Gaignun Kukai (
namedforcat) wrote in
tvk2012-04-07 08:35 pm
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Unit 6 - Where in the Hotel gains access to a pool table. No need for a bar.
[Early one evening, if one happens to walk through the hotel lobby, they may notice something that hadn't been there when they had left through those doors.
A pool table.
Thanks to that odd offer of the powers that be to give them back something from home, Gaignun (somewhat jokingly) asked for the pool table from his office, and got it much to his surprise. It's a well loved pool table, well made with a few nicks and scratches in the wood work that speaks to the fact that it actually got used.
So there it sits, in the side of the hotel lobby, fully decked out with a sign posted saying "Free to play, just take good care of it."
It's owner, a face familiar to mosmt is right now just happily noodling around on it, making random shots. Feel free to join him, he's always up for a game.]
[[ooc: So the hotel now has a pool table, which is free for anyone to use. It's now a fixture there until he finds somewhere else to put it so feel free to appropriate it for other threads and what not.]]
A pool table.
Thanks to that odd offer of the powers that be to give them back something from home, Gaignun (somewhat jokingly) asked for the pool table from his office, and got it much to his surprise. It's a well loved pool table, well made with a few nicks and scratches in the wood work that speaks to the fact that it actually got used.
So there it sits, in the side of the hotel lobby, fully decked out with a sign posted saying "Free to play, just take good care of it."
It's owner, a face familiar to mosmt is right now just happily noodling around on it, making random shots. Feel free to join him, he's always up for a game.]
[[ooc: So the hotel now has a pool table, which is free for anyone to use. It's now a fixture there until he finds somewhere else to put it so feel free to appropriate it for other threads and what not.]]
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Ah, I believe I understand. My own world is mere years in the future relative to this one, so that sort of ship wasn't the first to cross my mind.
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I had another table at my other office on the Foundation, but this one I think is my favorite.
At any rate, I hope I'm not interrupting anything.
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Not at all. I'm merely devoting extra time to relaxation, given recent events.
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Ah yes...I can see why you would want a little down time. You've been working on something very difficult.
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...I suppose "friend" will have to do for the interpersonal aspects. More importantly, however, he is a colleague of mine -- a defense attorney with few peers, and the man I would most wish to stand across from in court.
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And now he's gone so you're on your own. That would certainly complicate matters.
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Also, it's not that they can't or don't grasp that concept I think. Many of them come from a very different social structure, or even time frame from us. Justice is a very...mutable thing depending on circumstance. Not to mention that extreme stress and discomfort make it an emotionally charged atmosphere.
Please don't misunderstand me, I agree with you that they must be separate in a place like this and with the facilities that we have. I just wanted to point out another side to the issue.
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Concerning the emotional aspect, that's precisely why I took the time to attempt to talk down those who would in their outrage overstep the boundary between aiding in the criminal's capture and acting as an executioner without so much as a trial.
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[He's interested to see Edgeworth's thought process on all this]
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If you believe that to be the point I was making, Mr. Kukai, then you've forgotten a key fact -- the entire reason why we do require a separate justice system is that the native one is inadequate to the task of keeping order amongst kidnappees! Aside from the fact that the natives are unaware of the supernatural aspects of the situation and cannot be made aware, as well as the facts that most of us cannot be imprisoned in any ordinary jail for longer than we wish to be and none of us can be executed to any useful effect, let us not forget that for obvious reasons the laws themselves don't reflect the realities of our own situation!
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Even if we were to have a separate judicial system, it is going cause just as many problems as it solves.
First off, development. We have a unique community here and from my experience no one likes to agree on things that impact their freedom of action, or what they believe correct action should be.
Secondly, as with the case you just worked on. Should we have a separate system, then he should be tried and convicted twice, which is a non-efficient use of resource and time. Since he's been convicted in the native court, he can hardly undergo whatever trial we propose while he's in prison there. Even if he stays, what sort of penalty can we impose that is worse or that can stick?
Thirdly, it creates an image that we are above the law of the land here. Admittedly, there are those among us who feel like that anyways because they were above the laws of their homes. [He has to sigh a little...knowing one such individual very personally.]
