Vagrants chapter 11.

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Two of the longest weeks in recorded history, I was sure.

That was how long it took to “batten down the hatches”, as the shipping saying went. Botony was closed, the labs were closed, the living quarters were finally closed. But it had cost, oh how it had cost. The Magellan would never be the same.

The night after Lissa had been hit, Carla had. She had assured me in strident tones that it would take months for her hair to grow back, and yes it was a big deal. I had posted a guard inside Milla's quarters; it didn't take, well, an engineer, to know where Mouse would strike next.

Somehow she still got to her; now Milla and Carla both had a new found fondness for hats. Two days later, certain showers in the male gym area spit water tinted blue after a slight delay.

My own blue tinge was just now starting to fade, after almost two weeks of showers with a caustic soap. I knew what it meant; it meant she knew, or knew well enough from my own personality. Several others had been marked with the scarlet letter, as it were. A few were even indignant about it.

Most looked guilty... and worried.

I wouldn't care to bet that the cameras Oddball used were being used only by Oddball present. I bet Mouse was there, watching, laughing her fool ass off.

Now the females among the crew were looking over their shoulders, and testing their own showers each day before using them. The unease and stress were clear. Mouse looked omnipotent, or nearly so... and I looked incompetent, or nearly so. I wouldn't even argue if anyone stood up and screamed the accusation outright.

I'd probably agree, even if the crew wanted to replace me as captain.

But for all my own failure, there had been precious little rumbling of that yet. The real underground rumors and rumblings were far worse. Many in the crew were speaking openly (though never in my hearing) of 'punishing' Mouse.

How in the hell would we manage to punish our chief engineer without turning her further against us? Hadn't we 'punished' her first? How could we possibly stop Oddball from doing something like this again without Mouse? The other engineers from prior generations weren't even close to as brilliant as Mouse was, if their own anecdotal evidence and IQ tests were to be believed.

I'd felt I had to check those during the week, no matter how busy I was. Any sort of advantage I could find, I needed. But the prior engineers weren't much help, even if I were to request an emergency thawing. Provided I could make a case for such a thawing; Mouse hadn't in any way threatened the ship. And without that, Oddball wouldn't sign off on the action.

I felt like Oddball was getting his jollies from all this too, somehow. At least he was actually actively trying to help now, working on calculating how Mouse had blinded him, and ways to scan for bio-signatures throughout the ship that Mouse hadn't already figured out and disabled.

So far, no dice there, but it was a far cry from the first week. The first week Oddball did nothing at all that I didn't expressly ask for... almost as if it were paralyzed into inactivity. Some old archives in the history files had said some computers did that when faced with a problem they needed all their CPU power for... but that didn't really make sense. Oddball was a true AI, with more computing power than humanity had been able to make purely on it's own. It was more intelligent than Mouse, from an IQ test standpoint. So why would it freeze up like a windows computer running DOS and trying to compute the true numeric value of infinity?

That made me nervous; was our problem with Mouse so unsolvable that even the strongest computer humanity ever had access to couldn't solve it? And if not, what exactly did cause Oddball to freeze up like that?

I suppose it didn't matter; it was humanities' problem, for all that it was caused in part by Oddball itself. We could and would solve it. Preferably without bloodshed.

For now though, she was still at large. We had searched large areas of the ship, laying down sensors and hiding more; we didn't want to risk her hiding out in places we'd already been. None of those sensors had detected anything or been disabled so far, so I assumed they were clear.

I had a few private theories on where she was. One was that she was hanging out in the main drive section of engineering, which was a confusing warren of old machinery and tight hallways. Even our bravest explorers got lost regularly there, at least without some outside assistance. The old maps were all but useless there. Too much old tinkering and building.

Engineers were crazy; even the best of them.

The other option was the center of the ship, where the ship's gravity did not reach, in all the spaces not covered by cameras or sensors directly. There were no shortage of places to hide there for any length of time if you didn't mind your bone and muscle atrophy.

That's what was going to happen today. An organized search of the areas outside of the normal existence of the ship. Seth, Joe, Guido, and I were going to suit up and search that inner area in teams. I hoped we would find her today.

Because if we didn't, I'd need to get far more people to search the main drive section. The people I had searching now were ones I knew wouldn't hurt Mouse if we found her. Some of the people I'd have to include are not likely to be as forgiving. I hated the mere thought of having to worry not only for the searchers, but the one being searched for.

