HWalsh wrote:Well you left out how they'd kill the messenger.
I see no reason to think that the CS would kill messengers so long as they didn't break any CS laws.
Obviously it would be a bad idea to pick a Balrog demon or something like that to use to send a list of requests to the CS.
The CS received Nostrous Dunscon peacefully when they invited him to convey their requests. So long as proper formalities were observed (ie don't just teleport unscheduled into a meeting and begin making the requests, that would be seen as aggression) and you were polite about it, there would be no reason for the CS to kill you.
HWalsh wrote:Also. No, it's not more severe.
The FoM had their own culture. Telling them to stop practicing magic (even if it is distasteful) is just as severe as telling the CS to stop using propaganda.
Being 'culture' doesn't equivocate radically different practices.
We should first clarify, if we are discussing the pre-Prosek CS (which existed in WB16 as the CS was created in 1 PA and Joseph came into prominence in 12 PA, Sedition muddied this by having Joseph as Chairman prior to 34 PA foundation) that it's unclear how much propaganda was actually in effect when Nostrous attacked the CS. I'm sure they did have valid warnings against shapeshifters and supernatural beings.
Secondly: the FoM was NOT asked to stop using magic.
They were encouraged to adopt stronger laws governing its use.
We understand the difference between "stop using guns entirely" and "adopt stronger laws governing guns" or "stop using nuclear reactions entirely" vs "adopt stronger laws regarding nuclear energy".
HWalsh wrote:Your argument was the CS requests were reasonable (lol they weren't)
I notice you haven't bothered to address any of them individually.
HWalsh wrote:the 10 I laid out actually ARE reasonable.
Requesting that the leader of a nation step down is quite severe. Notice that the CS did not do this to Nostrous Dunscon. Even though he simply ruled by power and was not a democratically elected Chairman like Joseph and Karl.
HWalsh wrote:Reducing the military to 2.5 million? That's reasonable. It's still a huge army, but the CS has proven to be violent aggressors. Reasonably you want to restrict their ability to threaten others.
The CS needs its army to defend the continent against supernatural menaces. They haven't proven to be aggressors to me, taking out someone who rules a neighbouring state through power and doesn't treat its native human citizens fairly isn't aggressive, it's liberating.
HWalsh wrote:Try them for war crimes? They are war criminals.
War Crimes as defined by whom? The International Criminal Court of 2002 probably isn't around anymore. Why should Lazlo get to judge the CS?
HWalsh wrote:It's unreasonable to provide education and safe discourse to their people? You have odd grounds for severe.
Regarding these two points...
5. The CS agrees to provide free education to the citizens in the cities and the burbs. All education material must be approved by the Council of Lazlo.
Firstly: ARE there citizens in the burbs? I thought that the point of citizenship was to get out of them.
Secondly: why should a government be obligated to provide free education? That's a matter of internal politics. I can understand foreign governments making some encouragements of social policies.
Thirdly: why should a foreign government have to approve of the curriculum a government offers?
6. The CS must agree to holding open forums where people can speak freely against CS policy without fear of reprisal from the CS.
I believe this already exists in at least a limited respect. I agree this is a reasonable request for present-day CS.
That said: this wasn't explicitly a problem in the CS prior to 12 PA, so I'm not sure why we're comparing the severity of requests made to a present-day CS to those made by a past-day CS.
HWalsh wrote:Recognize other kingdoms on their continent? That's harsh and severe?
Depends on the kingdoms. Should the CS recognize the legitimacy of the Vampire Kingdoms? What about Soul Harvest?
You can certainly argue the merits of your kingdoms by sending diplomats to CS leadership, and I agree that this should not be punished (and I see no indication that it IS) but that doesn't make the requests more reasonable.
There's a big difference between making requests for mutual safety (ie stop summoning demons that often go wild and kill people) and making requests to be recognized as a legitimate form of government.
eliakon wrote:seriously... asking magical communities to give up magic and associating with magical beings? Seriously?
The CS didn't ask Nostrous to ban magic in the FoM, they asked them to regulate it better and stop summoning.
Which is pretty reasonable considering that summoning is usually a form of slavery which breeds angry creatures who go wild and kill people.
