Bundle: 486 Archive-Message-Number: 5869 From: skellogg@lonestar.utsa.edu (Scott S. Kellogg) Subject: Zhodani & the Tavrchedl' Date: Tue, 10 Aug 93 15:33:19 CDT So ya wanna hear about the Zhos, eh? The Tavrchedl' in particular, Ok. Catie compares them to Judge Dread. Well, I don't know Judge Dread, however as I understand it he's basically Judge, Jury and Executioner. That is NOT the normal Tavrchedl'. The usual Tavrchedl' is not some violent nut in battle dress on a grav bike carrying a fusion gun while his faithful sidekick merely mans a VRF gauss gun. No. As Stewart said, the Zhodani aren't Klingons. This is not the kind of thing that fits into the normal law abiding, harmonious society that the Zhodani are famous for. The Tavrchedl': the "Guardians Of Our Morality" are DOCTORS. They are treating SICK people. Sounds boring doesn't it? Sorry. That's another thing the Zhodani society is famous for. You see, when society is functioning together like a harmonious whole, you don't have people out there who would necessitate a Judge Dread. Oh sure, every once in a while you may need some military muscle to round up the Branch Dividian Cultists out on the planet Waco. But that will be the exception, not the rule. The Judge Dread bit MIGHT show up on the unabsorbed worlds in the Consulate, but I've a feeling that the Zhodani, who are supposedly the Machiavellian Masters of Humaniti would be much more subtle than that. [Soap Box Warning] Lots of people think that the evil "Thought Police" are terrible Orwellesque oppressors who will be instantly obvious to anyone who isn't completely blind. HA! (excuse me while I laugh heartily at you) If the Tavrchedl' were that obvious, well, they would KNOW they were obvious and correct it wouldn't they? How obvious are they? Are there perhaps Tavrchedl' in our society today? The answer is yes. But who are they? Who are the people who seek to mold us and shape our `Morality'? Preachers? Teachers? College Professors? Cops? Journalists? Consider the movement of the "Politically Correct". THIS is my model for the Tavrchedl'. After all, are not the goals of the P.C. people and the Tavrchedl' fairly closely in line? I would imagine so. Discrimination and antipathy must be the crimes which the ordinary citizens most often come in contact with the Tavrchedl'. (Actually, I imagine the Tavrchedl' more persuasive than the PCs. They know how to appeal to people and make their ideas sound reasonable instead of going off the deep end, thus losing their audience.) Catie sites the idea of a Tavrchedl' officer trying to clear up a problem between someone and their mother in law. :-) A good example for humor, but I think a more typical case would be along the lines of: "Well, Mister Radenov, I see that you are having difficulty in your job: you lack respect for your supervisor because she is female. Surely, you recognize that this problem you are having has no basis in proper thinking. I think it would be wise if you were to agree to come along with us so that we may sort out these feelings you are having..." Another thought is where the Tavrchedl' get their name: "Guardians of OUR Morality". That's *Zhodani* morality. Acute difference there. Remember, the Zhodani, being mind readers will know all about the human (and readable alien) psychology. They will *know* which thoughts and feelings are "natural". Because of this, the `Morality' of the Zhodani will be Quite different from what the "Honorable" Senator Jesse Helms considers `Morality'. I think the Consulate would take extreme views on what the `Moral Majority' calls itself. Now, there are quite a few sexual and societal practices which mainstream culture defines as deviant. Undoubtedly, the Zhos will have some very different opinions as to what defines `deviant'. Especially when they have known the human psyche intimately for the past 9000 years. There are a great number of fantasies the human mind entertains, but does not act upon because of societal pressures. When it is a known fact that everyone (or a large percentage thereof) has such fantasies, the Consulate will define said thing as `normal'. For instance, there is a much quoted (albeit highly debated) estimate on the percentage of homosexuals in our society (10%). If we are to believe that this is genetic, one may expect similar numbers in Zhodani culture. The Zhos, if they see 10% will undoubtedly conclude that homosexuality is indeed "natural". As such, homophobia will undoubtedly be seen as disease along side misogyny, misanthropy, etc. Bestiality (oops sorry) Zoophily will probably be acceptable to the Zhodani. (BTW, there are no anonymous mail/news servers in the Consulate :-) All in all, the Zhodani will be a lot more in touch with their feelings, and the id of a Consulate Citizen may be indulged a bit more than that of an Imperial Citizen. (Making the Zhodani more along the lines of the historical definition of an IDiot :-) Racism may be another matter though. After all, everyone knows that the Zhodani are the best psionics among Humaniti, (at least the Zhodani think so) and psionic strength is obviously the way people are judged in the Consulate. Now, remember, when a Consulate Citizen sees signs of what THEY consider DISEASE, they will want to help. It's rather like the Imperial Citizen sees a person with scarlet fever. The Imperial Citizen (if they care at all) will want to "cure" that person by sending them to a "Doctor". Well, the Consulate Citizen has the same view except the disease isn't fever, it's a phobia... Or free floating anxiety... Or feelings of inadequacy... Or deep seated aggression... Or dissatisfaction with the government... These are DISEASES. And what is perverted about Imperial Society is that they have *outlawed* the cure for these diseases. The only way that Imperial Citizens may "cure" such problems is