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Power Corrupts: The Hidden Threat of Slavery

Author
Lyn Farel
Societas Imperialis Sceptri Coronaeque
Khimi Harar
#41 - 2013-11-21 09:36:06 UTC
Anslo wrote:
Aldrith Shutaq wrote:
Anslo wrote:
I still don't get how slavery saves a soul. Doesn't make sense to me.


Through conversion. The original Scriptual justification for bondage of another person is to ensure that they are taught the tenants of the Amarrian faith and are given loyalty to its political institution, the Amarr Empire. Of course, not all Holders are as inspiring as others to this end, and thus the problem we have with multiple generations of heathens still living under the puriew of the supposedly righteous. It's a bit of a contradiction, and I do not especially like the implications.

I get that part. I don't get why you have to enslave someone to conver em. Baracca isn't enslaving people and he's doing just fine cause, ya know, he isn't tossing collars. He's having a conversation. No offense to you Shutaq, I'm just speaking on the topic is all.


Slavery is a remnant of the past, that has mostly changed due to Heideran edicts in the past centuries. Since the Empire can not anymore enslave in foreign territories, slavery has now mostly turned into an institutional two headed beast where it mostly exists for rehabilitation purpose for criminals and disgraced individuals, but still struggling with the huge population of war slaves dating back to centuries ago that spanned over millenias.
Isis Dea
Society of Adrift Hope
#42 - 2013-11-21 12:53:05 UTC  |  Edited by: Isis Dea
Lyn Farel wrote:
Anslo wrote:
Aldrith Shutaq wrote:
Anslo wrote:
I still don't get how slavery saves a soul. Doesn't make sense to me.


Through conversion. The original Scriptual justification for bondage of another person is to ensure that they are taught the tenants of the Amarrian faith and are given loyalty to its political institution, the Amarr Empire. Of course, not all Holders are as inspiring as others to this end, and thus the problem we have with multiple generations of heathens still living under the puriew of the supposedly righteous. It's a bit of a contradiction, and I do not especially like the implications.

I get that part. I don't get why you have to enslave someone to conver em. Baracca isn't enslaving people and he's doing just fine cause, ya know, he isn't tossing collars. He's having a conversation. No offense to you Shutaq, I'm just speaking on the topic is all.


Slavery is a remnant of the past, that has mostly changed due to Heideran edicts in the past centuries. Since the Empire can not anymore enslave in foreign territories, slavery has now mostly turned into an institutional two headed beast where it mostly exists for rehabilitation purpose for criminals and disgraced individuals, but still struggling with the huge population of war slaves dating back to centuries ago that spanned over millenias.


You seem like someone who believes the news. Or moreso, believe your empire follows the law to the letter.

You're cute.

Tradition doesn't change overnight, even your Amarrian capsuleer ships are occasionally still manned by slaves despite the legality of them. Even if you bust someone for the law here, notice how often eradicating slaver elements within the foreign sectors makes the news. It never does. The Empire has been doing this trade for centuries, it's gotten incredibly skilled at it, and it's not going to stop anytime soon.

The Empire is still the Empire. There's still slavery, even if there's no publicly expressed support for it.

More Character Customization :: Especially compared to what we had in 2003...

Lyn Farel
Societas Imperialis Sceptri Coronaeque
Khimi Harar
#43 - 2013-11-21 13:43:27 UTC
Would you read again the few lines that I wrote ? You might see that you do not really disagree with me. Especially the part on the two-headed beast.

The geopolitical context makes the whole slave trade and institutions different than they were in the past. When the context changes so drastically regarding legal matters as well as the whole administration surrounding it, it means that changes have to happen.

If fishing suddenly becomes forbidden in a certain oceanic planet somewhere, which means that a lot of people working in the fishing industry making a living out of this planetary resource will face economic difficulties and will have either to adapt (poaching and black market), change (find a new area or convert in another job), or just stop.

This is a fact.

Now that please show me where I said that tradition changed overnight - where I said there has been centuries already for this - or where I mixed up internal slavery with slaving raids altogether ?

