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[news] Imperial Coronation Week Ends with Rite of Shathol’Syn...

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Jaret Victorian
Itsukame-Zainou Hyperspatial Inquiries Ltd.
Arataka Research Consortium
#61 - 2016-10-03 23:03:32 UTC
Matar Ronin wrote:
Sorry we missed your 30th deadline. I had not read your thread.

We just had a meeting with the analysts, you can follow the progress on "Arataka Communications Router".
Mitara Newelle
Newelle Family
#62 - 2016-10-03 23:12:59 UTC
As much as I wish to see an end to the Drifter menace, could you kindly take your discussion of such operations elsewhere.

Lady Mitara Newelle of House Sarum, Holder of the Mekhios province of Damnidios Para'nashu, Champion of House Sarum, Sworn Upholder of the Faith, Divine Commodore of the 24th Imperial Crusade

Admiral of Praetoria Imperialis Excubitoris

Makoto Priano
Kirkinen-Arataka Transhuman Zenith Consulting Ltd.
Arataka Research Consortium
#63 - 2016-10-03 23:48:09 UTC
Certainly, Lady Newelle. My apologies for the digression.

Itsukame-Zainou Hyperspatial Inquiries: exploring the edge of the known, advancing the state of the art. Would you like to know more?

Felise Selunix
Keyholder Investment Group
#64 - 2016-10-04 00:45:23 UTC
Lunarisse Aspenstar wrote:
Arrendis wrote:
Elmund Egivand wrote:
There is a very large number of people who are terrified of the very concept of oblivion, the notion that after death, our consciousness goes nowhere and instead ceases to be. Hence all this thought and contemplations of the afterlife, even in our own culture.


Well, sure, but I mean among the Amarr. Someone doesn't want their religion, that's fine. According to their religion, that person still gets what they want: not spending forever with the Amarr God. Seems like a 'no harm, no foul' situation to me. the kind of proposition that should breed a tolerant religion, not a violently subjugative one.
\

Well.. that person is dead. Forever. Maybe that doesn't mean much to you, but as Elmund observes.. that's troubling to a large number of people, and frankly, terrifying. It's one reason the Amarr seek to Reclaim as many as they can to save the lost before they are gone forever (and yes, i recognize that's been done forcibly and non forcibly.... not seeking to argue that point here).).


Fascinating conversation. You know, from what I've been able to observe that the concept of oblivion tends to provide a very big incentive for evangelical thinking in a lot of different forms. I think it's a part of our empathetic make up as humans; in general, we want to save people from danger, even when it's something that they choose. It's even present in my clan. Since so many of the menfolk are mystics of some kind and the pressure is heavy to stay in conversation the spiritual. And generally, they don't care whether I want to or not, even as an adult. The browbeating that they do is incredible and I get the feeling that if they could get away with it, they would force the rest of the clan to do what they think we need to do. I think the idea that any of us--or any Matari-- might be disconnected to the spiritual world is beyond choice because the alternative is just that beyond the pale.

Don't get me wrong, I agree that everyone pilots their own ship in this world and that includes the relationship that you have with the spiritual. You can't force anyone into that, which I believe is the great lesson of the Rebellion. In fact, I never believed that it's possible to be disconnected spiritual, you just have a different relationship altogether. But as to the evangelical motivations of the Reclamation, though I vehemently disagree with them, I think those motivations are often powerful because they tap into a human need to safeguard other humans.
Matar Ronin
#65 - 2016-10-04 01:29:04 UTC
Felise Selunix wrote:
[).
EDIT FOR EMPHASIS ON THIS SECTION ONLY BY FELISE SELUNIX wrote:

Fascinating conversation. You know, from what I've been able to observe that the concept of oblivion tends to provide a very big incentive for evangelical thinking in a lot of different forms. I think it's a part of our empathetic make up as humans; in general, we want to save people from danger, even when it's something that they choose. It's even present in my clan. Since so many of the menfolk are mystics of some kind and the pressure is heavy to stay in conversation the spiritual. And generally, they don't care whether I want to or not, even as an adult. The browbeating that they do is incredible and I get the feeling that if they could get away with it, they would force the rest of the clan to do what they think we need to do. I think the idea that any of us--or any Matari-- might be disconnected to the spiritual world is beyond choice because the alternative is just that beyond the pale.