Even knowing my quarter's vents were welded shut with sensors in place to detect tampering, and the door locked with Mouse no longer granted entry, I still inspected my toothbrush and paste, as well as the water running from the sink in the bathroom. I did not need another application of blue pigment, or something strange spread upon my teeth.

Checking my clothes was a must too. All clear, on all counts.

The trip to the cafeteria was uneventful; I was running early which meant the hallways were empty. There had been no calls to wake me, the first time in weeks; I was just in the habit of waking early now... or not sleeping at all.

The cafeteria itself was almost empty; only Marion and Eric present. Eric's blue was actually closer to fading than mine was; a testament to how furiously one scrubbed when showering. Marion slid a plate of carrot muffins over as I stepped up to the counter without a word. I knew they were carrot muffins because that was what we had a surplus of this week.

I wish I could say tell Marion our food supply was out of danger, but that would be a lie. Even if everyone took shifts and just watched the garden, we wouldn't be able to watch all of it well enough. Not if Mouse decided to get serious. Luckily enough it seemed she didn't want to.

I was beginning to wish she'd just make her real move though; all this suspense was killing me.

I looked down in surprise when my questing hand found no more muffins to consume; I hadn't even tasted the things, and I liked carrots. Sigh. With a shrug I downed the last of my water and handed the dishes back to Marion.

Sure I was still early, but the sooner we started, the sooner we could find our wayward crew-member and bring her in. No one had even seen a glimpse of her during her admittedly malicious pranks, which meant no one knew if she had healed correctly, or if she had aggravated the surgery in some fatal way.

I'd rather she be pranking us than dead and rotting in some out of the way corner where the ship sensors did not reach. At least Oddball hadn't declared her dead; that would pretty much ruin someone else's day. Or life.

I think I'd rather space the entire damn computing core than allow it to operate on one of us again.

“Yo cap, good morning.”

Apparently I wasn't the only one ready to get started early. Joe and Seth were here already, with Joe acting mute and greeting with a silent wave as usual, and Seth speaking for both of them. Though in what movie inspired accent or slang this week would be anyone's guess. I couldn't even identify them all. The location was of course the primary inside hatch. Though we didn't need to be, we would be suited up for safety, and they were inspecting the suits.

Of course we couldn't get going until Guido arrived; I had demanded teams myself; no one left alone when searching for Mouse. Small as she was, she could still overwhelm any lone person, and I couldn't be sure she wouldn't hurt them somehow. I simply could not take the chance.

“yo cap, snap out of it.”

Concentration broken, I turned to Seth. He looked as serious as I had seen him. Neither he nor Joe had any hints of blue.

“What?”

“You're worrying too much cap. Got to cool off, stay frosty. You can't let it get to you; the stress will eat you alive.”

Behind him Joe nodded along.

“I can handle it.”

Maybe I couldn't, but a captain shouldn't appear weak after all. He gave me a surprisingly shrewd once over.

“Maybe cap... but how are you sleeping?”

I had no doubt he slept like a baby. They both likely did.

I was saved from having to respond and lie by Guido showing up. Right on time. He wasn't blue tinted either.

“Good morning.”

“Morning. So how are the suits?”

Joe spoke up for the first time today.

“Perfectly fine. All four suits check out.”

Wait.

“You checked all the suits? Even ours?”

“Yes, we wanted to make sure they were in good order and free of any sabotage. So we simply showed up early and checked all of them.”

“I am quite capable of checking my own suit.”

Seth chose to be insulting.

“Yeah, but we do it better. Don't want you missing something. That way if you die, it's all our fault and we get lynched.”

I still gave my suit a quick once over without seeming to. Just in case. I didn't like what this job was making me turn into. I found it hard to trust anymore... I could only hope I was the only one it was doing it too. Too much of this, and none of us would ever trust each other again.

I was pretty sure Joe at the very least, noticed me running the quick inspection. But he didn't say anything. And we all suited up with the ease of long practice. Though I was sure Guido didn't go EVA much. Probably no more than the minimum.

We locked the door behind us, using my code and nanites. One of the few perks of being the captain, I could lock anything and anyone out, unless I was declared unfit. Maybe the chief engineer could reverse it... but our chief engineer was currently unfit for duty. And the doctor could possibly do it by declaring me unfit first, but that would take a hearing.