Tradition had to change, institutionally as well as in practice. The simple fact that it suddenly became forbidden to raid foreign space implied that many slavers would find themselves in a dire situation due to a gross excess of them on the slave market. Some might have become illegal/rogue slavers - for which we still have to get concrete numbers - and most of them have either converted into internal slavery or tried to cut themselves a part of the internal market which was probably already saturated.

We have ultimately few numbers to indicate how that transition went but I would expect it to have been rather rude for the market, implying a surplus of slavers and a lack of slaves due to the removal of a main resource (foreign worlds), so probably a huge inflation. The rarer a commodity becomes, the more care is usually brought around, either in terms of taxes, legality, and elitism. I would even expect sentencing of criminals to slavery to have faced a sudden spike in terms of enslavement following that edict, to compensate, probably often including the enslavement of families for generations as well, as it is sometimes custom according to Amarrian tradition, as you may know.

All of this clearly imply a drastic change. We also know that a good part of the Minmatar demographics are still enslaved in the Amarr Empire, as well as other cultures like the Ealur, etc. This is where the "two headed beast" comes into motion where that other fact is a remnant of the old Reclaiming, constituting the raw numbers of labor slaves as you mentionned, either working inside navy ships (rarer and rarer) and various plantations, mines, construction works, etc.

So in conclusion, as much as the results of the old laws and traditions are still there to witness, the Amarrian institution itself does not advocate foreign enslavement anymore, contrary to what some conservative nostalgics would like to believe.

To be clearer, could you point me where I denied that illegal slaves raids happen in foreign space (and don't tell me that's on the same scale than what it was when it was legal) ? Could you also point me where are the news you mentionned ?
GoGo Yubari
PAK
#44 - 2013-11-21 15:38:46 UTC
The age old topic of slavery, discussed again by some of the freest folk in the cluster - capsuleers.

In some ways, this is a matter of labels. There are countless people who are enslaved by their circumstances, from the wage slaves of the Caldari State to the mainstream followers of the Federation, who are practically in the same circumstances as their legally and semantically enslaved cousins in the Amarr Empire. Yet, there are people in all those circumstances - even among the right and true slaves of the Empire - who do not fit the bill and thrive in their niche.

Ultimately we all have to strive to attain personal sovereignty and free us from the circumstances that created us and sought to bind us. The path is the same for everyone. Perhaps the true crime against nature is denying people the chance.

Love by nature. Live by luck. Kill by profession.

Nicolas Merovech
Doomheim
#45 - 2013-11-21 19:25:34 UTC  |  Edited by: Nicolas Merovech
Power does not corrupt, it merely attracts the corruptible. The reigns of power should be held reluctantly, eagerness only leads to ruin. In the beginning, the institute of slavery was created out of necessity, but it has since decayed into a disease pervading the galaxy. The cruelty it breeds is self sustaining, constantly feeding upon itself and regrowing with each life consumed. It will never end. Such is the struggle of life.

Dr. Nicolas A. Merovech, Ph. D, M.D.

Vulxanis Viceroy
Offworld Trading Company
Khimi Harar
#46 - 2013-11-22 01:32:59 UTC  |  Edited by: Vulxanis Viceroy
Ibrahim Tash-Murkon wrote:
More than treason, this is heresy. I see your heart is in the right place but your reasoning is flawed. There are, of course, abusive Holders who completely fail in the God-given task of shepherding spiritual children into adulthood. That does not, however, give us the right to abolish or spurn this divine task. To do so would be the greatest folly. The Holder/slave relationship is very much like the parent/child relationship. Are there parents who have shortcomings? Yes. Are there parents who are willfully careless or, worse, intentionally harmful to their children? Yes. Does that mean we should end parenthood and send children into the world alone and unguided? Absolutely not.

The same goes for slavery. Turning the spiritually undeveloped into the wilderness to fend for themselves is the surest way to condemn billions to an eternity separated from God. They stand the greatest amount to lose in the event of abolition.

There are wrongdoers among the Holders and they will be found and made to account for their crimes. If not by us then by God. But slavery remains the divinely commanded path to salvation for those He charges us with and I find any deviation from His commands unacceptable.


I concur with my friend Ibrahim, but because of those who do not understand the subtleties of the Amarrian culture or our view on slavery, I would phrase it somewhat differently.