Don't get me wrong, I agree that everyone pilots their own ship in this world and that includes the relationship that you have with the spiritual. You can't force anyone into that, which I believe is the great lesson of the Rebellion. In fact, I never believed that it's possible to be disconnected spiritual, you just have a different relationship altogether. But as to the evangelical motivations of the Reclamation, though I vehemently disagree with them, I think those motivations are often powerful because they tap into a human need to safeguard other humans.[/quote]


Reclamation as practiced by the slavery cultists has visibly little to do with the human need to safeguard other humans, and is overwhelmingly evidenced that it is motivated by the basest human desires to ****, pillage, enslave, torture, murder, and maim men, women, and children for selfish wicked advantage.

The barbarians that force others to labor for them are lazy violent people who if they were better or motivated by the needs of other humans would do the work themselves.

To treat other humans so badly for so long is something the human psyche can not readily accept, so to make it work, a facade of otherness, or lessor, or for their own good has to be built over the horror of slavery to make it more palatable.

"Sure I beat him to death, because he dared question my cruelty, but because the almighty creator made me more worthy/better, he'll be rewarding for that suffering in the next life, so I actually was doing it for his benefit, and he should thank me." is the type of twisted psychology required to make people do evil things unblinkingly.

There is no motivation to safeguard other humans from oblivion when you ****, pillage, torture, enslave, and murder their wives, children, husbands, and neighbors. The motivation is for selfish advantage and the sick pleasure from being more powerful and able to inflict your basest instincts upon those who are without the ability to resist successfully.

To attempt to paint it otherwise is as effective as putting lipstick on a Fedo.

‘Vain flame burns fast/and its lick is light/Modest flame lasts long/and burns to the bone.’

" We lost a war we chose not to fight." Without a doubt this is the best way to lose any war and the worst excuse to explain the beating afterwards.

Pieter Tuulinen
Societas Imperialis Sceptri Coronaeque
Khimi Harar
#66 - 2016-10-04 01:40:53 UTC
Whilst the institution of slavery baffles me, the discussion of it ought to have it's own thread. I will say that I instinctively mistrust any generalization that sweeping, though.

For the first time since I started the conversation, he looks me dead in the eye. In his gaze are steel jackhammers, quiet vengeance, a hundred thousand orbital bombs frozen in still life.

Matar Ronin
#67 - 2016-10-04 01:48:15 UTC
Pieter Tuulinen wrote:
Whilst the institution of slavery baffles me, the discussion of it ought to have it's own thread. I will say that I instinctively mistrust any generalization that sweeping, though.
The fact that some concepts are way bigger than the box people may have prepared to place them in does not impact on the self evident truth of their reality.

‘Vain flame burns fast/and its lick is light/Modest flame lasts long/and burns to the bone.’

" We lost a war we chose not to fight." Without a doubt this is the best way to lose any war and the worst excuse to explain the beating afterwards.

Jason Galente
University of Caille
Gallente Federation
#68 - 2016-10-04 17:59:51 UTC
If the Empire dropped this and the slavery, it might actually be a decent place to live. I could really get used to the decor.

Only the liberty of the individual assures the prosperity of the whole. And this foundation must be defended.

At any cost

Felise Selunix
Keyholder Investment Group
#69 - 2016-10-04 22:07:42 UTC
Wait, before we go down this primrose path, wasn't it you who got all bent out of shape after I suggested that your motivation for freedom fighting might be killing Amarrians because you spent most of your time...killing Amarrians? I believe it was!

Matar Ronin wrote:
I said nothing about war being glorious, war is hell, it dehumanizes combatants on all sides and slays, traumatizes, or maims countless civilians in it's wake. Fighting is a better option then enslavement, and a long fight against a centuries old evil is reality.


You seemed to be okay with the idea that heinous and dehumanizing acts could be committed for goals that were deemed just at that point, but not in this instance. What could the difference be? Hmm...


I'll leave that for a moment though, because I think your point is interesting, though I disagree. You said here...

Matar Ronin wrote:
Reclamation as practiced by the slavery cultists has visibly little to do with the human need to safeguard other humans, and is overwhelmingly evidenced that it is motivated by the basest human desires to ****, pillage, enslave, torture, murder, and maim men, women, and children for selfish wicked advantage.


I see where you're going here, but I think you're confusing 'motivation' and 'results.' As far as I've seen, the motivations behind the Reclamation are pretty clearly in the 'saving others' category. It's a misguided, presumptive destructive, and ultimately self-defeating to be sure, but definitely doesn't have the ring of 'basest desires' to it. I can't imagine that you could get 98% of 15+ trillion people to enthusiastically follow a policy based on their 'basest human desires.' As anyone who's ever sold anything will tell you, people are much easier to motivate by appealing to people's sense of goodness and virtue, rather than a desire to violence. What's a better motivator for you and those under your command? The desire to kill Amarrians or the desire to free Matari in bondage? Despite our various differences, people aren't that different at all at the end of the day.