Admittedly my objection to your plan may be more based in ideals rather then facts, but I am curious to know all the angles of the issue.
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While the inefficiency in cases such as Ryuunosuke's are regrettable, how do you propose that it could be avoided? By the time the native trial ended, those present believed that I had prosecuted him for all but one of the murders that occurred instead of roughly half of them -- the fact that any of us had been murdered at all was entirely forgotten! [Another BANG.] I cannot prosecute crimes against us under these conditions, Mr. Kukai! Consider as well the case of Onimaru Miki -- her entire motive for her actions was rooted in things that we alone can perceive and retain knowledge of. Had I not convinced her to plead guilty, her life would have been ruined by a ruling of insanity!
Concerning punishment, admittedly I'm at a loss for what we could sentence the likes of Miss Onimaru to under the circumstances; however, I've had a flash of inspiration concerning a punishment for Ryuunosuke and others like him, which Mr. Ridgeley and Mr. Kihara are both interested in helping to make a reality.
As for your assertion that a law of our own would give the impression that we're above native law, what about this situation does not? The very existence of our Personas and our inevitable return from death could easily lead one to consider themselves something superior to the natives. These same factors also serve as reasons why depraved sorts would have no fear of native law. Furthermore, some laws that make sense in an ordinary society are ill-suited to our own situation; for example, dueling is illegal, yet try to imagine all the consequences were anyone to attempt to enforce such a ban rather than simply require proof of mutual consent.
[Is Edgeworth standing a little straighter?]
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Also, thank goodness he'd splurged on the very solid real wood that the pool table was made of.]
Let us focus this discussion on one point at a time, since they each must be considered to their full potential. Starting with the issue of power. While I am pleased to hear that you have thought of a way that may serve as an effective punishment in this situation, how will you make the rest of the community agree to it's implementation. Just because something is 'logical' does not mean it will be accepted, or work right off the bat.
As a whole we lack leadership, though some, like Allen, have stepped up here and there. But they only have volunteered for specific tasks. There is a very real possibility that your suggestion will not be accepted, and if you seek to enforce it with out the backing of the majority of the community, you may well be seen as the very thing you are trying to prevent. We do not have a system for implementing these things with minimal fuss in the community yet.
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I agree that our lack of leadership is problematic. Worse still, there are those among the kidnappees who I fear might attempt to take the role of leader by force if the need for leadership were made too obvious -- Gilgamesh, for example. Subtlety is vital to avoiding all-out war in the process of introducing structure.
[While he's firm, Edgeworth doesn't seem to disapprove of the continued argument.]
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Royalty, deities, knaves, we're a rather motley crew here now. I'm almost wondering if a council based leadership attempt might go down more smoothly then a spear headed one...[He may be slightly musing to himself, but he's not actively trying to get the conversation off track.]
What you may want to do in that case, is get the community involved in the planning process of this. I've found that people are more apt to be happier with something that they had a hand in creating from the get go. Especially in a climate like this, where secrets are going to be met with more suspicion then usual.
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While I agree that a council would be preferable for several reasons, there are others here who insist, in some cases quite stubbornly -- [here Edgeworth hmphs, thinking of one Arturia Pendragon] -- that dictatorship is preferable, whatever name they may prefer to dress the concept up with. They have too much faith in what a single person can do and place too much weight on speed and decisiveness.
I don't suppose you have any suggestions concerning how to accomplish this? I've hardly been secretive, merely discreet.
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Back home, in my universe, I've seen all types of leadership. The Federation, for example uses the leaders of the planets under it's wing as a council, headed by a few powerful ones. Ormus, however, follows a singular patriarch. Miltia also rules by council, but it's headed by a retired general who detached himself from the Federation forces.
To be honest, it all comes down to what people are used to. I don't know who you're speaking of with the 'dictatorship' comment, but if that is what they're used to, it's what they are going to push for. Familiarity with a system. Personally I used a small council system, but that also can be seen as a bit of a dictatorship in itself.
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I hope this deer is sufficiently teal.
That deer is so teal, it glows in the dark
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