by blind techniques like `psychotherapy' which compared to the Zhodani is like a dug-out log, next to a jump-6 starship. Yes, the Imperium has declared all the doctors are criminals and all they have left are medicine men with their rattles, beads and hollow drums. ================================================================== Red was the color of his blood flowing thin Pallid white was the color of his lifeless skin Blue was the color of the morning sky He saw looking up from the ground where he died It was the last thing ever seen by him Black and white were the figures that recorded him Black and white was the newsprint he was mentioned in Black and white was the question that so bothered him He never asked, he was taught not to ask But was on his lips as they buried him -- Requiem for the Masses: The Association "When you retired from SORAG, Doctor, you said it was because you felt your science was being misused." Malenkoviepr tensed. His own logic was about to be used against him. He sat in silence. Baremkatalashe' continued. "You said you did not like the way SORAG used people. Manipulating people to follow their rule." Anger welled up in Mako, "Just as you have been trying to manipulate me?" "How would you feel about the manipulation of our entire culture? Twisting the Consulate with a horrible deception." Mako's lips curled in disgust, "Oh, your next ambition I take it..." Baremkatalashe' held his head high, "No." he paused for breath. "I intend to Stop the manipulation, and I need your help." Mako sneered. "Oh and just what is this monstrous plot you intend to save us all from?" Baremkatalashe' nodded, "Doctor, what shape do you think the Consulate is in?" Malenkoviepr ignored the question, refusing to get into a conversation. Baremkatalashe' waited for a moment before continuing on his own. "The Consulate is strong: socially, economically, militarily. The people are content, and well guided. The government has ruled well over them for three thousand four hundred and seven olympiads. "The Imperium by contrast is also strong: economically, and militarily, but not socially. They are still buried under their deceitful ways, and hammered in by the fear of the one tool necessary to give them the same social stability of our culture: psionics." Malenkoviepr grudgingly nodded. Some of what Baremkatalashe' said was true. "All right, Doctor," continued the Colonel, "you are an historian, what is the conflict between the Consulate and the Imperium?" Mako looked at him, he wasn't sure where this would lead. "Do you mean our current conflicts or the historical ones?" Baremkatalashe' opened his hand, letting Mako choose his own battlefield. Malenkoviepr fell into his professorial voice for delivering lectures, "The original conflict started about two hundred Olympiads ago as a territorial dispute. The Imperium was expanding too fast into Tloql sector and began to compete with our trade and harrass our allies in the area. Pressure built up and we attacked before they could hem us off from the area. "The Second War of Imperial Expansion was really an extension of the first. The Imperials were weakened during a period of civil war and our fleets made moves to continue the work of the First War. The root motivations for the fighting were mostly economic and clashes of different culture and governments. "The Holocost changed all that. The Imperials were initially reluctant to accept Zhodani use of psionics. This reluctance suddenly inflamed to pathological phobia. The Imperials first declared that no psionic activity would be tolerated, then they began rounding up and slaughtering all psionic adepts. "What were political and economic struggles became a fight for survival with each government swearing to annihiliate each other. The continued fighting of the following Wars of Imperial Expansion was orders of magnatude more bitter while the Imperials tried to tear apart the fabric that holds our people together and we fought not only to save ourselves, but to bring freedom of psionics to the struggling peoples of the Imperium. "The Third War of Imperial Expansion came at another time of Imperial weakness: the Imperium was having difficulty on their coreward side in their attempt to subjugate the Solomani. The Consulate took advantage of their weakened fleet strengths and pushed them farther back from our space. "The Fourth War of Imperial Expansion started too early. Because of losses in intelligence, The Imperials learned of the coming attack and the fighting started before all the fleets were in readiness. As a result, the fleets of both sides were almost thrown together with no plan or strategy. Fleets were attrited before any significant gains could be made, save the foothold on Esalin. Baremkatalasche' nodded, "Yes, Doctor those are the textbook reasons." He paused for a moment, gathering his thoughts, "Those are the causes that are taught to us. However, I have known the Supreme Council. I know something more of the motivations behind those causes. The Colonel spoke with a disgust that seemed old, but not faded with time, "I can tell you now that the Supreme Council has no intention of bringing freedom of psionics or of any other kind to the people of the Imperium. The Council merely wants to maintain the status quo. They make broad sweeping policy statements about waging a war for democracy, and making the galaxy safe for psionics, but that is mere propaganda. Their real position is that the Imperium is unabsorbable and must be held off indefinitely. And in a thousand Olympiads or so, it will be someone elses problem to deal with because they will be out of office." Baremkatalashche' scowled darkly, "They're afraid Really trying to absorb the Imperium would cost them their elections. So instead they make minor skirmishes against the Imperium to drum up support