tellmejohn: (Promises)
Scorpius ([personal profile] tellmejohn) wrote2012-04-04 12:39 pm

-2

[Written]

[...Okay so two days in he is by now aware that something is up. He recalls what the good doctor had told him at the New Feather Party and, frankly, he's very interested in the idea of changed memories. Being too pointed in either doubting or disproving would be bunk for a study though. So... right now he's gather testimonies, make a case study.

In Luceti, it seems common for people to ask blatant questions over a public network like this. so. He'll just write this thing. If people resist for whatever reason, oh well. If they go for it, that'll be interesting.

And as such:]


Would any of the people here be willing to tell me about their childhoods? I confess I am curious about how the personal experiences of beings might be different between different realities.
redjacketthief: @ starkxravingxmad (sigh)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-06 02:07 am (UTC)(link)
[The intelligence officer sighs at this question.] The end of the Clone Wars was the start of a long opressive rule by an Empire that, even thirty years later, we're fighting against. Even as a kid at the time, I knew my best shot was to get to a different planet. Even if it's in Hutt Space. It wasn't a bad childhood...but Taris is on the Outer Rim. Too far from anything interesting in the Galaxy.
redjacketthief: (--red-- brooding)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-06 02:17 am (UTC)(link)
The Empire wanted as little to do with the Rim as they could. It was simply too far away, and their base on Coruscant was at the Core. It was a logical realization, really. I didn't want to stay stuck on the lower levels of that city world for my entire life.
redjacketthief: (--red-- over the shoulder)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-06 02:35 am (UTC)(link)
It's politics, and boring. The long and short of it is that there were senators that didn't agree with the Emperor and started working on their own covert splinter group to subvert it. I, personally, joined because it sounded like a good way to use my skills as a slicer, and dying fighting against the Empire sounded like a much better fate than any death granted by the Hutts.

I haven't died yet, and it's been pretty interesting. I can't complain too much.
redjacketthief: (whine)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-06 03:39 am (UTC)(link)
Have you ever managed to piss off several pieces of a societal infrastructure based on crime? I did. It nearly did cost me a few times, too.
redjacketthief: (--red-- over the shoulder)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-06 03:57 am (UTC)(link)
Allowances? That's an interesting word to use. What do you mean?
redjacketthief: (--red-- in the rain)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-06 04:02 am (UTC)(link)
Benefiting the needs of a greater cause...

That sort of action, though, sounds like it would earn you a lot of enemies. Not everyone has that kind of foresight.
redjacketthief: (--red-- in the rain)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-06 12:54 pm (UTC)(link)
[He was a survivor because he made his work as discreet as he could manage. With Luke Skywalker repeatedly asking for his assistance, it was a difficult task to manage. While he's maintaining an even tone, the conversation with Scorpius had taken a turn that rankled him on a deep, instinctual level.]

That kind of foresight you're talking about, however, can be easily manifested in cruelty for the 'greater cause.' That's how men like the Emperor and Darth Vader came into power--that, and they took out almost the entirety of an order of what some here in the enclosure would describe as warrior monks. Their presence was begnign, helpful even, but the Emperor feared that they would ruin his plan.

[That was Jedi Business, though. That was the extent of what he knew, despite working closely with Luke Skywalker in gathering Force Sensitives and starting a New Order.]
Edited 2012-04-06 12:54 (UTC)
redjacketthief: (--red-- brooding)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-07 02:25 am (UTC)(link)
I see...

[If circumstances aligned, Red saw no reason to have this man by his side--if under close watch. There was something that still felt wrong about the man, something he knew only on an instinctual level. Years of working undercover has honed his social literacy. But, with audio alone, he wasn't certain. So much depended on how a person moved as well.]

That automatically puts your organization in a different category. At least you're smart enough to see how the complications such a decision would cause.
Edited 2012-04-07 02:25 (UTC)
redjacketthief: @ narben (smirk-- challenge accepted)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-08 08:56 pm (UTC)(link)
[But who's peace was being preserved? Who's sense of order? Red is smart enough to not ask these questions right yet--best to play it cool for now.]

What's there that's interesting to say about the Hutts and Nar Shaddaa? The Hutts are, in essence, crime lords. They have embedded themselves into the society in such a way that, even if someone did try to fight them, they wouldn't get far. The policing organizations can do nothing against it, so it is in essence a game of working for the highest bidder and doing what you can to get by. Nar Shaddaa is the moon of their homeworld, Nal Hutta--and both are dominated by a sprawling, multi-leveled metropolis. Being in the mid rim rather than the outer rim, it is quite the impressive compared even to Taris, which is similar.

Both pale in comparison to Coruscant, at the Galactic Core.

Otherwise, my time with them was nothing truely notable. It was probably similar to the lives of many freelancers who found their way into such employment.
redjacketthief: (too bad)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-08 11:55 pm (UTC)(link)
The Hutts weren't a threat because they did their own thing. The Empire left them alone because the Hutts had no reason to do anything--in fact, the regime probably helped their business.
redjacketthief: (imitatingtheloungeking2)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-09 12:41 am (UTC)(link)
Because their power stemmed from the same source as the Emperor's? It's more complicated than that, but the records have been altered or destroyed. I don't know much more with any certainty.
redjacketthief: (what are you going to do about it?)

[voice]

[personal profile] redjacketthief 2012-04-09 01:05 am (UTC)(link)
The rebellion didn't have much luck until about ten years ago, when through willpower, luck and the blood of many lives lost pulled through and we destroyed the first of their Death Stars. They're space stations with enough firepower to annihilate a planet in one blow.

They used the peaceful planet, Alderaan, as an example. The citizens of that world had done nothing.

...that sort of action wasn't uncommon for them.

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