Anyone in here with us, should not be able to get out that way. Of course, that only left an estimated hundred ways to enter or exit. And it was out job to check every single one.

…..........................................................

I watched captain traitor seal the first old hatch that no one ever used. He was giving the job due diligence, I had to admit. Welding it shut AND welding sensors for motion, our signal bearing nanites as well as a camera microphone and motion sensor. All of this was also welded in place, and covered by a fairly tough tamper proof cage while Guido played lookout.

A bit bulky but I approved. Of course there were ways to bypass it, but any bypass would result in at least one of the sensors going off. There were ways to defeat that as well, but it was too much effort for the gain; there were other entrances. I doubt even that bastard son of alien technology knew them all.

I doubt my old mentor even knew of the entrance I liked to use, for the simple expedient that there was no way he would ever fit in it. I discovered it by accident when upgrading some wiring to one of the newer motors regulating the modular function of some of our cargo spaces.

Some of our cargo bays for certain types of cargo (like the remains of the small comet worked on by Seth and Joe) could expand in size, or contract to better hold cargo; shifting cargo could actually generate a fair amount of movement of the ship itself, which we would need to burn costly fuel to correct.

The design was supposed to be a way to offset the problem; and just outside of the home solar system, it had proven flawed. The motors had proven insufficient to 'hugging' truly weighty cargo, and had a tendency to jam due to the dust and grit that often floated free in the empty spaces.

To further add insult to injury, the amount of motion generated by rampaging cargo had been overestimated. It really wasn't the problem the first gen builders had thought it might be.

So the old motors had to be replaced in favor of an encapsulated system which was smaller... and which also didn't work, due to the same dust. And then the entire system was decommissioned. It hadn't been used in my lifetime.

So, a little known fact; if you could ignore the crap floating around and ignore the feelings of claustrophobia and faint stirrings of panic, you could work your way through the old motor cowling and then into one of the fuel feeds. Which led into the engineer service tunnels behind, and into the main drive section.

All you had to do was be smaller than any human had a right to be, and know that the entire mechanism was disabled. Well that or balls of steel, and I was fresh out of those. They were probably in a jar that Oddball kept somewhere to gloat over. I had however made sure to disable one entire engine from the loop, decommissioned or not.

The problem was I wasn't sure how much longer I would be able to use it myself. I was growing.

Oh no, I wasn't finally hitting a growth spurt and gaining height; that would have been too easy, and a silver lining. I was growing... bumpy. I don't think I was gaining weight.... but my chest was killing me. All jiggly and maddening itch. And my butt, well, if it continued to balloon out there was no way I'd be able to make it through this hidden entrance of mine; I'd almost gotten stuck on my way in this morning.

I suppose I could hollow out the fuel line, but I was loathe to do that; we might need it later.

I had a pretty good idea why Claire used to ask if she looked fat in her clothes now though; cold comfort indeed.

The good news is I had only come this way to check the opposition; they were finally getting going on the offense, after weeks of being defensive. I still don't think they figured out how I managed to 'shave' Lissa and her chief hench-witch, but I was pretty sure they figured out the blue additive to the showers.

A great prankster once told me to never pull the same trick twice, and I was sticking to it; which was why the girl's badge of shame would be different than the blue man group's. It was hard to think of something at the same time brutal yet harmless, that would cause no lasting damage and not interfere with their jobs.

Besides, I hadn't actually cracked the code on the voter list yet; I wasn't sure what Oddball had used, but it was something I had little experience with. For all my skills I wasn't an experienced cryptologist.

I had acted on the guys mostly out of rage and spite, and I wasn't sorry for it; I was pretty sure who had voted against me there; the women were more guesswork than I was comfortable with. I was pretty sure Lissa and her hench-witches had voted against me, but what of Claire? What of Marion? What of Brun?

I had a feeling they could have gone either way, but at the same time I didn't want to know. I don't think I could ever really forgive the people on that list. Some of them were pure unmitigated jerks, sure. Some of them did not like me at all, and that was mutual; those people I could sort of understand voting against me.

But my friends? Those I trusted, voting away my identity as if it were something shameful or worthless, to be washed away by blood and tears for the sake of convenience? For their own convenience?

