James Tiberius Kirk (
boldygoing) wrote in
nexus_sages2017-05-16 11:14 pm
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James T. Kirk absolutely loves marketplaces.
It's not necessarily because he's looking for anything, per se, although he does often keep an eye out for interesting books to add to his collection, or maybe a bottle of some kind of exotic alcohol, or some kind of pointless alien gizmo with which to annoy Spock with its purposeless existence. No, he just loves the sheer diversity each bazaar brings to the table.
No two markets have ever been alike, in his experience. Sure, it's not quite as exciting and mysterious as exploring deep space, but it's something of a microcosm of the same, all sorts of goods and cultures thrown into close quarters, and one never knows what one might find just down the street.
His shipboard gold uniform may stand out a bit in the crowd as he meanders along, a faint smile on his face as he leans in to examine someone's wares on display, just enjoying being out and about in the fresh air.
[OOC: Retconning Jim eating bacon in this thread. Hadn't fully considered some of the elements in his backstory at the time.]
It's not necessarily because he's looking for anything, per se, although he does often keep an eye out for interesting books to add to his collection, or maybe a bottle of some kind of exotic alcohol, or some kind of pointless alien gizmo with which to annoy Spock with its purposeless existence. No, he just loves the sheer diversity each bazaar brings to the table.
No two markets have ever been alike, in his experience. Sure, it's not quite as exciting and mysterious as exploring deep space, but it's something of a microcosm of the same, all sorts of goods and cultures thrown into close quarters, and one never knows what one might find just down the street.
His shipboard gold uniform may stand out a bit in the crowd as he meanders along, a faint smile on his face as he leans in to examine someone's wares on display, just enjoying being out and about in the fresh air.
[OOC: Retconning Jim eating bacon in this thread. Hadn't fully considered some of the elements in his backstory at the time.]
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He's probably too young to be this cynical about government, even his own, but he's run afoul of the Federation's tendency to sweep things under a convenient rug for years now.
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It's difficult to fight a diffuse criminal organization with conventional strategy. The pirates favor guerilla tactics, lightning raids, and will do anything to get an edge. Up against that, the Federation needs to keep peace in about a third of the galaxy, without terrifying its neighbors or its own citizens with the level of force it brings to bear.
*She sniffs, then takes a sip of her own drink.*
If only the problem were some indifferent bureaucrats somewhere.
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Jim leans against the table slightly, considering his next move. She's got two pockets pretty well monopolized, and one of her stripes is in the way of a straight shot he'd have to sink one of his solids. He's not afraid to go for it anyway, but wouldn't be his first choice, so he continues to examine the angles.
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*She sips her drink and makes a dry admission.*
Still a panic, it just isn't any government's fault.
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Jim throws her a questioning look, one that says he suspects he already knows the answer. "Exactly how legal is your job, anyway?" He won't exactly judge her if it's not. He's many things, but he tries not to be hypocrite.
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I'm fully registered and licensed in the Galactic Federation, as well as eleven other major principalities. I pull most of my jobs from the high end of the judicial and military rolls. But the legality of the job isn't why I cause a panic when I go somewhere.
*She pauses, tilting her head a little to one side and looking off into the distance as she considers how best to frame it. After a moment, her focus returns to Jim.*
What would you say is the most powerful, dangerous, destructive weapon you've ever heard of, and if used at its optimum, what is the most harm it could do?
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Sounds like it would be a G or an H on the Federation's Threat Index.
*She pauses; she can see how seriously he takes the idea, and her own expression is similarly sober.*
Imagine how your government would react if that weapon were a person, and had just entered your space on errand unknown.
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*Her tone is light, almost glib, but there's an undercurrent of shadow, there. She's gone into more than one mission with allies at her side and come out alone, and she hides how deeply that hurts her.*
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Thank you.
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There is one thing that stands out, and he hopes it isn't something that'll lead to a similar sensitive spot. "You mentioned a threat index?"
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I did. The Galactic Federation has a rating system for measuring how dangerous something might be--whether it's an animal, a weapon, a natural disaster, whatever. It starts with null, then runs A through H. Broadly, it measures how much property damage something could do and how many people it could kill.
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As neutral as you can get when talking about disaster scaling, anyway.
"That's a hell of a scale," he says.
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It has its uses. It can help to determine whether something should be restricted or banned by the definitions set out in existing laws, rather than needing to write new laws to account for every new vehicle, weapon, and form of recreation that somebeing dreams up.
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Now that the more awkward moment has passed, he remembers about the game again too, and the fact that it's still his turn. He has to take a moment to remind himself where he left off, turning part of his attention back towards the pool table, even as the bulk of his awareness stays with the conversation at hand.
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Perhaps you can take the idea back with you--one of the perks of this place.
*At least she doesn't do the thing where someone coughs or makes a sudden noise just as he's making a shot.*
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"I just might," he agrees, glancing back over at her again. "I gotta admit, I wasn't planning on trying to change Federation policy, but I didn't plan on a lot of this either."
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The plan is usually the first casualty. Flexibility is healthy, and contact with the Nexus inevitably leads to change. Better to make it consciously, and get the kind you want.
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Diplomacy is the best way to wage war. Where should the emergency stockpiles come from? What should be stockpiled? Where?
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http://i.imgur.com/qlYtJk0.mp4
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