Asking not to associate with Demons/Elementals seems pretty reasonable to me. Even the Warlocks who treat Elementals fairly can sometimes have problems with not giving clear orders. Warlocks appear to be common in present-day FoM but it's unclear how common they were in 1 PA.
On the issue of dragons, remember that the CS had a HUGE shapeshifter problem, asking to avoid dragon interactions is pretty reasonable until better ways of telling who is a dragon are ascertained.
The most controversial request the CS leaders made to Nostrous was asking them not to associate with "aliens". That's not a reasonable expectation when aliens are everywhere. The CS itself had a 6% non-human population which is sort of implied to be D-Bees (not explicitly stated, was vague) and I imagine their law enforcement (like the Chi-Town magical division) probably had to associate in some way to keep the peace.
Freemage wrote:The other three are arbitrary, resulting from the CS' ignorance, bigotry and fear of all non-human, non-subjugated life-forms.
Elementals ARE subjugated though, they'd rather just teleport back to their own dimension except when enslaved by a Shifter or compelled by a Warlock's friendship. Summoning in general is not free association and creates problems.
Fear of dragons isn't ignorant. Most are shapeshifters and have magic and psychic abilities to sway minds. The adults are godlike. Requesting non-interaction with them until better screens are in place is very reasonable.
The "aliens" part is the only thing I would agree with you on.
Freemage wrote:2: Ditto.
3: Again.
4: And yet again.
I only agree on "aliens". Elementals certainly have no use for citizenship, and Dragons don't really need that. There's plenty of wild uninhabited lands for dragons to roost in without needing to live near humans.
Freemage wrote:5: This one is flat-out absurd. It's an attempt at economic bullying. And, for a society that is not technologically as developed as the CS, it's a blatant effort at putting the FoM on a permanent disadvantage.
It isn't a disadvantage, the CS entirely avoids interdimensional trade so encouraging a potential ally to decrease it is very reasonable. The things in other dimensions are dangerous unknowns. Think for example, of how the Naruni and Splugorth both employ slaves to produce their things. Or how Aehriman is selling demonic power armor which changes its user into a demon. Is it right for the FoM to support that?
Asking to take a step back from free interdimensional trade and maybe rexamine it before dipping your toe into it isn't unreasonable.
Freemage wrote:6&7 are both vague enough that we can't really address them. "Stronger laws on personal freedoms" could mean stronger laws protecting them (such as a ban on using magical enslavement of sentient beings) or it could mean stronger restrictions on freedom of expression and association. The former is a reasonable suggestion; the latter deserves nothing but contempt and derision, especially coming from a foreign power (see, for instance, the efforts of Islamists* to get the West to crack down on 'religiously offensive' materials, such as the Danish political cartoon debacle from several years ago).
I agree with you that 6 and 7 are pretty vague, without knowing more details about the request it is hard to evaluate how reasonable or unreasonable aspects of it were.
Assuming this is still part of the canon (the 1v34 FoM/Sedition issue makes me wonder) I would actually LOVE to have a supplement which is the 137 requests the CS leaders made to Nostrous, in their entirety. Basically a transcript of the conversation that occurred before Nostrous left.
Come to think of it... if he heard 137, would there have been enough time to listen to 1370 requests, but the 9/10 was allotted for discussing the requests, which he refused to do. I imagine that each request could have 1 page dedicated to it, so a 137 page sourcebook would be cool... but if Nostrous had stayed it could've been a 1370 page sourcebook!
This makes me wonder just how long the meeting lasted and how long it was scheduled to last... was it possibly meant to last days, with many breaks? Negotiations often do last that kind of length.
Freemage wrote:So the 'reasonable' demands were mostly centered around ensuring economic and political supremacy for the CS, and the disenfranchisement of a large swath of Federation citizens. I'd hate to see what it takes to count as an 'unreasonable' position, in that case.
Limiting interdimensional trade isn't necessarily about political supremacy, I have to disagree on that. There's a huge difference between say, trading for cheap bread and milk, and trading for bio-wizard weapons which just happen to enslave fairy folk which might instigate a Fairy Uprising.
