is if Gaian and political collapse doesn’t get us first.

Defiance

But there is still beauty in the world. Resistance, defiance, art that serves to uplift — all of these things stand in our stead as a species, and may see us through the coming years.

As I write this, my daughter informs me she’s playing a game involving a time machine, while simultaneously on a bus and doing her schoolwork. She’s also dressed as Spider-Man, mask and all (albeit introducing herself as Spider-Girl with twin brothers).

Maybe there’s something in that, that sort of cheerful innocence amid a sea of troubles. It’s a spark of pure creativity and imagination in a way that reminds us there are still things worth treasuring, no matter how grim the outside world might become. 

And if we hold on to that spark, and keep it gently fed, we might be in a better shape when we come out the other side.