Yun Hee Ryeon wrote:
You presume more rigidity than my approach contains, Fae-haan. "The job" has layers of priority; treason I become aware of will not simply be ignored because the traitor happens to be my superior.
If you believe that the State has been infiltrated, bring evidence and let it be weighed. There are proper forums for this, and your solo efforts are unlikely to succeed.
Kirjuun, with Heth gone anything I can say is of little importance now. Any additional commentary would just be ex post facto. A young soldier however may still be suseptable to believing that dying on a shelled out rock in the middle of null sec might bring him some form of honor. Esspecially in the Amarr, were Crusaders are taught that striking down any individual who does not believe in their faith is not only encouraged by their generals, but mandated by their God to bring their faith honor.
Quote:You have swallowed far too much Gallentean propaganda concerning the Amarr, Fae-haan. The Amarrian goal of universal conquest is far from realization; even at the pinnacle of their strength, they were no match for the Jove, and their obstacles have only grown since. By habit and custom, they are a cautious people, slow to change, but changing they are; two of the last three emperors have been peacemakers. The Pax Amarria is an ode to the path of scholarship and persuasion over the path of the sword.
Even Empress Jamyl has remarked that the age of slavery is coming to an end.
The Amarr can build ships, certainly. They can prepare for a great Reclaiming ... and what do you think the rest of us will be doing? Cowering in shelters, waiting to be dragged into the streets and clapped in Amarrian irons?
We will, of course, be building ships of our own.
The Amarr are surrounded by enemies. So are we all. You would have us upset the balance of power on the presumption that the outcome would be as you describe. You would have us murder an ally against an ancestral enemy because of what that ally might one day become, if everything goes perfectly for them.
The templars we see here are men of warfare, Fae-haan. They see their role as being that of holy knights. Their capsuleer counterparts are the like of Rodj Blake: warriors.
They are followers. They will hope for glory, but they do not set policy. They will do as they are told.
In the end, the Empire's ideal of conquest is precisely that: an ideal. Like most ideals, the reality will fall short of the hope, and we have another and more immediate problem to deal with: the Gallente continue to war against the people of the State. You are welcome to seek peace, but please remember that the Federation only ever stopped the Great War against your ancestors' State because it encountered the Amarr.
The Amarr are not the only self-righteous conquerors in this cluster, Fae-haan. The Gallente come to tame the Winds; the Amarr are latecomers in that regard.
Have I been corrupted by Gallente, or have you been told by those above you what you should be fighting for?
It comes down to this:
The Federation might form another counterattack, or me might negotiate peace with them. They are slowly finding that this war of attrition will not be won on distant planets, but on the desks of politicians. They might return to tame us, and I stand by the fact that reperations must be paid for the fall of Caldari Prime. Yet the Gallente are indecisive, and the Gallente public are slowly starting to ask themselves if a war with us is really what they want in the end.
However, for the Amarr, there is no question. It is their way to invade the land. They will try to tame us. They will organize against us. There will be a war.
War with the Amarr is a much more likely hypothetical than you might think. It will happen, so we might as well allow it to be on our terms.