The motivations of the CS leaders are already stated on page 10 of FoM. The leaders "wanted to insure that the Grand City was not a danger".
It doesn't say anything about wanting economic/political supremacy.
eliakon wrote:the CS is demanding that other nations enact "Stronger laws on personal freedoms". Because we all know that the CS is a paragon in that area.
The CS of 1 PA (when these requests were made, NOT demands) may very well have been. It isn't really fair to view the reasonability/hypocrisy of such a request in regard to the CS of a CENTURY later.
eliakon wrote:the rest of them? They start at utter jokes and work down to 'act of war'
Why is it a joke to request not associating with dragons, elementals or dragons?
Requesting not associating with aliens is something which I would agree doesn't seem feasible, since 'associate' is a vague term and there are aliens dropping in all over the place who you have to deal with somehow.
On that point, Nostrous could certainly have protested and actually TALKED about, instead of storming out like an infant.
Imagine if some present nation approached the United States and were all "don't talk to women at all". Even though that isn't reasonable, a US ambassador could still stay at the negotiating table and explain why talking to women is very necessary and why they can't amend their ways to include that request.
eliakon wrote:this is just the first 10? There are still another 124 more?
Not necessarily, we don't know how many it is broken into. "Please don't summon demons" and "Please don't summon elementals" can be 2 different requests, for example. We aren't actually given a numbered list, so we don't know how discretely the points were defined.
eliakon wrote:(so twelve more lists each just as long as this one) and considering what is on this one I am frankly worried what was on the other ones? I mean there are only so many 'reasonable' demands that you can put on before your demands become either "surrender to us unconditionally and become our minions" or "this is just a farce and we want you to leave but are trying to pretend its your fault so we are going to act like we are being in good faith here...so here is a list of impossible things to do so you can never actually pollute our presence xenos scum"
Xenos scum? Nostrous Dunscon was human, to the best of my knowledge.
One thing that is important to keep in mind of the CS of 1 PA + 1 week (when Nostrous arrived in Chi-Town) was page 10 of FoM says the CS was "not yet dedicated to human supremacy".
That's a VERY significant point.
Supernatural beings and creatures of magic were banned, true.
But in spite of that, the Coalition States were not human supremacist at the time.
So all this speculation about xenophobia is entirely unwarranted.
I'd bet that if any of the 6% of non-humans in the CS in 1 PA were dwarves, some of them might agree with banning creatures of magic and supernatural beings from the CS. They are kinda dangerous, and there's plenty of other places outside the CS they could go and live.
Shark_Force wrote:even the first demand isn't always that reasonable. there is a great deal of difference in how a warlock summons things as compared to shifters, for one thing.
True, but we don't know how common Warlocks were in 1 PA, or how educated the CS were about them.
Assuming the Nostrous did know something of warlocks (he was a dual-class LLW+TempWiz, Alistair was a dual-class LLW+Shifter) he could've simply explained how warlocks have a friendly non-slavery relationship with Elementals worth exploring under controlled circumstances.
That's a big part of negotiations, accepting that there can be differences in understanding between cultures and trying to reach a common understanding.
Shark_Force wrote:for another, while we in our current time think poorly of slavery... it has been a thing for far longer than it hasn't. certainly not always in the form it existed in the american south or places like haiti, but arguably, the weirdos are us people that think slavery is wrong
in fact, the CS essentially practices slavery (though i don't think they had dog boys at the time in question).
I think Sedition said lone star was discovered around the early 60s and WB13 said they were created in the late 60s or something like that? Regardless of specifics it was definitely during Karl's reign as Chairman, and not during Joseph's or the pre-Joseph CS of 1-12 PA.
Shark_Force wrote:(to be clear, i still think slavery is wrong, i just can't argue that the belief in every person's right to be free is in any way typical of the human race as a whole throughout the course of our history).
An argument for 'good slavery' might be magical intelligences, like golems/mummies/zombies created via magic rituals or the Magic Warrior spell.
Shark_Force wrote:and even then, i would argue that there's a difference between summoning some sort of alien equivalent of a rat and summoning a sapient being.
[/quote]
Considering almost any summon can go wild, I still see dangers in it, even if there's less moral outrage.