Beasts of No Nation

[Scene: A ruined village in sub-Saharan Africa. Smoke rises in the distance. Solid Snake crouches in the dust, surrounded by wary child soldiers. Nellyโ€™s Warchild stands at the front, clutching an old rifle.]

Warchild: Who runs Africa, Snake? They tell us itโ€™s the generals, the presidents, the ones with gold and guns. But we know better. We feel the chains.

Solid Snake (gravelly voice): Chains go back a long way. Since Cecil Rhodes carved this land for diamonds and empire. But he wasnโ€™t the last. The Rothschildsโ€ฆ theyโ€™ve been funding wars since Napoleon. Every bullet has a bankerโ€™s signature.

Warchild (bitter laugh): So we fight for ghosts? For men weโ€™ll never see?

Snake (lighting a cigarette, then putting it out in the dust): Not ghosts. Names. Old men who hide behind the curtains. Jacob Rothschild. Still alive. Still pulling strings. And Epsteinโ€”yeah, he didnโ€™t vanish. Heโ€™s hiding. Israel. Places the world doesnโ€™t want you to look.

[The children shift uneasily, whispering.]

Snake (reaching into his shirt, pulling out a small silver Virgin Mary necklace): Iโ€™ve got UN berets and medals for you. Every war child deserves recognition. But medals donโ€™t stop bullets. So hereโ€™s the only law that mattersโ€”no one shoots unless itโ€™s self-defense. You hear me? You live, you protect, you survive.

Warchild (staring at the necklace): And what of her? The woman you wear around your neck?

Snake (soft, almost a whisper): Thatโ€™s Mary. Sheโ€™ll defeat him. Sheโ€™ll put the old men in chains. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow. But the web always unravels. Remember that.

SOLID SNAKE’S ECONOMICS LESSON:

Snake: You kids ever hear about GDP? Gross Domestic Product. Thatโ€™s what they say measures a countryโ€™s wealth. Politicians love it. Economists worship it. But itโ€™s a lie.

Warchild (frowning): GDP? What does that mean to us? We donโ€™t eat it.

Snake (grim chuckle): Exactly. GDP means nothing. A hurricane rips through your home? The economy grows. A war burns your fields? GDP goes up. A famine makes food scarce? Thatโ€™s profit for someone. Even a wasting diseaseโ€”big money for pharmaceuticals. They call it growth. I call it blood money.

[The children glance at one another, the rifles on their knees feeling heavier now.]

Snake (voice tightening): When I was younger, I tried college. Sat in lecture halls. Studied economics. They said Iโ€™d learn how the world works. You know what I learned? Nothing. It was worthless. The textbooks never talked about the real costsโ€”the graves, the orphans, the child soldiers. So I dropped out.

Warchild (quietly): Then who writes the numbers? Who decides what matters?

Snake (pulling on his cigarette, exhaling slow): Old men. The same ones whoโ€™ve run things since Rhodes. Rothschilds. Bankers. War profiteers. They donโ€™t measure your life, or your pain. They measure their profit. Thatโ€™s the truth of GDP.

[He grips his Virgin Mary necklace and lets it dangle in the dust.]

Snake (softly): Donโ€™t worry. Maryโ€™s justice doesnโ€™t measure in numbers. It measures in chains. And one dayโ€ฆ those old men will wear them.

[The children lower their rifles, a silence falling over the camp as Snakeโ€™s words sink in. The Virgin Mary pendant catches the last light of the sun, glinting like a promise.]

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Solid Snake

A strong Man doesn't need to read the Future. He makes his own.

One Reply to “Beasts of No Nation”

  1. The children sat in the ruins, eyes sharp with hunger and fear, rifles dangling in their hands like chains too heavy for their small bodies. Dust swirled as Nelly Furtado walked among themโ€”not as a singer, not as a celebrity, but as Peacekeeper Nelly, her blue UN beret tilted over her brow.

    She raised her voice, soft but steady, carrying over the silence:

    โ€œYou donโ€™t have to be soldiers anymore. You donโ€™t have to fight for warlords who only use you and throw you away. If you walk away, if you defect to me, youโ€™ll wear this beret.โ€

    She lifted the sky-blue cap, symbol of the United Nations peacekeepers.

    โ€œAnd not only thatโ€”youโ€™ll be given the Silver Star award, because you chose peace over war. That takes more courage than any battle.โ€

    The children glanced at each other, uncertain. Nelly stepped closer, kneeling down so she was eye-level with them.

    โ€œThis isnโ€™t surrenderโ€”itโ€™s victory. Victory over the people who lied to you. Victory over the guns. Join me, and weโ€™ll rebuild, not destroy.โ€

    One by one, rifles hit the ground.

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