How could anyone forgive such a thing?

I heard them in the hallways and in their private spots, thinking they were safe from prying eyes and ears. They dared talk of trust; of how they would never be able to trust me again after the crimes I've pulled. What the hell sort of nonsense is that? Do they really not realize who broke trust with whom? If not, I feel honor bound to show them.

Still, it wouldn't do to target the wrong people.

But for now, I was gathering information. It seemed as if, true to form, they were focusing on making sure I did not double back and get behind them as they tried to run me to ground. Captain traitor was right in that the main drive section of the Magellan should be dealt with last; it was undeniably my turf.

I had both worked and played there since I was six, after all. No one currently active knew that particular section better than I; not even the other engineers. There, no one could match me. There, I could finally get some full measure of revenge against my betrayers and tormentors.

I was finally getting into the swing of using my altered body, having spent most of my enforced time off just learning how to move again. The number Oddball had done on me was surprisingly thorough, but confidence was slowly returning. I had had more time than I expected, but less than I needed. I would have to start layering my traps tonight.

And I would be hampered by the fact that I wouldn't be able to place them indiscriminately, or I'd be keeping the engineers who were seeing to the well being of the ship from doing their jobs. Which in itself limited the number of places I could make my first stand.

Squeezing my body, a traitor all it's own, though through no fault of it's own back through my make-shift entrance was even more claustrophobic than normal... there was a moment when I truly thought I was stuck. A vigorous shimmy got me through.

I needed a shower.

Captain traitor thought he had the residential hub locked down... and he did. He had all the vents and tubes locked, welded shut, and sensor warded. Both the quarters and corridors both. However the residential hub was not the only place to get a shower on the Magellan; nor was it the only place to get a good night's sleep.

Near one of the old, now unused outer hatches, one that used to be one of the new and most used outer hatches when the ship was being constructed, there was an old decommissioned infirmary. The place was actually a storeroom converted to the purpose for the treatment of work related accidents.

At the time, those people working furiously to save humanity tended to cut their suit or crush their limbs with power tools due to a rather normal tendency to hurry. A surprising number of those tended to survive, for all that they needed replacements. Eyes bursting from the lack of pressure was common, but replacements were at the time, easy to implant.

All the medications and equipment (as well as the replacement eyes) had of course long since been removed or recycled, but the beds an other anomalous amenities were still in place, for all that the place was listed as a storeroom. Having one's mother as chief medical officer for years had some benefit, after all.

It had the added benefit of being off the beaten path, though it was on the list for tonight's sweep, which meant today was the last day I could use it. Luckily it was only one of my bolt holes. It wasn't even the only one with a shower, though this one was the most comfortable one left.

Finally arriving, I pulled myself through the vent and replaced it, adding my own sensors to it. Then I made sure the door was locked and sealed, and added my alarm there too; it would chime extra loud if attempts were being made to open it...then delay the order for two minutes, more than long enough for me to get away, provided they didn't know for sure that I was here.

If they did, they would simply seal off the entire wing; that way when I tried to run they could track me down. They would likely do it by flooding the vents with radioactive dust; easily treatable, it would allow them to track me. The only reason they didn't just flood the ship now was that cleanup afterward would be terrible.

One section could be done; the entire ship, and the dust would cause illness or other problems before we could clean it all up.

The shower was almost too hot, and very warm. The tang of rust from the old tank (the real reason this was a great bolt hole) was almost gone now, and the water almost clear. It worked to get me and my clothes clean... or clean-ish at any rate, in the case of my clothes. Yes I knew how to use water and soap to wash my clothes, which was a must because I no longer had access to the normal sonic machines we used.

I didn't really want to wash clothes by hand, but it was either that or go naked. The outfit shirt, shorts, and overall combo I was using was the last one to fit me. It had been a little loose before. The normal clothes I'd grabbed at the start of this were beginning to get a little tight.

And the shirts... well this one was the only one that fit and didn't chafe. I wasn't sure what it was made of, but it was soft. I needed to get some more; a heist was in order. I could also take care of Claire's punishment while there, provided she was on the list. I hadn't cracked that list in two weeks, and I was beginning to get impatient again. I'd also heard her talking when she thought no one else could be listening in on her conversations.

Claire was as good a target as any.

