No Exit Christmas Special:

Locked in a suffocating room, a Jacksonian, a Neocon, and a Techno-Libertarian stew in a surreal cacophony of complaints, each convinced the others are the root of all the world’s misery. The Jacksonian, clutching a tattered American flag, howls about the “pussification” of America, blaming the Techno-Libertarian for flooding the country with “goddamn H1B visa workers,” turning real jobs into code-based fiefdoms for SV elites. He calls the others “namby-pamby globalists,” who wouldn’t know a real fight if it crawled up their asses and bit them.

The Neocon, strutting around like a whiskey-soaked war hawk, insists the only way out is to make the desert glow and bomb the world into a freedom-shaped crater. He accuses the Jacksonian of being a “cowardly isolationist” and a “Putin apologist,” sneering, “You’d probably let Moscow roll tanks right through Europe if it meant you could keep your beer and football.” Turning to the Techno-Libertarian, he scoffs, “And you, you’re just a fucking armchair general. A Hitler appeaser in a Patagonia vest, too busy building your little crypto empires to care if the world burns.”

Meanwhile, the Techno-Libertarian, hunched over his phone in his Patagonia vest, declares that everything would be solved if they just let him re-centralize the internet and put him in charge. Slapping around smart contracts and drafting 1,200-page terms of use, he blames the Neocon for “stifling innovation with endless wars” and the Jacksonian for “ruining birthrates by clinging to jobs for truckers and ditch diggers instead of embracing the gig economy.” At best, you’re sigma—and, honestly, ugly.

After hours of grueling back-and-forth, the Jacksonian finally breaks, muttering, “You know, any of you even know what George Clooney’s doing these days? I liked that Nespresso thing he did. Classy.”

The Neocon, without missing a beat, replies, “No idea., last thing I remember was catching up on Taylor Swift. She win? I lost track after that whole Ticketmaster thing.”

The Techno-Libertarian, hunched over his phone snaps his head up in disbelief. “What kind of hell is this? It doesn’t even have a goddamn copy of The New York Times!

The room falls silent. For a moment, the three of them just stare at each other, a surreal tableau of ideological absurdity. The Jacksonian adjusts his crumpled flag, the Neocon reaches for a whiskey that isn’t there, and the Techno-Libertarian flicks at his phone, still trying to connect to a non-existent Wi-Fi.

In that stillness, the absurdity of it all crashes down on them. There they we’re in a hell of their own creation, each secretly longing for the very things they once swore they hated—the pomp, the self-righteousness, the spectacle of a world that, for all its flaws, at least had the decency to pretend it knew what it was doing.

Morning Execution

Scene: The Absurd Choice

Setting: A bare, concrete room. Three metal chairs are the only furniture. A single, harsh bulb hangs from the ceiling. LUCIEN, a wiry man with haunted eyes, sits hunched. INES, a woman with a defiant chin, paces the room like a caged animal. ANTOINE, portly and sweating, mops his brow. A GUARD, impassive, stands by the door.

Guard: (Flatly) You have one hour. Discuss amongst yourselves.

He exits, slamming the door. A heavy silence settles.

Lucien: (Voice raspy) Absurd, isn’t it? Choosing how to die. Like picking a restaurant where the main course is your demise.

Ines: (Scornful) Don’t be theatrical, Lucien. It’s a mockery, true, but a mockery we can twist. A final act of defiance.

Antoine: (Whining) Defiance? What good is defiance when you’re staring down the barrel of… (He trails off, unable to voice the word)

Ines: Silence, Antoine! We have options. The guillotine, swift and “clean,” they say. A lie, of course.

Lucien: The noose? A choking spectacle for their amusement. What a degrading way to leave the stage.

Antoine: (Muttering) Maybe the firing squad. At least it’s…

Ines: (Snapping) Quicker? A bullet to the back like a dog? No dignity there, either.

Lucien: They want us to choose. To pretend we have control over this absurdity.

Ines: Then let’s not play their game. Let them choose for us.

Antoine: But that means… surrendering…

Ines: We’re already condemned, Antoine! Surrendered the moment they found us “guilty.” This… this is a choice they dangle before us, a choice so hollow it becomes an insult.

Lucie: (Eyes flashing) Don’t you see? This is their game! They dangle this illusion of control, hoping we’ll play their farce.

Ionesco: Farce? This is existence stripped bare, my dear. We are condemned, and now, condemned to choose the manner of our own demise.

Antoine: There’s no winning here, Ionesco. We either choose and validate their authority, or refuse and let them choose for us.

Lucien: But to refuse… won’t they just…

He gestures vaguely, unable to finish the thought.

Ines: They’ll do what they will regardless. Refusing is the only defiance we have left. Let them scramble, let them see our rebellion in the face of the inevitable.

Antoine: (Wringing his hands) But what if they make it worse? Torture… solitary…

Ines: They’ll do that anyway if it suits them. We have no guarantees, only this: a chance to spit in the eye of their so-called justice. We are condemned, yes, but we are not without choice. We choose how to face it.

Lucien: (Slowly) You’re right, Ines. It’s the only scrap of meaning we have left in this… this existential wasteland they’ve created.

Antoine: (Small voice) But…

Ines: (Firmly) No buts, Antoine. We stand together. We refuse their game.

An uneasy silence hangs, then Lucien nods with a grim smile.

Lucien: Together.

Ines: (Looks at the guard) One hour. We have our answer.

The guard opens the door, his face unchanging.

Guard: Decision?

Ines steps forward, her voice ringing clear.

Ines: We refuse your “choice.” Take us however you see fit.

The guard stares at them, then shrugs. A flicker of something – annoyance, perhaps? – crosses his face.

Guard: As you wish.

He turns and exits. Ines lets out a harsh laugh.

Ines: There. We defied the absurd. Now, for the rest of the absurdity.

The door slams shut. Lucien and Antoine exchange a look, a mixture of fear and defiance in their eyes. The harsh bulb shines down on them, casting long shadows in the bare room as the weight of their decision settles i