for their elections. Whenever there's trouble, they send the Guards to some troubled planet to divert the headlines. But to start a War really gets the populus distracted, and is a sure way to win an election when your opponent looks good." Malenkoviepr rolled his eyes, "I've heard that argument from every tenth college sophomore. It..." "It's true." Baremkatalashe' spoke with finality. "I've been in on the planning for the next campaign against the Imperium. They make no plans for absorbing of Imperial planets into the Consulate. And the `losses in intelligence' that caused the fiasco of the Fourth War? Those were leaks. Deliberate leaks. The war was meant to fail. We stirred up that nest of Stingers and fought like nightmares *intentionally*. To show the Imperium that they could not absorb US! The Colonel relaxed somewhat, "There was no intention of ever freeing or helping the psionic adepts under Imperial yoke. None at all. That's all just a publicity stunt." "If we really meant to save our cousins in the Imperium we would have done a lot more than made inroads to a mere three subsectors. We have almost all the advantage. Economically, we are in the same shape. They have a slight advantage in terms of technology, but no psionic forces worth speaking of. And each time war started, it has been on our terms. We struck simultaneously across the front and behind it while they had to react with no warning. We could have driven them out of Tloql and Nieklsdia altogether if we really wanted to. The Supreme Council will not commit enough to insure victory, but only enough to scare the Imperials. They think that if they just sit back and make occasional strikes, the Imperium will leave the Consulate alone." Baremkatalasche' leaned forward, "Have you ever seen the full extent of the Imperial madness? You were right to call it a pathological phobia. How many millions of psionic adepts have been blindly massacred by the mob rule there? The very people they need to keep their society peaceful, they shoot down in the streets." Baremkatalasche' jerked his thumb back toward himself, "I was head of SORAG for years. I sent men and women into the Imperium. They didn't always come back alive." He gripped the table and closed his eyes for a moment. "Raped... Murdered... Sometimes, they would come back with their minds destroyed... lobotomized... tortured... mutilated... arms hacked off... legs chopped off... ears... genitalia... because the Imperials said psionics could grow new ones... Once we got an agent back piece by piece... The last thing we got was her brain..." Malenkoviepr's stomach felt weak. Baremkatalasche's eyes were afire. The SORAG Colonel took a deep breath. "We are going to change all that." Malenkoviepr's psi-shield covered his revulsion. Baremkatalasche' raised his hand and it clenched into a fist, "For centuries the Supreme Council have been preaching how we must make the galaxy safe for psionics. They do not want to. Millions of Zhodani have died trying to free those people from Imperial domination. They died for something they believed in. The Supreme Council does not believe. They *Lied* to the Consulate. They Lied. They *LIED* to us. All those people: they all died for *NOTHING*." Baremkatalasche's voice rang with sarcasm. "They have said 'Absorbing those worlds would cost too much...' It will cost us more dearly in sons and daughters *NOT* to absorb them. We must Crush the Imperium before the Supreme Council turns us all into liars worse than the Imperials!" Malenkoviepr felt his stomach churn. "I do not believe you." Baremkatalasche' nodded sadly. "I am not surprised. The Supreme Council has covered their steps very well. They do not want the people to believe it." Malenkoviepr eyed Baremkatalasche's face closely. "You really believe that is true." "Doctor," sighed Baremkatalasche', "I've seen it. I *know* it is true." The two Citizens stared at each other. Silence rang over the room. Malenkoviepr leaned forward "Give me your thoughts." The colonel eyed the doctor askance. Malenkoviepr spread his hands. "If you believe what you say is true, then prove it to me." He looked the colonel in the eye and repeated his demand, "Give me your thoughts." Baremkatalasche' hesitated a moment and then nodded. Malenkoviepr stood and approached the colonel. For the first time in months Mako willingly dropped his psionic shield. The colonel felt a soft touch on his head as Malenkoviepr stretched his thoughts out into the world. A camera focused on the room would have seen nothing but two men staring at each other. What Mako saw was different. A swirling, shadowy cloak of electric blue surrounded them. It blotted out the universe as the white tendrils of the doctor's mind reached out for the colonel. Like a writhing mass of feathery snakes, the tendrils quickly attached themselves to the colonel's brain cocooning the mind, imprisoning the thoughts within. Mako then began to slowly open the colonel's mind up under the light of the search. Thoughts flashed through the air. Pictures. Sounds. Words. Feelings. Thoughts arched between them like lightning strokes that left burning afterimages in Mako's brain. Confusion swept over the doctor's probings. Something was odd here. That couldn't be the truth... Mako was careful. Baremkatalasche' was as strong a telepath as any. Someone in his class could decieve a probing. He had to be sure. He painstakingly combed through the colonel's mind searching for mistakes, something he'd missed, some sign of deception... Subjective hours later, Baremkatalasche' eyed Mako, who was deep in thought. "You believe me now." It was not a question. Malenkoviepr took a deep breath and let it out. "Yes." He pursed his lips, "What you told me is what you believe. It may indeed be true." Mako turned away. "I need to think." Copyright 1993, Scott Kellogg