Unless I was killed off without my knowledge. Then there'd also be an explanation for why I'm not on the map, other than simple oversight.


Not being too familiar with the Indian reservations I decline to comment on that specifically, but I do want to add that the two Zigonian and the single Apexai state, apart from forming fully 1/3rd of the USS political landscape, are at least in theory entirely independent from the larger Sovereignty state. They have their own defense forces, their own laws and their own governments. They are involved in the Sovereignty only in asmuch as the Bragulans (Imperials, Collectors, Karlacks, etc.) present a uniform universal threat to everybody and if they don't work together they're screwed, but it's hardly like these states are theoretical concepts that humans can just walk over willy-nilly any time they wish. The Zigonians have weight-by-numbers going for them, and the Apexai have their techology: the Sovvies wouldn't even be able to function if the Apexai withheld their technological wizardry. So even sheer numbers aren't everything. You could say "well it's a human nation" because the President is a (post)human, but you might as well say "it's a non-human nation" because Olympic runs pretty much everything, or because the whole place only exists by the grace of Apexai tech, or whatever. My point is, then, that this 'human/inhuman' angle pretty much disregards the (massive) political, economical, etc. differences between humans and focuses exclusively on species which is, frankly, in the day and age of the game, a pretty irrelevant concept in many nations that it tries to classify.Simon_Jester wrote:Looking at the numbers, the "human" states all, or nearly all, have majority human populations, whose interstellar governments generally trace back to human colonists and thence to Earth and Nova Terra. There may be, often are, self-governing alien enclaves in those nations, but they're necessarily in the same strategic and political position as the US's Indian reservations. In theory they're autonomous, and that autonomy does give them jurisdictional freedom and a degree of self-rule, but in practice they are dependent on the larger nation they're embedded in.
To be sure- but even that is towards the very high end of status aliens can expect when incorporated into a human polity. At the more common low end, the aliens get increasingly dependent on humans' forebearance and superior numbers.Siege wrote:Not being too familiar with the Indian reservations I decline to comment on that specifically, but I do want to add that the two Zigonian and the single Apexai state, apart from forming fully 1/3rd of the USS political landscape, are at least in theory entirely independent from the larger Sovereignty state. They have their own defense forces, their own laws and their own governments. They are involved in the Sovereignty only in asmuch as the Bragulans (Imperials, Collectors, Karlacks, etc.) present a uniform universal threat to everybody and if they don't work together they're screwed, but it's hardly like these states are theoretical concepts that humans can just walk over willy-nilly any time they wish.
I'm not saying you're wrong as such, but you're thinking along classic majoritarian lines: "we're not really in charge, there just happen to be a lot of us, it's all right we're post-discrimination and not trying to screw you over."So even sheer numbers aren't everything. You could say "well it's a human nation" because the President is a (post)human, but you might as well say "it's a non-human nation" because Olympic runs pretty much everything, or because the whole place only exists by the grace of Apexai tech, or whatever. My point is, then, that this 'human/inhuman' angle pretty much disregards the (massive) political, economical, etc. differences between humans and focuses exclusively on species which is, frankly, in the day and age of the game, a pretty irrelevant concept in many nations that it tries to classify.
Sure, but by promoting 'inhumanism' as specifically anti-human, which is the angle pushed by the Bragulans, they're that more likely to bring about exactly that which they are afraid of. And they ought to actually be aware of this, because it's hardly a secret that if the Bragulans and Karlacks weren't as antagonistic as they are, the Imperium and the Sovereignty would be at each other's throats constantly. The only reason these two nations banded together is, shockingly, the alien threat next door.Simon_Jester wrote:There's a power dynamic here, and it's very common for broad communities which see themselves as being on the wrong side of a power dynamic to turn round and band together against it, rather than sitting quietly and assuming it won't become a problem.
Who knew?Force Lord wrote:...Regarding the recent Nova Atlantean actions, he "was concerned with such recklessness, such pettiness, all because Byzantium crashed the party in the recent naval review. Turns out Posthumans can also be dicks. Who knew?"
Kierger probably saw Strakanoffs in action and decided to imitate their attitude.Simon_Jester wrote:[reads revised version of FL's post]
Ah, now that's more like it.![]()
Also, it would appear that Kierger has been contaminated by the Strakanoff line of clonetroops, or some such.