The Fire Brigade
S01:E11

The Fire Brigade

Episode description

The Fire Brigade

In this episode we muse about the role of the military in a world without war. What comes next for these highly trained individuals and groups? How might they turn those skills toward new types of community service?

Transcript: https://wiki.tomasino.org/writing/Solarpunk-Prompts---The-Fire-Brigade

Links mentioned:

Music from:

Dyamur - Sun Syndicate - https://globalpattern.bandcamp.com/album/solarpunk-a-brighter-perspective

Download transcript (.srt)
0:19

Hello World, I am Tom Sinow.

0:22

This is SolarPunk Prompts,

0:24

a series for writers where we discuss SolarPunk,

0:27

a movement that imagines a world where technology is used

0:31

for the good of the planet.

0:32

In this series,

0:33

we spend each episode exploring a single SolarPunk Story

0:36

Prompt, adding some commentary, some inspirations,

0:39

and some considerations.

0:41

Most importantly,

0:42

we consider how that story might help us to better envision

0:45

a sustainable civilization.

0:47

If this is your first time here,

0:49

I recommend checking out our introduction episode first,

0:52

where we talk about what SolarPunk is, why you should care,

0:55

and why this series came into being.

0:57

Let's get into it.

0:59

Today's prompt is the Fire Brigade.

1:03

There's a military unit which switched from tanks to fire

1:07

trucks decades ago.

1:09

Now they're fighting climate disasters,

1:12

being more engineers and firefighter than soldier,

1:15

which is a dream for some and a nightmare for others.

1:18

The rookies, well versed in the new reality,

1:21

are struggling to understand the language of the old

1:23

officer, still clinging to the military jargon in ways.

1:28

We've given a lot of time and discussion to the role of

1:31

teachers, scientists,

1:32

and engineers in the SolarPunk future.

1:35

It's easy to see a place for the hackers, the cooks,

1:37

and the librarian, but what about the soldier?

1:39

We want to envision a world free of martial conflict,

1:43

but where did those people go?

1:45

Sure,

1:46

your story civilization may still have some guard force,

1:50

but there's a lot of well -trained people that are going to

1:52

be out of work.

1:54

For inspiration,

1:55

we can look to programs that exist for veterans now.

1:58

What sort of training is available to port their skills

2:00

into the civilian world.

2:02

Did they have some specialty training in the military with

2:05

a counterpart?

2:07

When I served in the Navy,

2:09

I was trained to be an electronics technician and a nuclear

2:12

reactor operator.

2:13

Civilian transitioned for that sort of training

2:15

straightforward.

2:17

But there will be many for whom it's less obvious.

2:21

What does a sonar tech do after service?

2:24

What about infantry?

2:26

In our prompt,

2:27

we see that this military group made such a transition and

2:30

are now acting as a sort of rescue crew against climate

2:33

disasters.

2:34

What sort of activity would that entail?

2:38

One of the first ideas that comes to mind is search and

2:40

rescue operations.

2:42

Here in Iceland,

2:43

we have a completely volunteer search and rescue

2:46

association with thousands of people giving their time and

2:49

energy to keep the community safe.

2:51

They operate heavy rescue machinery, helicopters,

2:55

and rugged winter vehicles.

2:56

They work by sea, by air, and by land.

2:59

Their goal is to prevent accidents and save human lives.

3:03

But it's not just some random people off the street thrown

3:05

into these situations.

3:07

There is extensive training programs, practice drills,

3:11

and exceptional knowledge of the conditions in Iceland's

3:14

unique environments.

3:16

Their activities pay off in rescue situations,

3:18

but also in education of children of the public.

3:22

They even have youth groups eager to get the kids involved

3:25

via seminars and travel.

3:27

All of this is without a standing military.

3:31

A military unit moving into this sort of work would bring

3:34

with them a different type of professionalism.

3:37

And that type of background might also give them unique

3:39

insights into the dangers left behind in this world.

3:44

Military conflicts have left behind an abundance of dangers

3:48

long after the fighting has ended.

3:50

Landmine -free estimates that there are over 110 million

3:55

landmines in the ground right now and an equal number in

3:58

stockpiles are ready to be used.

4:00

More than 5 ,000

4:01

people lose their lives to these mines every year,

4:04

and between 15 ,000 to 20 ,000

4:06

injuries and 42% of those are children.

4:10

Landmines are also traditionally planted in fields,

4:13

forests, and around wells, water sources,

4:16

and especially hydroelectric installations.

4:19

These are exactly the types of places that attract everyday

4:22

activity for agricultural societies like we commonly

4:25

envision as a solar punk.

4:27

Today we have major organizations working to clean up these

4:30

dangerous messes lurking in the earth.

4:33

The Halo Trust, Mines Advisory Group, and Odyssey 2025.

4:37

But what will those actions look like in our future

4:40

civilization?

4:42

I've been focusing on landmines as an example,

4:44

but this is a problem that extends to many more areas.

4:48

Modern warfare understands that infrastructure is essential

4:51

to military operations and will target it both with

4:54

conventional attacks and sabotage.

4:57

Ridge collapsing, power plants down.

4:59

much more.

5:00

If your story is transitioned into the future as anything

5:03

but a peaceful one,

5:04

your world may be scarred from this past action too,

5:07

and your Solar Pump community will have to deal with it.

5:10

They'll want trustworthy people who know the dangers and

5:13

who can work well together.

5:15

Not all the dangers left by human hands directly.

5:19

In a world of rapidly changing climates,

5:21

there are plenty of dangers from Mother Earth.

5:23

There will be great storms, hurricanes, tornadoes,

5:27

earthquakes, and wildfires.