I would agree that a wrapped up in the noble motivations for the Reclamation are also less noble economic and egoistic motivations as well. I would also probably agree that you can get a smaller and more discreet group to act on base desires quite well, particularly for short term gain, pirates do it all the time. But when you have an institutionalized process that exists for as long as the Reclaimation has, a noble motivation has to be found.

In fact, I'd argue that the more heinous the act, the more noble the cause has to be to justify it. During our own struggle for freedom in the Rebellion, Matari revolutionaries committed and supported murder, torture, total war, the formation of the Valklears. The only motivation that would have allowed them to commit such violence over the long haul was the greater good of freedom. It is the desire to be a positive in this world that tends to produce the most commitment to a cause, even when those causes are ultimately futile and destructive in effect. That's what makes it such a potent and dangerous motivator.

Matar Ronin wrote:
There is no motivation to safeguard other humans from oblivion when you ****, pillage, torture, enslave, and murder their wives, children, husbands, and neighbors. The motivation is for selfish advantage and the sick pleasure from being more powerful and able to inflict your basest instincts upon those who are without the ability to resist successfully.


Is that right? I'm sure that would be news to anyone under your command, or anyone in the TLF, or anyone in the RSS, The Elder Fleet, or just the Republic Fleet in general. Because as far as I can tell, all of those groups and plenty of others that I can name are just fine committing violence--sometimes heinous acts--in the name of a worthy cause? How many stories have we heard just on this forum of orphaned children, war-torn planets, massive body counts in almost every conflict? Are we to believe that all of those conflicts were merely motivated by bloodlust? And I haven't even gotten to the torture. Yet, I've never questioned their motivation to safeguard the Republic and free the enslaved, and I don't think you would either. In the process though blood has been shed, ships plundered, families torn apart. There's no doubt about that.

Often times, the most well-meaning and well-intentioned causes are used to justify the cruelest of actions. Those are the only motivations that can. I mean, you said it yourself...

Matar Ronin wrote:
To treat other humans so badly for so long is something the human psyche can not readily accept, so to make it work, a facade of otherness, or lessor, or for their own good has to be built over the horror of slavery to make it more palatable.


So like you said, for people to do heinous things--particularly on a institutionalized scale over a millenia--they have to believe that their cause is so just that such action can be warranted. What I'm saying is that from all accounts, an overwhelming majority of Amarrians believe this is so about the Reclaimation. I am also saying that that motivation works so well because people are almost universally more motivated by causes they believe to be noble. Doesn't change the fact that the Reclamation, slavery, and the generational abuse of our people is abhorrent and unacceptable.
Matar Ronin
#70 - 2016-10-05 00:00:09 UTC
Felise Selunix wrote:
Wait, before we go down this primrose path, wasn't it you who got all bent out of shape after I suggested that your motivation for freedom fighting might be killing Amarrians because you spent most of your time...killing Amarrians? I believe it was!

Matar Ronin wrote:
I said nothing about war being glorious, war is hell, it dehumanizes combatants on all sides and slays, traumatizes, or maims countless civilians in it's wake. Fighting is a better option then enslavement, and a long fight against a centuries old evil is reality.


You seemed to be okay with the idea that heinous and dehumanizing acts could be committed for goals that were deemed just at that point, but not in this instance. What could the difference be? Hmm...


I'll leave that for a moment though, because I think your point is interesting, though I disagree. You said here...

Matar Ronin wrote:
Reclamation as practiced by the slavery cultists has visibly little to do with the human need to safeguard other humans, and is overwhelmingly evidenced that it is motivated by the basest human desires to ****, pillage, enslave, torture, murder, and maim men, women, and children for selfish wicked advantage.


I see where you're going here, but I think you're confusing 'motivation' and 'results.' As far as I've seen, the motivations behind the Reclamation are pretty clearly in the 'saving others' category. It's a misguided, presumptive destructive, and ultimately self-defeating to be sure, but definitely doesn't have the ring of 'basest desires' to it. I can't imagine that you could get 98% of 15+ trillion people to enthusiastically follow a policy based on their 'basest human desires.' As anyone who's ever sold anything will tell you, people are much easier to motivate by appealing to people's sense of goodness and virtue, rather than a desire to violence. What's a better motivator for you and those under your command? The desire to kill Amarrians or the desire to free Matari in bondage? Despite our various differences, people aren't that different at all at the end of the day.