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Mouse is starting to grow up

The thing that has been bothering me is if Mouse would have agreed to the transformation if it had been brought to Mouse-the-boy in a somehow diplomatic fashion. If Oddball had brought Mouse and the captain together and explained the situation, I wonder what might have happened.

At this point, I think Oddball could still salvage the whole debacle with a simple apology to Mouse and explain that his transformation to a her was necessary. Mouse would still have an ego that could respond to the proper approach.

Monica...

It's possible, but it would have been far more likely that Mouse would have tried and succeeded to find an alternative. Oddball couldn't have that, now could he? After all, then where would his beautiful plans be....

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The important thing here.....

D. Eden's picture

Is that Mouse recognizes the need to punish without causing real harm to either those being punished, or to the overall mission. Yes, Mouse is justifiably angry and hurt, but still ruled by her intellect. She has the knowledge and ability to strike back without causing permanent problems.

What amazes me is that an AI that is supposed to be so intelligent and advanced didn't understand that it was messing with the one person most capable of striking back.

Dallas

D. Eden

Dum Vivimus, Vivamus

And that's the story here, isn't it?

Oddball, knowingly or not, has picked a scrap with the one person on the ship capable of doing it serious harm.

Weird side thought here ... how "long-term" is Oddball's view of this situation? I'm getting the feeling this is less about the disparity in genders and at least in part a eugenic plan in operation, foiled somehow by one of the subjects coming out a pointer instead of a setter ... were Rog and Mouse set up as a match?

Neihaera...

I refuse to spoil, but when asking about Oddball's view, yes it's the long one, with all the concerns that entails. It has been programmed to take that view not just by humans, but by meddling aliens as well, and it started with the crew selection for generation 1.

Oddball doesn't really have a choice when looking to it's own survival; the survival of the portion of humanity he has been given to watch over supersedes that. Part of that survival may mean the improvement of the species along it's journey, to better survive by pushing the adaptations humanity already possesses.

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Either Oddball miscalcuated and is adjusting it's plan or...

perhaps Oddball expected this reaction all along.

The eugenics or a related idea seems plausible.

IE force the crew to be more creative, to REALLY think and just maybe they might learn somethings critical to their survival.

BTW how far are they from a likely suitable landfall?

IE is the current gen the one that will find Earth Mark 2?

We have several big clues here to consider and for Mouse, the Captain and Oddball as well.

The crew is becoming paranoid and few trust each other.

Well DUH! Mouse would argue they brought it on themselves. She simply sped things up. Any people who would vote to do what they did to Mouse and that other boy would naturally begin to distrust each other.

IE if they could do such a vile thing once why not again?

Mouse has not only healed from the surgery but is undergoing a rapid female puberty. She may be within weeks or days of menstruation. And given that Oddball is programed to see a sexually balanced crew as crucial I suspect Mouse has been *tweeked* to be extreamly attractive withing the physical limits required for her duties as chief engineer.

How will that affect crew relations when she comes out of hiding?

And most important, the talk of getting back at Mouse. Never forgetting THEY hurt Mouse first and unforgivable so.

Do they just mean pranks or would they kill her?

If this is Oddball playing a long game it is a dangerous one. They need to be tough and resourceful to survive.

But they must be cooperative, not thugs and killers.

The sex change thing and the computers week of inaction hints at this being a test. Either a planned one or one triggered by Mouse's and the crew's actions.

So many possibilities. Look forward to more.

John in Wauwatosa

John in Wauwatosa

A test

I think that yes, it is a test, perhaps to prepare the crew for potential planet fall. They have no experience looking out for themselves, being prepared to face potential sabotage or outside aggressors.

However, I believe one of the reasons Oddball chose Mouse is because it would force the rest of the crew to adapt to a most challenging situation and the crew couldn't truly harm her as she is vital to long term survival.

This is of course flawed reasoning based solely on computer logic and not taking into account human feelings and emotion, such that the crew may actually harm or kill her.

A fantastic story, thanks again.

I'm still wondering

what Mouse will do when she does figure out that Oddball rigged the vote and that's the Captain has little to no real control. On the other hand, their survival is dependent on that same AI. So just what do you do?

Great SF story!
Hugs
Grover

Great Story!

Just fascinating.

I have a weird idea; naturally, since I'm weird. Or an idea out of the box, since I can't even find the box, let alone be in it.

