Galliard: Difference between revisions
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Major public debate has been growing regarding the "Topiary problem," with a general understanding that Galliard's significance in the cluster would be much greater if the entity were somehow better managed, paid off, destroyed, or some other hypothetical. | Major public debate has been growing regarding the "Topiary problem," with a general understanding that Galliard's significance in the cluster would be much greater if the entity were somehow better managed, paid off, destroyed, or some other hypothetical. | ||
The superrich often contract "indents" - indentured workers - with the promise of possibly working on the system's garden world. Indents have "voluntarily agreed" to assert no rights, and grant their vote to their employer by proxy for a set period of time. This is often functionally | The superrich often contract "indents" - indentured workers - with the promise of possibly working on the system's garden world. Indents have "voluntarily agreed" to assert no rights, and grant their vote to their employer by proxy for a set period of time. This is often functionally becomes indefinite as debt for holidays, luxuries, and other supplies accumulate and are unable to be paid at the end of the indent's initial contracted term. | ||
==== Aspects ==== | ==== Aspects ==== |
Revision as of 21:33, 4 December 2014
Slipstream Links
Green Sun, Hammerhead, Old Terra
Stats
- +2 Technology (slipstream use)
- +2 Environment (one garden, several survivable)
- +2 Resources (one significant export)
Background
The two largest rival corporate-government alliances - Esten and Wogar - competed to exploit the local system. It looked like war was brewing, but the discovery of slipstream drive came in time to divert their energies outwards. Now they compete to exploit other systems!
It's a stratified society with the veneer of representative rule. The main garden planet is the exclusive domain of the super-rich; most industries, and their workers, are based off the survivable worlds. While against slavery of people, their laws do not define non-humans as people. That said, this and other laws do not seem to apply to the whims of the super-rich.
Major public debate has been growing regarding the "Topiary problem," with a general understanding that Galliard's significance in the cluster would be much greater if the entity were somehow better managed, paid off, destroyed, or some other hypothetical.
The superrich often contract "indents" - indentured workers - with the promise of possibly working on the system's garden world. Indents have "voluntarily agreed" to assert no rights, and grant their vote to their employer by proxy for a set period of time. This is often functionally becomes indefinite as debt for holidays, luxuries, and other supplies accumulate and are unable to be paid at the end of the indent's initial contracted term.
Aspects
- A house divided
- Don't threaten the revenue stream
- Lawful and orderly