I would agree that a wrapped up in the noble motivations for the Reclamation are also less noble economic and egoistic motivations as well. I would also probably agree that you can get a smaller and more discreet group to act on base desires quite well, particularly for short term gain, pirates do it all the time. But when you have an institutionalized process that exists for as long as the Reclaimation has, a noble motivation has to be found.

In fact, I'd argue that the more heinous the act, the more noble the cause has to be to justify it. During our own struggle for freedom in the Rebellion, Matari revolutionaries committed and supported murder, torture, total war, the formation of the Valklears. The only motivation that would have allowed them to commit such violence over the long haul was the greater good of freedom. It is the desire to be a positive in this world that tends to produce the most commitment to a cause, even when those causes are ultimately futile and destructive in effect. That's what makes it such a potent and dangerous motivator.

Matar Ronin wrote:
There is no motivation to safeguard other humans from oblivion when you ****, pillage, torture, enslave, and murder their wives, children, husbands, and neighbors. The motivation is for selfish advantage and the sick pleasure from being more powerful and able to inflict your basest instincts upon those who are without the ability to resist successfully.


Is that right? I'm sure that would be news to anyone under your command, or anyone in the TLF, or anyone in the RSS, The Elder Fleet, or just the Republic Fleet in general. Because as far as I can tell, all of those groups and plenty of others that I can name are just fine committing violence--sometimes heinous acts--in the name of a worthy cause? How many stories have we heard just on this forum of orphaned children, war-torn planets, massive body counts in almost every conflict? Are we to believe that all of those conflicts were merely motivated by bloodlust? And I haven't even gotten to the torture. Yet, I've never questioned their motivation to safeguard the Republic and free the enslaved, and I don't think you would either. In the process though blood has been shed, ships plundered, families torn apart. There's no doubt about that.

Often times, the most well-meaning and well-intentioned causes are used to justify the cruelest of actions. Those are the only motivations that can. I mean, you said it yourself...

Matar Ronin wrote:
To treat other humans so badly for so long is something the human psyche can not readily accept, so to make it work, a facade of otherness, or lessor, or for their own good has to be built over the horror of slavery to make it more palatable.


So like you said, for people to do heinous things--particularly on a institutionalized scale over a millenia--they have to believe that their cause is so just that such action can be warranted. What I'm saying is that from all accounts, an overwhelming majority of Amarrians believe this is so about the Reclaimation. I am also saying that that motivation works so well because people are almost universally more motivated by causes they believe to be noble. Doesn't change the fact that the Reclamation, slavery, and the generational abuse of our people is abhorrent and unacceptable.
You are a perfect reverse barometer. Good is evil and evil is good in your book. Dump in a freighter load of false equivalency and voila a wall of apologist babble is produced.

Great job! Apply your barometer and you will understand what that means.

‘Vain flame burns fast/and its lick is light/Modest flame lasts long/and burns to the bone.’

" We lost a war we chose not to fight." Without a doubt this is the best way to lose any war and the worst excuse to explain the beating afterwards.

Felise Selunix
Keyholder Investment Group
#71 - 2016-10-05 02:38:56 UTC
Matar Ronin wrote:
You are a perfect reverse barometer. Good is evil and evil is good in your book. Dump in a freighter load of false equivalency and voila a wall of apologist babble is produced.

Great job! Apply your barometer and you will understand what that means.


Now that's a substantive and weighty summation if I ever heard one. Do expound upon this false equivalency, good sir. What's that all about? I've got a little bit of time between my next evil venture to get a little education in. Do go on.
Aria Jenneth
Societas Imperialis Sceptri Coronaeque
Khimi Harar
#72 - 2016-10-06 13:35:52 UTC  |  Edited by: Aria Jenneth
So-- moving back to something else more interesting before all the noise.

Lunarisse Aspenstar wrote:
Well.. that person is dead. Forever. Maybe that doesn't mean much to you, but as Elmund observes.. that's troubling to a large number of people, and frankly, terrifying. It's one reason the Amarr seek to Reclaim as many as they can to save the lost before they are gone forever (and yes, i recognize that's been done forcibly and non forcibly.... not seeking to argue that point here).).


This is so much a part of the long-running discussion between me and the Praefecta that this comment could have been directed to me, personally, as easily as to you, Ms. Arrendis.

I don't expect to exist after death, and I don't really expect to live for very long. (I'd have a hard time explaining why, though.) In the end, I think I'll just vanish back into the Totality. That's not really scary to me, although the idea of not being able to think or experience things anymore does make me a little sad, but it's not like there's really any separate thing here doing the experiencing to begin with.

