Mollkin

Mollkins are allegedly the first known "spontaneously morphic species", spawned from human ancestors in U.S.Iraq who suffered long-term radiation poisoning as the result of exposure to D.U. weapons. Owing to testing showing they are sufficient non-human, they have been used as humanoid slaves; blackened with sticky oil, Mollkins work the radioactive fields that would kill anyone else. Once a people, now a product, I give you the Mollkins. They can be bought and sold, and are sometimes bought en masse for conservitive hunting partys back home. Kids in grade school are taught to despise the Mollkin race. "Your mama kissed a Mollkin! Your mama kissed a Mollkin!": many a child's youth has been seared by this cruel spirited taunt.

Go with you know, a mollkin, glow with radiation head toes and its slow in beef steak and ... the range of strange where the darkest of human stain. Lets go with a mollkin. Lets mutate.


"Dripping feet like creatures that wonder in circles; mutants to feed our economy."

The whole sick and stained Mollkin culture was shunned and exploited for endless years, until finally, in the 2030s, they began to be an accepted part of Merican culture. A prime example of this was popular singer Johny Mollkin, whose hits had everyone dancin'. Many protested the creation of Mollkin sweat shops on American soil with the slogan, "Keep those fuckin Mollkins where they belong."


Academic Reading

Fnordham University Press's "Mutation: the Genealogy of Mollkin Culture" is the longest available text on Mollkins, spanning 3320 pages. The collection contains two-hundred-and-one thought-provoking essays on the controversies surrounding the moral & cultural genealogies and legal status of Mollkins. Since public awareness of this issue has increased this fifth edition includes nine entirely new essays which bring the treatment of the subject up-to-date. The urgency of this issue can be gauged in recent developments such as the criminalization of Mollkin hunting in Oregon, and the many headlines devoted to "mutant jazz" sensations topping the bestseller charts in the United States, which has raised controversy the world over by defying convention. The essays address the range of questions involved in this issue pertaining especially to the fields of cultural theory, public policymaking, and social philosophy. The discussions consider the decisions facing public policymakers, how those decisions will affect the Mollkin and Human-onlyist communities, and the social and legal ramifications for Mollkins in a permanently oppressive state, as well as issues of homeland rights.

The book is divided into three sections. The first, "Medical and Genetic History of the Mollkin", includes an thorough overview and examination of the American invasions of Middle Eastern territories, including the Annexation, and selections from medical histories on the rapid appearance of the first observed "mutants", with an extensive review of the increasing popular theory that the Mollkin genesis was the result of intentional genetic manipulation. Featured are articles by medical doctors Rolf Lucas, Arthur Nicolaus Murray, and Xzavier Lyndon, and ethicists Aki Breana, Loreta Saskia, and Joukahainen Nice, with a new article by Rikard Topi. The second section, "Legal and Political Implications of Mollkin Personhood", includes an examination of Supreme Court decisions on the Mollkin right to life and selections from the lower court decisions on the personhood of Mollkins, with further study on the impacts the Mollkin question has had on state and local authority, particularly regulation of citizenship and legal personhood, in the absence of binding federal regulation. Featured articles by law professors Rosa Daria and Rolf Siegel, lawyers Vidya Klein, Darinka Yuzuki, and Sisel Zilberschlag, and politician Diomedes Argyris. The third (and longest at 2973 pages) section, "Cultural and Philosophical Considerations," probes more deeply into the new cultural, philosophical, and theoretical issues raised by the introduction of Mollkins into the wider society, illustrating in appalling detail a dispute between rival theories, consequentialism and deontology, and the ethical problems raised by international stalemate in addressing Mollkin issues. It also includes a corpus of the standard thought on the debate by Eliasz Matouš, Aniketos Sharif, Dorota Dinello, Jeffrie Wu, James Harris, Dick Foot, Noga Washington, and Q. Murray Davis, and adds articles new to this edition by Matouš, Sharif, Foot, Warren Harman, Ricard Dubois, and Judith Lieberenz.