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Letters to Super C: #26
To the mighty Cat of Steel, SuperCat
Dear Sir:
I'm waiting my turn to be documented by the C.I.D.F., but my question about CNG was this: if CNG wanted to punish all of humanity for being "too savage of a race," was it doing it in a specific order? The rumors I heard said that it killed more white people than any other race (black, brown, yellow, or red), even though it killed people in all five categories. I used to be a black man serving in the United States Marine Corps. Now I'm a black Labrador retriever. I can't help but wonder if that was done on purpose, although some of my fellow Marines, all of which were once white people, had transformed into a variety of animals. One became a black bear, and another became a black wolf. (The other four in our core group I speak about turned into a bulldog, timberwolf (so he's gray), a golden retriever, and a raccoon.)
I guess I have multiple questions then, but the first one was asking if the humans were transformed in a specific order, or if it was just at random. Number two: was the choice of species random, or did it make me a black animal on purpose? All I do know is that CNG had no purpose to do anything it did. I am so glad it is gone, but I fear that as I finish my career and transition back to civilian life, it may have contributed more to any PTSD I might suffer than any battle wounds or nightmares I experienced. I wouldn't change a thing, though. If I had to do it all over again, I would. I am thankful I had the opportunity to serve my country.
I also thank you for letting me write this letter to you.
Sincerely,
2nd Lt. Jamal P. Andrews, age 34 (black Labrador retriever, formerly human being)
Biloxi, Mississippi, USA
Super C's response:
Dear 2nd Lt. Andrews:
I thank you for your service, first of all. You are one of too many to count, but if the people CNG came upon were military service, it always turned them into animals. Some say that it is a fate worse than dying, but nothing else about you has changed. The world doesn't just need superheroes like me; it also needs more courageous people like you.
The answer to your first question is yes and no, to be honest; no, because CNG was trying to be as random as possible. Yes, because it killed more white people than any other race. At one point, it did assume that whites were the worst, with whites living in America being the worst of the worst, because they had not treated other people (your kind especially) as people, but as property. You also have events like the Trail of Tears, where Native Americans were forced off their rightful lands. It's hard to understand why these things happened, other than the fact that, as any preacher would tell you, that these people have proven all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, and all were punished for it when they crossed over into the afterlife. (NOTE: The numbers do not include those 7 million people in Argentina and 1.5 million people in Turkey, all of whom died from all those soccer riots, and for just being fans of those teams. They don't count because they had come back to life as if nothing had happened, but the experience scarred them so much, they practically gave up on soccer.)
The answer to your second question is that CNG did everything at random, so the fact you went from a black human being to a black Labrador retriever is purely a coincidence. I think that's best illustrated by the fact your friend that was once a white human being became a black bear. Regardless of what animals humans turn into, nothing else about them changes. Your voice, DNA, personality, and list of things you were interested in (hobbies, e.g.) has not changed. (That last one is your voluntary choice, you understand.)
I can't help you with the PTSD element, but I can share some sympathy with you on that topic because a few of my recruits in the G-52s were sufferers of that (some of them because they had been active military once upon a time). The best advice I can give is to find someone who is an expert on that topic to help you deal with it. No one deserves to suffer for anything. Stay courageous; you've got this. If you can defend our homelands as a Marine, you can easily make the switch over to a civilian lifestyle.
I appreciate your letter; thank you so much.
Yours truly,
Simon Corrineson, a.k.a. SuperCat (Super C for short)
Commanding Officer of the G-52 Organization
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Letters to Super C: #26
To the mighty Cat of Steel, SuperCat
Dear Sir:
I'm waiting my turn to be documented by the C.I.D.F., but my question about CNG was this: if CNG wanted to punish all of humanity for being "too savage of a race," was it doing it in a specific order? The rumors I heard said that it killed more white people than any other race (black, brown, yellow, or red), even though it killed people in all five categories. I used to be a black man serving in the United States Marine Corps. Now I'm a black Labrador retriever. I can't help but wonder if that was done on purpose, although some of my fellow Marines, all of which were once white people, had transformed into a variety of animals. One became a black bear, and another became a black wolf. (The other four in our core group I speak about turned into a bulldog, timberwolf (so he's gray), a golden retriever, and a raccoon.)
I guess I have multiple questions then, but the first one was asking if the humans were transformed in a specific order, or if it was just at random. Number two: was the choice of species random, or did it make me a black animal on purpose? All I do know is that CNG had no purpose to do anything it did. I am so glad it is gone, but I fear that as I finish my career and transition back to civilian life, it may have contributed more to any PTSD I might suffer than any battle wounds or nightmares I experienced. I wouldn't change a thing, though. If I had to do it all over again, I would. I am thankful I had the opportunity to serve my country.
I also thank you for letting me write this letter to you.
Sincerely,
2nd Lt. Jamal P. Andrews, age 34 (black Labrador retriever, formerly human being)
Biloxi, Mississippi, USA
Super C's response:
Dear 2nd Lt. Andrews:
I thank you for your service, first of all. You are one of too many to count, but if the people CNG came upon were military service, it always turned them into animals. Some say that it is a fate worse than dying, but nothing else about you has changed. The world doesn't just need superheroes like me; it also needs more courageous people like you.
The answer to your first question is yes and no, to be honest; no, because CNG was trying to be as random as possible. Yes, because it killed more white people than any other race. At one point, it did assume that whites were the worst, with whites living in America being the worst of the worst, because they had not treated other people (your kind especially) as people, but as property. You also have events like the Trail of Tears, where Native Americans were forced off their rightful lands. It's hard to understand why these things happened, other than the fact that, as any preacher would tell you, that these people have proven all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, and all were punished for it when they crossed over into the afterlife. (NOTE: The numbers do not include those 7 million people in Argentina and 1.5 million people in Turkey, all of whom died from all those soccer riots, and for just being fans of those teams. They don't count because they had come back to life as if nothing had happened, but the experience scarred them so much, they practically gave up on soccer.)
The answer to your second question is that CNG did everything at random, so the fact you went from a black human being to a black Labrador retriever is purely a coincidence. I think that's best illustrated by the fact your friend that was once a white human being became a black bear. Regardless of what animals humans turn into, nothing else about them changes. Your voice, DNA, personality, and list of things you were interested in (hobbies, e.g.) has not changed. (That last one is your voluntary choice, you understand.)
I can't help you with the PTSD element, but I can share some sympathy with you on that topic because a few of my recruits in the G-52s were sufferers of that (some of them because they had been active military once upon a time). The best advice I can give is to find someone who is an expert on that topic to help you deal with it. No one deserves to suffer for anything. Stay courageous; you've got this. If you can defend our homelands as a Marine, you can easily make the switch over to a civilian lifestyle.
I appreciate your letter; thank you so much.
Yours truly,
Simon Corrineson, a.k.a. SuperCat (Super C for short)
Commanding Officer of the G-52 Organization
SuperCat's twenty-sixth letter.
Super C, G-52s, etc. © me and me alone
Super C, G-52s, etc. © me and me alone
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