The Universal Righteousness Machine
Professor ZYGOTE had finally cracked the automation equation,
paving the way for the creation of the ultimate machine, a machine
capable of wiping out all forms of crime overnight without the
help of guards, policemen, detectives, lawyers, judges, juries,
jailers, executioners, parole officers, alarm systems, prisons.
or even locks and keys. The very thought was staggering. It would
truly be the ultimate machine, the law enforcement machine.
If accepted by the people, the machine would be installed in
the nation's capital. Powered by gigantic thermonuclear dynamos,
it would direct an immense laser beam toward a stationary space
satellite in the sky over North America. Relay stations evenly
spaced over the land would pick up the signals as they bounced
off and radiate them out in all directions to be picked up by
tiny transistor devices.
These devices were so small that by a simple surgical operation
one could be planted under the scalp where it would pick up the
signals and send them on into the brain, producing a predetermined
response.
"But the rumor is not true," Dr. Zygote tirelessly
pointed out on his exhaustive speaking tours around the land,
"that the machine does a person's thinking for him. Indeed
not." The computer itself was programmed with none other
than the laws of the land, and it simply beamed a negative impulse
into a person's brain if he tried to break the law.
The President himself and most of Congress had personally tested
a model of the machine, had been delighted, and had recommended
to the nation that the Constitution be amended to require every
citizen to wear one of the transistor devices.
One Senator. while testing the device, had tried to plunge a
knife into one of his colleagues and had found himself "pleased
as a child with a new toy" that he had been unable to do
so. Professor Zygote's machine was indeed a miracle.
To be sure, there were questions and objections raised about
the law enforcement machine, but the overriding fact was that
crime was engulfing the nation, and Professor Zygote's invention
seemed to be the only remedy left.
When the system was completed, it was set in operation by the
President himself in a special ceremony. The effect was as startling
as it was immediate. Prisons, jails, correctional institutions
of all descriptions opened their doors; and the most hardened
criminals- each wearing his own transistor device-went out, never
to commit another crime. All forms of crime, from corruption of
judges and high government officials to muggings on the street,
were wiped out overnight. Policemen obtained other jobs. Social
workers took vacations. Lock makers went out of business.
Professor Zygote. now a very old man, was honored beyond any
other man in history. So complicated were his formulas that nobody
else had been able to understand them or knew how his machine
worked. He died seeing his "dream come true" - a moral
utopia.
A few dissenters were saying that the machine changed only the
exterior behavior of a person, but did nothing to change his motives,
desires, and impulses. However, no one paid much attention. "After
all, crime has been wiped out, hasn't it?" syndicated a national
columnist. "If it works, it's right!" The statement
became a national slogan.
Women walked the streets at night unmolested. Credit was extended
to everyone. Because the demand for their products had dropped
off so sharply, weapons manufacturers diversified into other lines
of business.
But all was not unity and peace in paradise. Despite all disclaimers,
many people were extremely unhappy with the law-enforcement machine.
Addicts, whose only ways to support their habits were criminal,
found themselves without funds. Mobsters were reduced to rags.
Wealthy ladies would wear their jewels into the most depraved
slum areas at night, scoffing at the misery and at the men who
leaned out of windows yelling, "Woman, if that machine would
let me. I'd kill you!"
Psychiatric offices had lines blocks long. Leading psychiatrists
were saying more and more that murder and other forms of anti-social
behavior, such as child beating, assault and battery. rape, and
so forth, had been ways of releasing pent-up hostility. Now, since
the machine had closed off these escape hatches; people were going
insane.
Mental hospitals were overflowing. All the structures that had
formerly been prisons, jails, reformatories, and the like were
now converted into mental institutions. And former policemen and
detectives, put out of work by the law-enforcement machine, were
re-employed to care for the insane.
But those who had money, position, and influence were well off.
Nobody could touch them. They used legal methods to get their
revenge. The most complicated and subtle legalistic system ever
devised was worked out to circumvent the law and make one's way
without it.
Yet no crimes were committed, not because people didn't want
to, but because they couldn't. Every newborn child was fitted.
Every alien entering the country was fitted. Fugitives were quickly
tracked down and fitted. Nor could the device, once fitted, be
taken out for the newly-enacted national law would not
permit it.
Then one day the machine began to shake, emitting a loud buzzing
sound. It grew louder and louder and the shaking more intense
until the whole capital city was shaking and the noise had drowned
out even the cacophony of the traffic. Frantic technicians slaved
in droves around the machine, all to no avail. Terrified scientists
searched the late Dr. Zygote's papers in vain for a clue. Nothing
worked. The machine steel, crystals, wires, transistors
was simply giving out.