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Once the world's last superpower, the United States of America are no more. Economic turmoil
and societal uphevals have broken the US into a patchwork of squabbling territories and
corporate city-states. Urban civilization is centered on the east and west coasts in two
narrow ribbons of struggling humanity. The central continent is an arid wasteland, full of
abandoned treasures and lurking horrors.
On January fifteenth, 2005, New York City's life ended. Five years to the day after the
disbanding of the United Nations, a terrorist bomb exploded at the site of its former
headquarters. The blast started on First Avenue, and quickly covered the city.
The Twin Towers were toppled, resting as a scarred and pitted X against a downtown neighbor.
The Museum Mile was a firestorm, some of our culture's most precious relics turning into
tinder in the fires sparked by the blast that ignited Central Park.
Lady Liberty stood strong, surviving the blast with only a barrage of scars.
While Manhattan withstood the greatest population hit, percentage wise, it was more fortunate
structurally despite being the center. The terrorists, whoever they were, used a dirty nuke.
Most of the building damage was caused by fires allowed to rage on, as the firemen died retching
in the blast. The concrete and steel used in the building of the city survived, leaving many of the
giants as their smaller neighbors crumbled into ash. Queens, the Bronx, and Long Island were less
fortunate in the fires that followed.
So that is how she stands now. Once the crown jewel of an emerging country, once the proud port of an
industrial nation, now a giant scab on our culture's emotional psyche.
The hub of the Empire State, a proud and tough city, now a corpse.
The 'city that never sleeps' is now the city that sleeps seemingly forever.
The next time you fly into Free Newark, take some time to look out the windows across the bay.
That glowing pile of rock and metal was once a glorious and mighty megalopolis.
(Excerpt from A Historian's Guide on New York City, Professor Richard Goldberg, Amherst).
This dead plain of red dust creeps deep into the interior of our continent.
This new scarlet death--a disease eating away the memory of Mother Nature, twisting her progeny
into grotesque mockeries of primordial beauty.
Full green boughs, deep blue waters, crystal streams over rounded pebbles. All this lost to the arrogance
of man and his quest for destruction.
Perhaps there is beauty to be found, hidden beyond the bleached bones and the knotted grey of deadwood.
Perhaps. But who shall re-discover?
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