Wednesday, February 22, 2012

September 10, 2013

September 10, 2013


I’ve ordered that NO patients autopsies be performed (noninvasive scans and blood tests are permissible).  Brief funeral services (closed casket) served to help surviving patients attain psychological closure.


Bodies of augmentation washouts are cryogenically preserved, pending further study.  Perhaps one day we’ll discover ways to ameliorate or reverse lethal side effects and revive one, if not both of them.  That is my hope.


Reviving these patients would be fraught with complexities – and not just from technological perspective.  How would they respond to an essentially new world when resuscitated months or even years later?


How could surviving patients react to their comrades’ resurrection?  I certainly can’t predict.


One thing is for certain – UFMN would find a use for them.

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