Basically we see it as a duty to bring the word of God to the masses, not as conquest or a resource to exploit. I cannot say in good conscience that raids are necessary to bring the light to the dark places. Missionaries can do just as well with less resentment or margin for error.

Also, I personally do "pat myself on the back" because I look out for my "lessers", but not in the way you are insinuating. I entirely agree with Naomi Tichim on this in a logistical and empathetic fashion.

However, I do not think that Slavery can be abolished immediately, nor should it be, nor would doing so be wise economically, or practically. This is why I try to rescue slaves when I can, and then provide for them in the way I have posted about. Because of the logistical impossibility of abolishing slavery in the Amarr empire, for religious and practical reasons, I have come up with a more reasonable approach.

Hopefully, the Amarrian version of slavery, and not the exception, becomes how we are viewed. It is not actually evil. We have been charged by God to take care of those he has given us. How we carry out this mission is what can be called evil or not.

In Character: Only responds to "Lord Draconis"

Pronounced "Vulzanis"

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Vulxanis Viceroy
Offworld Trading Company
Khimi Harar
#47 - 2013-11-22 01:59:28 UTC
Aldrith Shutaq wrote:
Actually, in my opinion this woman's statements represent neither treason nor heresy. However they do have some major issues to work out with the current status quo in the Empire, which is why they seem dangerous at first glance. She has not doubted the divine mandate for slavery of the unfaithful, but the ability for mortal men to uphold its heavenly intent. Really she is a slavery reformist, not an abolitionist. The Amarr faith itself has mechanisms for abolition; for a future where all who are enslaved are freed and released into Amarrian society as functioning citizens, and I agree with her that as the institution stands in its current form that abolition is not occurring fast enough.

The ideas Ms. Tichim present here are not new ones; the reform of particular slavery practices is often and hotly debated within the Empire between Holders and organizations devoted to various slave-centric goals, be they proper breeding, prevention of cruelty or hastening the process towards freedom and citizenship. Of course, the Empire being the Empire, the dialogue for reform is slow and the actual implementation for it even slower, so on the surface no net change is seen by the impatient and short-sighted. Ms. Tichim's particular view of achieving speedy conversion and freedom by completely separating slave children from the cultures of their heathen parents is actually a common one that has come up in many Holder courts and regional governance debates. Historically the idea has not been considered applicable on a large scale since it is much more efficient (and some say humane) to allow slave parents to raise their own children rather than make them direct wards of a governing body, be it a local Holder or a Ministry. This isn't to mention the complex economic, social and theological implications of releasing large numbers of fresh free citizens into Imperial society. Nevertheless, many still see this method as more humane than allowing the souls of those slaves slip away, and to deny them and their children freedom and the full benefits of Amarrian society.

I have my own views on the subject, but it would be pointless to share them here as no one who reads the IGS actually has the power to enact change. As always, political and policy reform in the Empire is a tricky business and always fraught with those who will quickly judge words that are deemed too unorthodox for the tastes of some more conservative outlooks. And as always, we will argue over what the Scriptures mean and how best to implement them, but in the meanwhile people must have patience.


I concur. This is the approach I am taking and aptly explains why. However, I am making a change. At least in my own household.

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Andreus Ixiris
Center for Advanced Studies
Gallente Federation
#48 - 2013-11-22 02:04:29 UTC
Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
Basically we see it as a duty to bring the word of God to the masses

We're fine, thanks. Take the word of your god somewhere else.

Andreus Ixiris > A Civire without a chin is barely a Civire at all.

Pieter Tuulinen > He'd be Civirely disadvantaged, Andreus.

Andreus Ixiris > ...

Andreus Ixiris > This is why we're at war.

Vulxanis Viceroy
Offworld Trading Company
Khimi Harar
#49 - 2013-11-22 02:09:30 UTC
Andreus Ixiris wrote:
Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
Basically we see it as a duty to bring the word of God to the masses

We're fine, thanks. Take the word of your god somewhere else.


Regardless of your opinion, the truth is still the truth. I was simply explaining the Amarrian point of view. You do not need to convert. It is your choice if you wish to be exempt from the light. Given your attitude, this is why I think missionaries, rather than conquest, is a more palatable approach.

