Brasil, 1926. Monteiro Lobato publica una novela cuyo argumento sonará a más de uno:
O Presidente Negro envisions the 2228 U.S. presidential election. In that race, the white male incumbent, President Kerlog, finds himself running against Evelyn Astor, a white feminist, and James Roy Wilde, the cultivated and brilliant leader of the Black Association, “a man who is more than just a single man … what we call a leader of the masses.”
[...]
Of course, there are several differences between Lobato’s story and the circumstances surrounding the 2008 election. In Lobato’s fictional world, the United States prohibited the mixing of races—believing it would lead to “disintegration” or “denaturalization”—and thereby conserved white and black races in “a state of relative purity.” Lobato also failed to predict the civil rights movement, which undid his predictions of an extreme version of “separate but equal.” Unlike Roy, born in a supposed age of “pure races,” Obama, born of a white mother and black father, witnessed America’s social revolution.
Se lo he dicho en más ocasiones, pero no me cansaré de repetirlo siempre que pueda: la ciencia ficción es maravillosa.









Burgomaestre Rinzewind:
Este video anuncia la segunda temporada de Reflexiones de Repronto:
http://minchinela.com/repronto/2008/10/01/segunda-temporada-de-reflexiones-de-repronto-calendario-y-video-promocional/
Trece nuevas entregas, que se publicarán los días 1 y 15 de cada mes.
Es curioso lo que la ficción llega a parecerse a la realidad, ¿eh Chemy?