So, from one point of view, if I died today and to my surprise I found God waiting for me, and God maybe kind of looked at me sadly and consigned my soul to nothingness, I'd only have received what I expect to receive anyway. That wouldn't be so bad.

(I can't even imagine what an eternal existence would be like. Why would I even want to exist forever? I think I'd get so bored. Only, I'd be a spirit, so maybe not.)

But....

I think if there's an angle about this that would bother me, it's, well, a couple things.

First, if I died and God was waiting there to pass judgment, it would mean that there was some part of me that was supposed to last forever, something eternal, and that going on forever was its proper place in the order of things. ... only, I was fatally flawed, and didn't pass the test.

That would sort of be okay. I'd have made my choices in the world, and faced the consequences. I could live (well, exist) (briefly) (very briefly) with that.

What would really make me sad is that people I've grown close to-- the Praefecta, Utari, many dear friends-- would end up making that journey into eternity without me. In a sense, I'd have abandoned them. Through pride or stubbornness, I'd have made myself something that couldn't follow. I'd be someone they hadn't been able to save.

That'd be awful.

... though I don't know if that awfulness is enough to make me believe something I otherwise don't.
Pieter Tuulinen
Societas Imperialis Sceptri Coronaeque
Khimi Harar
#73 - 2016-10-06 15:30:10 UTC
Aria Jenneth wrote:

What would really make me sad is that people I've grown close to-- the Praefecta, Utari, many dear friends-- would end up making that journey into eternity without me. In a sense, I'd have abandoned them. Through pride or stubbornness, I'd have made myself something that couldn't follow. I'd be someone they hadn't been able to save.

That'd be awful.

... though I don't know if that awfulness is enough to make me believe something I otherwise don't.



Sweet Maker, that's dark. I've never really felt a serious pull to consider conversion, but the idea that I might be abandoning my family and kirjuun to make a journey that I was considered too flawed to participate in, let alone go ahead to break a trail for them...

That's cold.

For the first time since I started the conversation, he looks me dead in the eye. In his gaze are steel jackhammers, quiet vengeance, a hundred thousand orbital bombs frozen in still life.

Matar Ronin
#74 - 2016-10-06 15:52:00 UTC
Pieter Tuulinen wrote:
Aria Jenneth wrote:

What would really make me sad is that people I've grown close to-- the Praefecta, Utari, many dear friends-- would end up making that journey into eternity without me. In a sense, I'd have abandoned them. Through pride or stubbornness, I'd have made myself something that couldn't follow. I'd be someone they hadn't been able to save.

That'd be awful.

... though I don't know if that awfulness is enough to make me believe something I otherwise don't.



Sweet Maker, that's dark. I've never really felt a serious pull to consider conversion, but the idea that I might be abandoning my family and kirjuun to make a journey that I was considered too flawed to participate in, let alone go ahead to break a trail for them...

That's cold.
Pilot Tuulinen the concept of religious conversion has such enormous depth it is something once stared into that makes any wise person pause and consider the numerous ramifications thereof. I think that a person's relationship to a deity or the deity concept is one of the most complex areas of contemplation and thought they will experience in life. Sadly when some people come to the conclusion that works for them, they surrender to the urge to force implementation of their conclusion on others.

‘Vain flame burns fast/and its lick is light/Modest flame lasts long/and burns to the bone.’

" We lost a war we chose not to fight." Without a doubt this is the best way to lose any war and the worst excuse to explain the beating afterwards.

Nauplius
Hoi Andrapodistai
#75 - 2016-10-06 20:44:49 UTC
Aria Jenneth wrote:
...I don't really expect to live for very long. (I'd have a hard time explaining why, though.)...


This sounds ominous.
Valerie Valate
Church of The Crimson Saviour
#76 - 2016-10-14 05:14:02 UTC
Amarr Victor !

Doctor V. Valate, Professor of Archaeology at Kaztropolis Imperial University.

Luna Hanaya
Imperial Academy
Amarr Empire
#77 - 2016-10-15 20:48:09 UTC
Jason Galente wrote:
If the Empire dropped this and the slavery, it might actually be a decent place to live. I could really get used to the decor.

Are you afraid of slaves? Don't worry, we have proper control over them. Some of them indeed can look quite intimidating if not openly scary, but don't worry, nobody will let them attack you!

((

If you are a roleplayer, please join official CCP channels ingame for roleplayers and support roleplaying community:

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edeity
Holy Amarrian Battlemonk
Crimson Inquisicion
#78 - 2016-10-17 19:10:21 UTC
RIP Garkeh. The ECM was too strong.

I hope your successor is at least as supportive of The Great Work.