5:29

There will be flooding rains and landslides.

5:31

There will be new things we've never even imagined.

5:35

Recent analysis from Climate Brief shows that 71% of the

5:39

504 extreme weather events reported over 400 peer -reviewed

5:44

studies were made more severe by human -caused climate

5:48

change.

5:49

93% of the 152 extreme heat events,

5:54

more severe by climate change.

5:57

and more than half of the flooding and drought events both

6:00

were made worse by it as well.

6:02

A fire brigade of highly trained ex -military folks focused

6:07

on dealing with these problems would be a boon to any

6:10

community,

6:11

and would likely be welcome to travel between them as well.

6:14

Does your world have large communities or small ones,

6:18

or would this group roam a region?

6:22

Do they trade their services, and for what?

6:24

But this brings us into the topic of stylistic hooks.

6:29

How does their military background come through in your

6:32

story?

6:33

It could be something played lightly,

6:35

with just the language and jokes of the old officer to

6:38

paint the background,

6:39

or you might lean into the hierarchical structure of their

6:42

group,

6:43

something that may contrast with the rest of the community's

6:46

organization.

6:48

The prompt calls attention to the differences between the

6:51

old guard, who likely served in military service,

6:54

and the new recruits,

6:55

who only know this unit for their current work.

6:59

This dichotomy could let you explore both cultural aspects

7:02

while keeping a very narrow focus on just this unit,

7:06

rather than jumping back and forth to a solar -punk

7:08

community.

7:09

Another hook could be in parallels to our own world.

7:13

For instance, let's imagine a school setting,

7:16

where the military comes to present the recruitment pitch,

7:19

and enlists people into early training programs.

7:23

While some countries have banned the practice,

7:25

and there's even rules against it set by the UN Convention

7:28

on the Rights of the Child, many places skirt those rules.

7:32

Promoting the military is a career path to children as

7:35

young as eleven.

7:36

Thankfully,

7:37

the practice has been in decline in recent years,

7:40

thanks to dedicated work by NGOs.

7:43

On writing a solar -punk setting, though,

7:45

we can play with these experiences and leverage the

7:48

reader's reactions to really hit them with the differences.

7:52

Rather than a military recruitment pitch,

7:54

our fire brigade could be educating the kids of the new

7:57

unit.

7:57

about the legacy dangers of environmental hazards and

8:00

challenging them to join the training to keep the world

8:02

safe.

8:03

Who wants to save lives?

8:05

the old soldier asks.

8:07

His voice clipped with an unfamiliar cadence,

8:10

like his words on a march just like the firemen around him.

8:14

A scary symbol of nationalism is thus converted into

8:17

something wholesome while pointedly commenting upon our

8:21

present world.

8:23

The military aspects of this prompt also offer up an

8:26

unusual opportunity.

8:28

SolarPunk's vision for the future needs to find different

8:31

ways to appeal to different audiences.

8:34

What of the action fan, or even the military story reader?

8:39

Their expectations for pacing, for drama,

8:42

and life -or -death scenarios aren't the typical fair.

8:46

We're so concerned about living in harmony with nature it's

8:50

easy to sound boring.

8:52

you Military and action genres are stuffed to the brim with

8:54

adrenaline, and that's something we can dip into.

8:57

The fire brigade of this prompt may not be in a gunfight

9:00

with a raiding party,

9:02

but they could be suspended by ropes over a dam that's

9:05

collapsing around them.

9:06

There are a lot of people who love this type of story.

9:10

It doesn't have to be army vs.

9:12

army to use some of the genre's best qualities.

9:15

So what are they?

9:16

Well,

9:17

there's a few important aspects of military genre fiction

9:21

that you could effectively borrow without putting your

9:23

theme at risk.

9:24

1.

9:25

Background of conflict.

9:27

This doesn't have to be fighting,

9:29

it just needs to form a state of urgency for the rest of

9:32

the action.

9:33

2.

9:34

Politics, strategies, and tactics.

9:37

Again, those don't need to be about fighting,

9:39

they could be strategies for diverting the river flood.

9:43

3.

9:45

Training, training, and more training.

9:47

Show it directly,

9:48

show it indirectly through the action and reactions, etc.

9:52

And 4.

9:53

Military elemental styles.

9:55

Jargon, nicknames, acronyms.

9:58

Regulatory structure.

10:01

Of cautioned and previous episodes against blending genres

10:04

with solar punk, and I'll do it again here,

10:06

what we're talking about isn't about writing a military

10:10

solar punk story,

10:11

rather we want to think of the readers that love the action

10:14

and drama and say to them, your symbols are great,

10:17

we're just going to bend them a little bit in this

10:19

direction.

10:20

And then we'll lift what we need and use it to deliver a

10:23

solar punk package deep into their psyche.

10:26

It's a type of inclusivity,

10:30

finding other ways to connect with new audiences while

10:33

maintaining the core solar punk vision.

10:35

Now before we wrap up,

10:37

let's take one last look at that prompt, the fire brigade.

10:41

There's a military unit which switched from tanks to fire

10:45

trucks decades ago.

10:47

Now they're fighting climate disasters,

10:49

being more engineers and firefighters than soldiers.

10:52

which is a dream for some and a nightmare for others.

10:56

The rookies, well versed in the new reality,

10:59

are struggling to understand the language of the old

11:01

officer, still clinging to the military jargon in ways.

11:05

Until next time, I'm Tomasino,

11:09

I'll help you join me for the next Solar Pump Prompt.

11:14

Music in this recording is Sun Syndicate by DMR,

11:19

perspective.

11:19

perspective.