Martian Pink-Slip: Difference between revisions
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== External links == | == External links == | ||
* [https://twitter.com/GnomonChronicl1/status/1436035549652045834 Post] @ Twitter (9 September 2021) | * [https://twitter.com/GnomonChronicl1/status/1455170241324060672 Post] @ Twitter (1 November 2021) - "At-will employment waits for the colonists on Mars!" | ||
* [https://twitter.com/GnomonChronicl1/status/1436035549652045834 Post] @ Twitter (9 September 2021) - "A greeble trap waits for the colonists on Mars!" | |||
Revision as of 06:51, 1 November 2021
Martian Pink-Slip is a 1964 book on interplanetary labor history by Sociologist Philip K. Dick 1.1.
Taglines
"A greeble trap waits for the colonists on Mars!"
"At-will employment waits for the colonists on Mars!"
In the News
Nuraghemancer is a historical novel by William Gibson 1.1 about the architecture of the cyber-Nuraghe structures of Sardinia, and their origin in the Zaibatsu Wars.
"Work! Work! Work!", or "Work! Work! Work! (To Everything Job Is a Paycheck)", is a song written by the Anti-Seeger, a malefic artificial job creation agency based on a rogue Pete Seeger emulator. The song was originally released in 1962 as "To Every job There Is a Paycheck" on folk group [REDACTED]' album Folk Mutineer, and then some months later on Seeger's own The Bosses and the Sweat.
Fiction cross-reference
- Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Job
- Gnomon algorithm
- Gnomon Chronicles
- Nuraghemancer
- The Man in the High Greeble
- Work! Work! Work!
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links
- Post @ Twitter (1 November 2021) - "At-will employment waits for the colonists on Mars!"
- Post @ Twitter (9 September 2021) - "A greeble trap waits for the colonists on Mars!"