In Character: Only responds to "Lord Draconis"

Pronounced "Vulzanis"

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Kithrus
Brave Newbies Inc.
Brave Collective
#50 - 2013-11-22 02:40:07 UTC  |  Edited by: Kithrus
I just find it humorous that people like Andreus are so quick to say "No thank, you now move along" but when it comes to points they know to be fact he is the most vocal about pushing said point.

So arguments ensue and feelings are hurt, feathers ruffled and everyone goes away thinking the other is an idiot.

At the end of the day the Federation is just as forceful about shoving freedom down your throat as we are about shoving our religion
when all along we both want people to do what they want as long as they don't hurt anyone around them or themselves.

So consider this the olive branch, accept that men/women need guidance to do good and we can hash out the specifics as to how.

Slavery may just very well die and frankly maybe it should but I'm never going to believe that men should be free outside a moral code any more then a government enacts laws to the same effect. People must be held accountable for their actions and prevented from hurting society. I'm sure or lest I hope that's something we all can agree on.

So called 'freedoms' be damned, your free when you can prove you can respect the rules and the people around you.

Not before.

Darkness is more then absence of light, it is ignorance and corruption. I will be the Bulwark from such things that you may live in the light. Pray so my arms do not grow weary and my footing remain sure.

If you are brave, join me in the dark.

Vulxanis Viceroy
Offworld Trading Company
Khimi Harar
#51 - 2013-11-22 02:48:58 UTC
Kithrus wrote:
I just find it humorous that people like Andreus are so quick to say "No thank, you now move along" but when it comes to points they know to be fact he is the most vocal about pushing said point.

So arguments ensue and feelings are hurt, feathers ruffled and everyone goes away thinking the other is an idiot.

At the end of the day the Federation is just as forceful about shoving freedom down your throat as we are about shoving our religion
when all along we both want people to do what they want as long as they don't hurt anyone around them or themselves.

So consider this the olive branch, accept that men/women need guidance to do good and we can hash out the specifics as to how.

Slavery may just very well die and frankly maybe it should but I'm never going to believe that men should be free outside a moral code any more then a government enacts laws to the same effect. People must be held accountable for their actions and prevented from hurting society. I'm sure or lest I hope that's something we all can agree on.

So called 'freedoms' be damned, your free when you can prove you can respect the rules and the people around you.

Not before.


I concur.

In Character: Only responds to "Lord Draconis"

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Andreus Ixiris
Center for Advanced Studies
Gallente Federation
#52 - 2013-11-22 03:20:59 UTC
Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
You do not need to convert.

Great!

Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
Given your attitude, this is why I think missionaries, rather than conquest, is a more palatable approach.

Don't bother! You just said I don't need to convert.

Andreus Ixiris > A Civire without a chin is barely a Civire at all.

Pieter Tuulinen > He'd be Civirely disadvantaged, Andreus.

Andreus Ixiris > ...

Andreus Ixiris > This is why we're at war.

Naomi Tichim
Sovereign Hospitaller Order of Saint Katherine
#53 - 2013-11-22 04:32:16 UTC
Andreus Ixiris wrote:
Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
You do not need to convert.

Great!

Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
Given your attitude, this is why I think missionaries, rather than conquest, is a more palatable approach.

Don't bother! You just said I don't need to convert.


That doesn't mean we don't want you to.
Vulxanis Viceroy
Offworld Trading Company
Khimi Harar
#54 - 2013-11-22 05:07:03 UTC  |  Edited by: Vulxanis Viceroy
Naomi Tichim wrote:
Andreus Ixiris wrote:
Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
You do not need to convert.

Great!

Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
Given your attitude, this is why I think missionaries, rather than conquest, is a more palatable approach.

Don't bother! You just said I don't need to convert.


That doesn't mean we don't want you to.


Or that we are not commanded to bring the light to all of New Eden. And yes, you don't have to convert. However, that choice does not negate the duty we have been charged with as an Empire to spread our scriptures. Thus why we still "bother", even when people react in a hostile way.

