Steve wrote:International cooperation on determining what actually makes an organization an international-scope terrorist group that needs international cooperation to take down is fine. Cascadia will not be party to any agreement that places requirements upon its own justice system in terms of terrorism suspects, though. We won't be extraditing suspects without trial for King Alexander to shoot on international TV.
It would be nice to hear this in character, because the whole conference has ground to a halt, and this is a
very relevant concern that the Cascadian delegate(s) would be wise and in-character to raise.
What is the particular of the "international insurance" plan? Is it something like a World Bank or international reconstruction fund?
Nobody knows, because literally nothing has been said about the matter since Maddoctor brought it up. Have any suggestions? I'd be very interested to hear them in character.
Siege wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:Siege's input is highly relevant, and I'd like the words of his characters to affect how such an organization defines terrorists.
I'm finding it difficult to articulate the San Doradan position on terrorism. A major element of the common definition of 'terrorism' is the intimidation of government through (threat of) force. But San Dorado rejects the paramountcy of the nation-state, so where does that leave us?
Many definitions of 'terrorism' are quite easily applied to the megacorporations of San Dorado too: after all, they regularly arm-twist national governments too. Simply put we don't agree with the commonly held axiom that government has a monopoly on force but it's obvious that we're a minority in that respect and we aren't so daft as to argue on behalf of terrorists in the capital a big business partner that was hit by a major terror attack only a few weeks prior. So for now we're just going to silently watch and learn and object to anything too invasive.
Well, you've
already had an impact on the debate by having your guy argue for "outlaw by actions, not by concepts." So even if you just hang around and maybe pop in with that one or two more times, it counts. I'm glad you're in on this conference.
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POSTSCRIPT NOTE:
Perhaps ironically and amusingly, the Umerians might actually be among the few people you could feasibly ally with in acknowledging that this whole 'well gee, what about non-state actors that are worried about terrorism being defined to prevent them from ever doing anything ever because governments don't like competition?
This is because they have just as many bitter experiences of being screwed by foreign governments as by foreign corporations. And because they reserve the right to say 'walks like a duck, quacks like a duck' to any entity powerful enough to move and shake on a national scale.
The flip side of that is that they reserve the right to... hm. Let me give a
purely random example. The Umerians feel that they would be well within their rights to declare war on SinGen and use literally all available resources pursuant to that aim, if they think the megacorp is facilitating an alien invasion. Just as they would declare war if, say, Shinra were doing such a thing.
Now, they wouldn't
do that just because Acheron pissed in their Champan coffee once or twice, or anything dumb like that. But if they feel like they're facing an existential threat from a problem that is not a state (or even not a human entity, something like climate change)... well, they have no more problem declaring war on Monsanto or war on drugs than they do declaring war on Hakistan.
On the other hand, unlike, say, the US, they would
really prosecute this war with the serious intent of securing their own people from the problem, using whatever strategies their analysts can devise, and accepting considerable sacrifices and tradeoffs in order to do so. That's what war
means to a Umerian technocrat. It means a lot of pain's going to be going around, and that the only way to ensure that the bulk of the pain doesn't land on your own side is by being very, very clever and resourceful and organized.