What if captain and crew surrendered to Mouse? The captain and his few faithful followers could enforce whatever Mouse wanted to do. They could have a truth and reconciliation tribunal with non-lethal, non-disabling punishments for whoever they determine wronged Mouse. They could probably figure that oddball had rigged the vote, then Mouse's hurt and bitterness could be directed at oddball and not the majority of the crew.

Mouse is chief engineer and is occupied doing other things than er job. Much of the crew is busy trying to find or trap Mouse or make the crew (more) safe from Mouse. Who's running the ship? Distrust is rising; the captain could be blamed next. The disaffected could do a job slow-down or a sit-down strike. Crew unity might be going to hell. I think stopping all this and getting Mouse placated and back to work ASAP is what's needed.

Hugs and Bright Blessings,
Renee

replies to the statements on Vagrants 11...

Sorry, been a little ill and such, so I wasn't able to reply to your comments as you made them.

You're all dancing around pieces of the puzzle.

Whether Oddball expected the fallout or not, according to it's own programming, it cannot put itself above what it considers is best for the crew. It flat out can't. That Oddball is in fact tinkering with the crew in this manner implies that it views it is necessary. Why is it necessary is the real question.

Eugenics is all but a must with any small population, by the very act of choosing who went on the ship and who stayed, eugenics was employed. Continuing that seems almost a forgone conclusion, and is hinted at with the genetic tweaks some children underwent in the womb.Genetic diseases? What are those? You haven't seen any or heard mention of any for a reason.

Who's running the ship? Mostly, Oddball is. Many people are pulling double shifts and such to hold up their end, engineers especially...but Oddball of course takes up the slack.

A test? not really. While it is good practice, Oddball started this train wreck when the programming he had been created with clashed; the original problem was caused by an accident of genetics after all, that Oddball was forced to try and correct. In some cases he succeeded, in others, he failed.

As for surrendering to Mouse, not going to happen; people are too pissed, too polarized for that now. Perhaps if Roger had done that in the beginning, but once the pranks started rolling in, blood started heating up.

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Do keep in mind that you

Brooke Erickson's picture

Do keep in mind that you *cannot* do genetic "improvement" without knowing what environmental pressures the organism will be facing.

Classic example is the prevalence of sickle cell anemia among people whose ancestors were from the parts of Africa that malaria originated in.

If you get the sickle cell gene from both parents, you have active sickle cell, and die young and painfully (and probably don't pass on your genes). This is bad anywhere.

If you have it from one parent, your red cells are a bit odd, but function more or less normally. and you are practically immune to malaria. Good thing in that part of Africa (and in other places malaria spread to).

If you don't have the sickle cell gene from either parent, you are apt to die young from malaria, or at least be at a major disadvantage in passing on your genes if you live where malaria is endemic.

So the gene is not something you can safely try to eliminate from the gene pool.
the genes for adaptation to high altitude aren't as extrtemem an example, but they do cause a disadvantage (chances for problems due to excess red cells if ou are living at low altitudes).

So, basically, you don't dare eliminate a "bad" recessive, because it *may* be needed in whatever environment you wind up in.

Best you can do is try to keep them from getting paired up at conception.

This pretty much torpedoes the usual sort of "eugenics". They are going to need as much genetic diversity as they can get.

Brooke brooke at shadowgard dot com
http://brooke.shadowgard.com/
Girls will be boys, and boys will be girls
It's a mixed up, muddled up, shook up world
"Lola", the Kinks

Brooke...

Couldn't agree more, but there are hints of what we can do now with a new medical field just beginning to show promise; Gene therapy. I won't go into how it works in depth. But in short what that means is (carried to it's logical conclusion), the diseases themselves all but vanish while the genes carrying them do not.

Secondly, humankind's greatest adaptation is it's intelligence. Don't like Malaria? The genes for sickle cell are not the answer. Realizing Malaria is a disease carried by mosquitoes and preventing/curing it is. Intelligence flat circumvents many of the purely biological adaptations humans have in regards to life.

It's why I (and a few others) say that the only way for humankind to evolve now is socially.

What this means is that even in unknown environments ( a new home planet) while you cannot predict which genes will be needed in order to adapt, you can definitely tell what will... intelligence, which can cover many, if not all, such deficiencies.

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