
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Survival is not the same as healing.
In this final episode of the arc, The Sci-Fi Griot moves beyond sacrifice and compromise to ask a deeper question: what must be intentionally restored if the future is going to be worth living in?
Across science fiction—from Battlestar Galactica and Babylon 5 to The Expanse, Arrival, and Children of Men—stories of survival often reveal something unsettling. The system may endure, but something essential is lost along the way .
This episode explores what societies must reclaim after crisis: moral language, accountability, memory, empathy, and the belief that the future can still be chosen.
Because the real work of the future isn’t just innovation.
It’s restoration.
Science fiction doesn’t promise a better tomorrow.
By Nicolas R CunninghamSurvival is not the same as healing.
In this final episode of the arc, The Sci-Fi Griot moves beyond sacrifice and compromise to ask a deeper question: what must be intentionally restored if the future is going to be worth living in?
Across science fiction—from Battlestar Galactica and Babylon 5 to The Expanse, Arrival, and Children of Men—stories of survival often reveal something unsettling. The system may endure, but something essential is lost along the way .
This episode explores what societies must reclaim after crisis: moral language, accountability, memory, empathy, and the belief that the future can still be chosen.
Because the real work of the future isn’t just innovation.
It’s restoration.
Science fiction doesn’t promise a better tomorrow.