silvereye wrote:
Give me an idea
Man discovers that someone else has been using his identity to provide intelligence services to the government. This discovery comes about when he finds the body of the mysterious other person in his bathtub, car trunk/boot, deep freezer, or favorite chair (choose one). While looking for some identification, the other person's mobile phone rings. The man answers it. The voice on the other end calls him by name and offers an assignment.
Should the man accept or reject the offer or admit that the caller is talking to the wrong person?
Should the man report the body to the police or try to dispose of it on his own?
What if the man's girlfriend shows up? What if the dead person looks like the man, right down to identical fingerprints? What if the man has not had a job in over a year, and his unemployment benefits have all but run out? What if the man has AS, agoraphobia, or both?
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The mere fact that science may not yet adequately explain an object, event, or experience does not mean the immediate explanation should automatically default to a conspiratorial, extraterrestrial, paranormal, or supernatural cause.