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Blaise Cadelanne
The Synenose Accord
#55 - 2013-11-22 05:39:50 UTC
Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
Naomi Tichim wrote:
Andreus Ixiris wrote:
Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
You do not need to convert.

Great!

Vulxanis Viceroy wrote:
Given your attitude, this is why I think missionaries, rather than conquest, is a more palatable approach.

Don't bother! You just said I don't need to convert.


That doesn't mean we don't want you to.


Or that we are not commanded to bring the light to all of New Eden. And yes, you don't have to convert. However, that choice does not negate the duty we have been charged with as an Empire to spread our scriptures. Thus why we still "bother", even when people react in a hostile way.


The missionary approach would bring your Faith to the rest of New Eden, without much of the hostility that has accompanied the previous attempts at "Bringing the light to all". I agree that this could be a better approach. I am the first free son of immigrants who fled a Holder who used God as an excuse to beat his slaves to within a hair of their lives. I was born free, but there are many who are not, and their Holders may truly lead them in their Faith, but others will abuse and destroy their slaves and believe they are vindicated in their God's eyes because, in the end slaves are just property to some.

Blaise Cadelanne

They bid me take my place among them, In the halls of Valhalla! Where the brave may live forever!”

Vulxanis Viceroy
Offworld Trading Company
Khimi Harar
#56 - 2013-11-22 06:18:24 UTC  |  Edited by: Vulxanis Viceroy
Blaise Cadelanne wrote:
The missionary approach would bring your Faith to the rest of New Eden, without much of the hostility that has accompanied the previous attempts at "Bringing the light to all". I agree that this could be a better approach. I am the first free son of immigrants who fled a Holder who used God as an excuse to beat his slaves to within a hair of their lives. I was born free, but there are many who are not, and their Holders may truly lead them in their Faith, but others will abuse and destroy their slaves and believe they are vindicated in their God's eyes because, in the end slaves are just property to some.


It pains me that the word of God was used against you in such a fashion. If you read my topic on slavery, you may feel some comfort at the evidence of a Holder who does care for those under his charge. My hope is that more will take my approach, and not see slaves as possessions, but rather persons given to them as a responsibility.

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Anabella Rella
Gradient
Electus Matari
#57 - 2013-11-22 15:36:25 UTC
Louella Dougans wrote:


Aritcio Kor-Azor, a Family Heir, and as such, a contender for being Emperor, was summoned and judged by the Speakers of Truth, for his treatment of the people under his responsibility.



Kor-Azor is not the Emperor. Granted he is a Royal Heir but, that's a far cry from being the ruler of the empire.

Please show me where in your empire's laws it's written that a regular citizen or a slave who is "owned" by a citizen has the right to have the sitting monarch called into a court to answer charges leveled by said regular citizen. I doubt you'll find such.

When the world is running down, you make the best of what's still around.

Constantin Baracca
Societas Imperialis Sceptri Coronaeque
Khimi Harar
#58 - 2013-11-22 18:40:03 UTC
Anabella Rella wrote:
Louella Dougans wrote:


Aritcio Kor-Azor, a Family Heir, and as such, a contender for being Emperor, was summoned and judged by the Speakers of Truth, for his treatment of the people under his responsibility.



Kor-Azor is not the Emperor. Granted he is a Royal Heir but, that's a far cry from being the ruler of the empire.

Please show me where in your empire's laws it's written that a regular citizen or a slave who is "owned" by a citizen has the right to have the sitting monarch called into a court to answer charges leveled by said regular citizen. I doubt you'll find such.


It is there, technically. Anyone can accuse anyone of anti-Scriptural behavior, and there is actually a rather high success rate for that sort of prosecution. The reason you, and most people, don't know about it is an educational failing, and a deliberate one.

I mean, let's say you're a terrible Holder trying to make sure your charges are nothing but a cheap source of manual labor. In the education you provide, would you make sure that your slaves knew they had a process by which they could take you to court and say you're violating your Scriptural duty?

So yes, it does exist in the legal code, and a slave is justified in taking their case for poor administration to a council representative. Such prosecution is rare, though, first due to most people not knowing about their recourse, second because even when they do know, they usually are cut off from their ability to complain.

