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Industrial Society and Its Future
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Ted Kaczynski´s Industrial society
and its future

Text: Theodore Kaczynski 
Art: Valentín Ramón

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Graphic novel adaptation by Valentín Ramón (D4ve, Dead Kings Have no Dreams ) of the 1995 essay "Industrial Society and Its Future" by Theodore John Kaczynski better known as the Unabomber Manifesto, contending that modern technological progress will extinguish individual liberties.

 

The "Unabomber Manifesto"  was originally printed in the Washington Post and The New York Times print supplements by a form of blackmail, that Kaczynski would end his 1978–1995 Unabomb mail bomb campaign if the essay went to print.

 

While Kaczynski's violence was generally condemned, his manifesto expressed ideas that continue to be commonly shared among the American public. A 2017 Rolling Stone article stated that Kaczynski was an early adopter of the concept that:

 

"We give up a piece of ourselves whenever we adjust to conform to society's standards. That, and we're too plugged in. We're letting technology take over our lives, willingly."

 

 

Mixing a wide range of graphic and narrative styles, it moves back and forth between a realistic drawing style and a TV cartoon; and from the use of archive images to a mixture of dream like narration and pure sci-fi.

 

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