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Chapter 34: Earth’s Hegemon

Louie was definitely not a real God.

He was only a dragon that had chanced unto the godhood of a dead one. As his godhood was neither connate nor something he had personally cultivated, he did not understand much about its abilities.

With his divine power, he could replicate some divine abilities, but his efficiency in doing so was piss-poor. He knew what he was doing, but he didn’t understand how he was doing it.

Louie had also racked his brains thinking about how to accumulate more divine power. At the moment, however, he felt elated as he realized that the natives could be useful in that regard.

At the very least, Louie knew that even if he was not a God, he had the ability to collect divine power with his godhood.

‘Is this because of their faith?’

Louie gazed at the natives who knelt before him. Even though Louie himself was an atheist, he could detect the devotion within them.

Perhaps to these people, Louie’s appearance, his ability to spit flames, and his speech were enough to convince them of his supernatural origins.

At that moment he received a flash of insight, ‘No wonder San Soliel is so backward……’ he wondered.

Louie realized that San Soliel was quite possibly underdeveloped because the Gods themselves had prevented any technological advancement. That its civilization had stagnated for millennia despite its plurality of realms, races and magic could only imply that, in his opinion.

When humans banished the unknown and grasped the truth by themselves, they would cease to worship deities. This was why modern societies tended to have high incidences of atheism and irreligiosity. So long as humans needed to turn to the Gods for comfort, they would continue to worship them. The more primitive the society, the greater the reliance on deities.

Of course, this was not absolute. As civilization advanced and populations boomed the number of believers would often actually increase. What fell was their proportion in relation to the rest of the population.

Louie felt he might have touched on something extremely important. He thought more carefully about the information he had obtained in San Soliel. That world had numerous Gods and no particular God fostered a tremendous amount of believers. Moreover, even that backward world had its own share of irreligious people who officially ‘worshipped’ under the banner of a God. It was not necessarily the case that the more believers a God had, the better.

If that were the case then the Gods would likely have fought between themselves for absolute control over the faithful. There would definitely be more theocracies around in that case.

Louie looked once more at the natives and decided to put those matters aside.

This tribe, in addition to the 20 to 30 people who were driving off the crocodiles, and including the children and elderly, had only about 70 members. They would be suitable for a few experiments to better understand godhood.

Their ignorance of modern scientific breakthroughs and phenomena made them good sources of faith. Their tribal structure, however, meant that they couldn’t expand their numbers very easily. Louie surmised that this was likely why the Gods did not keep all races in a primitive state.

Well, I can always look deeper into that later. Right now I need to find some food...’

…...

In a small, dilapidated village outside the Amazon jungle, three Apache helicopters landed. Under the gale of propellers, a group of locals held back their curious children and watched the aircrafts’ passengers alight with trepidation.

The men were heavily armed and carried heavy bags bearing the insignia of the US army. Their numbers were small, but each bore a steely look in their eyes that only the hardest, toughest, and most exemplary of soldiers could bear.

“Captain, now that we’re here you have to tell us what this mission is about. The humidity here is killing me.”

An officer walked to his superior’s side, complaining.

The captain ignored his grumbling subordinate. His eyes were covered by a pair of thick-rimmed sunglasses and he shouted, “Attention!” At this, all soldiers present, including the one pestering him a while ago arranged themselves in a straight line. Each man stood erect with their fists firmly by their sides and their chest puffed out.

The commander went over several cycles of ordering the soldiers to attention and ease.

With his hands behind his back, the captain walked back and forth in front of the soldiers. “Our mission today has been ordered by the President himself as well as the Secretary of Defense.”

The soldiers kept their heads high and stayed motionless, but their eyes carried a gleam of expectation and excitement.

“Sorry to disappoint you fuckers, but there’s no one to kill or kidnap this time. We’re here to do reconnaissance of this area with no other instructions. We’ll be moving by foot so prepare your asses for a long march!”

“Yes sir!”

Despite some disappointment, the soldiers responded firmly.

“Sir!”

At this moment a soldier spoke without looking away.

“Speak, Private Bourne!”

“Since we’re here to investigate, what are they here for?”

Bourne indicated, with a tilt of his head, towards the passengers that had alighted with the soldiers.

“Over there is a professor of ecology from Stanford University and some of his students. They happen to be in Brazil right now to conduct ecological research on the Amazon jungle. In this unknown terrain, some expertise is required. This is also on orders from above.”

