- Location
- United States
Ah, yeah. Alright, I see why that'd be tempting.At least in part, Viserys happened with the show of how powerful blood magic is.
Ah, yeah. Alright, I see why that'd be tempting.At least in part, Viserys happened with the show of how powerful blood magic is.
I'm curious on what exactly happened in the Azure Court that all of a sudden they're trying to collect all the blood magic.
Fair enough, but reassigning him to Antarctica is in line with how we punished these things in the past.We're not in the habit of punishing people for past crimes after they've stopped them and started working for us, but this guy did drop the ball pretty badly here.
He had to know where he was going to be heading for this assignment, and that his own history might be a problem, but didn't provide any of that very important information to his superiors. If he had we'd have stationed him somewhere where he hadn't conducted god damn slave raids.
Even if we don't want to open the can of worms that is punishing him for pre imperial era crimes that particular fuck up is more than worth getting stripped of his position and sent home in disgrace.
A person in his position needs to be willing to actively report any personal information that could reasonably interfere with the interests of the office they work for.
[X] Strip him of his position in the Silver Serpent and send him home in disgrace
If his mistake was more or less private I'd be on board with that but he gambled with the Imperium's diplomatic position and publicly lost, so I think the situation warrants using his punishment to mitigate some of the damage he did.Fair enough, but reassigning him to Antarctica is in line with how we punished these things in the past.
I mainly don't want to have people thinking that we bowed to foreign pressure here and punish someone for old crimes.If his mistake was more or less private I'd be on board with that but he gambled with the Imperium's diplomatic position and publicly lost, so I think the situation warrants using his punishment to mitigate some of the damage he did.
It's not much, but it's something at least.
That's my thinking as well here.I mainly don't want to have people thinking that we bowed to foreign pressure here and punish someone for old crimes.
Yeah, I can agree with that. @BronzeTongue has a good point.Compromise:
[X] Have him dismissed from diplomatic service entirely. He has shown extremely bad judgment by being silent about his history in regards to the Summer Isles and thus become untrustworthy.
I don't think he actively lied. He probably mentioned having done slave raids in the past, but nobody cross checked when assignments were made.I dont know the full extent of our laws on this but isnt LYING about his background to get into the job illegal and punishable by us?
That works for me. I get the desire to avoid looking like the Summer Islands pressured us into doing something, but letting this guy walk after fucking up something this basic about his job rubs me the wrong way.Compromise:
[X] Have him dismissed from diplomatic service entirely. He has shown extremely bad judgment by being silent about his history in regards to the Summer Isles and thus become untrustworthy.
Yeah. I feel the same. Reassignment somewhere unpleasant would have been some measure of punishment, but not quite as big of a slap as I'd preferred.That works for me. I get the desire to avoid looking like the Summer Islands pressured us into doing something, but letting this guy walk after fucking up something this basic about his job rubs me the wrong way.
Maybe we should also consider circulating a memo (one pointedly lacking any level of classification) detailing some basic standards regarding reporting personal history and current entanglements that are relevant to their positions around our various offices as well.
We'd get some improved professional standards out of it, and the whole thing would probably be in the hands of the most worried members of the nobility by the end of the day hopefully nipping any stupid reactions to this incident at the bud.
[X] Azel
I don't think he actively lied. He probably mentioned having done slave raids in the past, but nobody cross checked when assignments were made.
He should have said something though, the idiot.
I hope Rhaella's going to force her underlings to be more thorough with background checks from now on.He did indeed mention that he served under such and such captain, including on slaving journeys, but no one was going to check the undocumented accounts that were already several years old before the Imperium was a gleam in Viserys' eye. The man basically wrote 'pirate' in the proverbial box marked prior experience, it was assumed to cover things like that, just not where.
I hope Rhaella's going to force her underlings to be more thorough with background checks from now on.
Why are we using guys like him for that in the first place? We have plenty of other people in ACSEC and Red Scales Holding that would be way safer than sending former pirates.He was not her underling directly. He was (technically still is as of right now) a Silver Serpent employee whose job it was to show all the economic benefits of closer collaboration with the Imperium, not at that specific feast of course but more broadly.