But the law is fairly simple, any citizen of the Amarr must abide by the Scriptures and any other Amarrian can, essentially, bring their case before the Theology Council's courts. Even a slave can bring testimony and evidence against his master. It's just harder to do in practice than in theory, unfortunately.

"What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul? Or what can anyone give in exchange for their soul?"

-Matthew 16:26

Kithrus
Brave Newbies Inc.
Brave Collective
#59 - 2013-11-23 01:25:48 UTC
Anabella Rella wrote:
Louella Dougans wrote:


Aritcio Kor-Azor, a Family Heir, and as such, a contender for being Emperor, was summoned and judged by the Speakers of Truth, for his treatment of the people under his responsibility.



Kor-Azor is not the Emperor. Granted he is a Royal Heir but, that's a far cry from being the ruler of the empire.

Please show me where in your empire's laws it's written that a regular citizen or a slave who is "owned" by a citizen has the right to have the sitting monarch called into a court to answer charges leveled by said regular citizen. I doubt you'll find such.


Said the law is in place to allow for such a thing. No one said it has happened.

Darkness is more then absence of light, it is ignorance and corruption. I will be the Bulwark from such things that you may live in the light. Pray so my arms do not grow weary and my footing remain sure.

If you are brave, join me in the dark.

Lady Katherine Devonshire
Royal Ammatar Engineering Corps
#60 - 2013-11-23 05:10:07 UTC
Naomi Tichim wrote:
The answer is quite simple. Every culture in New Eden has their own variation of the old maxim "Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely."


Whilst this may indeed be true, do not for a moment lure one's self into thinking that such moral pitfalls exist only within the Empire or our customs. How many Gallente senators have lost their positions over the years due to scandals of embezzlement and dishonesty? How many Minmatar warlords treat their underlings with far less respect than we treat our own servants? Even our Allies in the State, as noble as they may be, still recently had quite a bit of a conundrum with corruption at their very highest office. Of course, unlike the other two powers that I just mentioned, the State actually solved their little problem. Still no word on what fates awaits Blaque or Shakor, hmm?

However, my point still stands: No great nation has ever been truly free of corruption entirely, for no great nation shall ever be truly free of the hierarchies of power itself. They do not truly increase or decrease, either. Rather they merely change form. In authoritarian nations such as the Empire and the State, power is wielded openly and without shame. The same could be said of the Republic, but they seem so hypnotized by their own "freedom" mantra that they often fail to realize that they are more slaves to their own dogmas than the most pious of Amarrian high priests. The Gallente, to their credit, are the far most subtle in the ways that they manipulate their people into believing themselves to be far more free than they really are.

So if you wish to address the heart of the issue then you need to realize that slavery is just another one of power's many faces. It is a manifestation of power, but not by far the only way people are controlled in New Eden. It is simply the most honest, open and direct form.

The advantage to our system is entirely this: Faith. Through religion we Amarrians all acknowledge that no matter how powerful we may become as individuals that there is always a higher power than ourselves. All Amarrians may bow before our Great Empress, but even She in turn must bow before God. Compare this in stark contrast to so many mere mortals (both common and capsuleer alike) whom not only forsake God but have egos so enlarged that they often mistake themselves for God.

So I present to you another axiom of wisdom: In the end there are no good or bad forms of government, only good or bad people. Whether a monarchy, dictatorship, or elective democracy one's government is only as morally correct as the people who hold those seats of office. Again this is where the Amarrians have a distinct advantage. In most societies the rule of power is this: Those who seek it the most are the people you would least want to have it. Sociopaths, liars, con-artists, power mongers and other mental malcontents flock to the banner of political office, seeking power for themselves purely for their own personal gain. In the Empire, however, being theocratic in nature, power goes not the most wicked but the most pious. Here it is strong moral character that advances one in rank, whereas elsewhere such a trait would be an obstacle to achieving power.

Since moral character operates in direct opposition to the temptation of corruption, our system has a build in check against it. True, the system is not perfect, and bad apples slip through, but I still firmly believe that if one were to strip away all veils of secrecy and deception, then laid our every human's true nature & soul before the eyes of God for judgement ... it would be quite obvious that the only real contestants would be ourselves and our Caldari allies.