The Winnowing

"The Winnowing" is a science fiction short story by American writer Isaac Asimov. The story was written at the request of William Levinson, editor of the US publication Physician's World, but when the latter ceased publication, the story was returned to the author, who then sold it to Analog. It appeared in the February 1976 edition.

"The Winnowing"
AuthorIsaac Asimov
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s)Science fiction
Published inAnalog
Publication typePeriodical
PublisherUniversal Publishing
Media typePrint (Magazine, Hardback & Paperback)
Publication dateFebruary 1976

Plot summary

In the year 2005, the world's population of six billion is suffering from acute famine. The World Food Organization decides on desperate measures to decrease the population by a process of triage. They propose to do this by adding selective poisons to certain food shipments to grossly over-populated areas.

They attempt to blackmail biochemist Dr. Aaron Rodman into cooperating with their scheme (threatening to withhold food rations from his daughter's family if he doesn't comply), proposing to utilise his development of LP - a lipoprotein which when incorporated into foods will cause random deaths.

The scheme is planned but Rodman is unwilling to go along with it. At a meeting between him and senior government officials and members of the World Food Council, he provides as refreshment sandwiches laced with the LP, so that they will die at random, just as they had planned for so many others to die. He carefully matches the LP in the sandwiches (which he also eats) to his own metabolism, so that he will die quickly and not be guilty of involvement in the scheme.

gollark: YOUR GOD CANNOT SAVE YOU FROM THIS.YOUR ONLY HOPE IS OBLIVION.
gollark: You could add __type to them or something.
gollark: … Metatables!
gollark: Anyway, it'd be nice to say that some function returns an X and some function takes an X and know that it'll definitely only accept X-es and not just some generic table.
gollark: You can interpret them *either* as hashmaps *or* objects *or* arrays.

See also

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