The captain paused before continuing with a smile, “ He also gives us a good pretext for coming here. Professor Johnson is a well-known ecologist, and ‘protecting him’ is quite important as he goes on this journey .”

At the captain’s words, the soldier nearly broke out into laughter.

What excuse could be more superfluous? As members of the United States Army, the defenders of the free world who would stop them from roaming wherever they pleased. Their battleships could wander any waters they wished, and their planes could bomb whoever they wanted to oblivion. Given this small-scale operation, what was the point of even giving an explanation?

Comments 7

  1. Offline
    + 00 -
    He knew what he was doing, but he didn’t understand how he was doing it.

    My coding journey

    When humans banished the unknown and grasped the truth by themselves, they would cease to worship deities. This was why modern societies tended to have high incidences of atheism and irreligiosity. So long as humans needed to turn to the Gods for comfort, they would continue to worship them. The more primitive the society, the greater the reliance on deities.


    I feel like that is a pretty interesting perspective, but rather than truth it may have to do with competency. The more a person can exert control over their environment to fulfill their desires the less they have to rely on a deity to fulfill them, though this may have nothing to do with God actually existing or not, simply how much a person feels the need to rely on "external" sources.
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  2. Offline
    + 10 -
    'Speak up, Private Bourne!'
    oh my god, is Jason Burne
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  3. Offline
    + 85 -
    Implying that technological advances civilizations won't or can't believe in god's is narrow thinking at best or nonsense at worse. Reason why in our more modern society you find a lot of people questioning religions around us is proof. Most if not all religions have no proof of what they claim to be true. No divine miracles. No divine gifts. No oracles. If someone studies actual religious scripts you will notice that they are a mix between that values of the period they were writen and the wishful thinking of the author. In the case of Christianity and the Old Scripture most authors were herders or fishermen. These kind of people were uneducated and if read what kind of stuff they wrote as divine script you would question the legitimacy of Christianity. Nonetheless just because someone is a scientist or a member of a technologically advanced society doesn't mean that he won't choose to believe in a certain religion. There are doctors and scientists in general who are actively part of a religion. Now if a god or a religion could provide tangible benefits (like blessings , supernatural gifts/power , curses , etc) even in a technologically advanced society most people would choose to join said religion or worship said god. The notion of preventing technology in a world where gods are real and have a mutually beneficial relationship with their believers is uneducated at best or straight up dumb at worse. Well this is my 2 cents from what I have gathered from the novels I have read and from what I have observed in real life.
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    1. Offline
      + 101 -
      Religion today is nothing more than a process of cultural inheritance & social circles. You are Christian because your parents embraced that religion. The same is true of other religions. It's just a process of hereditary inheritance & brainwashing through dogma & set of rules. In celebrity social circles, for example, religion can be an aspect of popularity & a way to get a partner. Meanwhile, in most third world countries, conventional religions are nothing more than the result of western imperialism & colonialism.

      Now, meanwhile, the history of mankind itself needs to be seen from various aspects. If you look at Darwin's theory for example, then humans are the evolution of monkeys. Thoughts like this, actually become one of the reasons why people can doubt the existence of God. And these thoughts grow along with the development of civilization in which humans deepen their knowledge & critical thinking. So actually it is not wrong if the author says that the more modern a civilization is, the more they leave God. Although this is not absolute.
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      1. Offline
        + 23 -
        Your point only stands if God truly doesn't exist. If a race existed that only came into existence due to a godly existence , then "technology" would never have such effect. Especially if that godly existence kept a somewhat active relationship with race he created. In our case any proof of any godly existence is dubious at best.

        P.S. For me science is a dogma where you search for the truths of everything through external means. On the contrary in magic/cultivation/etc you search for the truths of everything through internal means while possessing a type of energy that you can "freely" manipulate and cultivate. Technology is the physical manifestation of science. A caveat to that is that devices created through magic/cultivation/etc can also be considered technology. The notion that magic/cultivation and religion are directly opposite to science and technology is foolish.
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    2. Offline
      + 11 -
      I my opinion religion was something poeple in the old days used fight their fear like there is one your family member who has a deadly disease you know he is going to die but you pray to god in hope some miracle happens

      I think humans have developed religion to overcome fear
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      1. Offline
        + 01 -
        What is the point you want to make ?
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