[X] Discuss the Jin further, they are close allies of the Throne, and through them the west, and their representative here was not the most available, for numerous reasons.
Ultimately, the immediate concerns of the meeting we're stepping into is besides the point. The Jin are more relevant to the overarching tensions within the empire than the Zheng, at least as it applies to Emerald Seas interests. Which happen to be our interests. And where we're flying pretty blind.
The Jin are close allies of the throne, support the Sun to a degree we don't understand, have tensions with the Bai and near-murderous feud with the Xuan, both being allies/parties of interest to the Cai, and to us on a personal level. But other than a hazy outline, we don't understand these issues at all. And that impacts our ability to engage with the persons on the ground.
Time and again, issues with the Bai/Sun/Xuan/etc have been presented to us as Main Plot Intrigue™️ and then not gone anywhere, with us not engaging with any of the local agents/avatars of those higher conflicts. This has almost always been due to a lack of introductory information. It happened at multiple times throughout our time at the sect, both inner and outer, avoiding ever speaking of/to Sun Liling, the Meng/Bai conflict with Meng De, and so on. Most recently, it happened with Jin Tae himself, when we whiffed on getting Xuan Shi to speak on the Jin. Jin Tae then immediately fell off the face of the planet, and even when he's resurfaced, he's been nigh-automatically suppressed in the narrative because it's very busy and there's simply nothing to work off of, so no room to handle both introduction and playing out.
Like, it's a pretty big shame Jin Tae won't be in this Ducal action. It would have been fascinating. We'd get to see the contrasts and limitations of Jin support for the Western Territories juxtaposed with the Imperial bias towards the conventional, which Western jungle practices have to be pushing the limits of, sharpened into tighter focus by Jin Tae's position as a MoI trainee, who especially embody that bias. That would have been pretty cool! Extraordinarily useful too! You'd also have the Xuan vs. Jin dynamic in there. But the groundwork to make that possible with the crowded roster simply isn't there. It wasn't done. We didn't arm ourselves with the knowledge necessary.
So now we have an action that, while not entirely directionless, is basically a shadow of what it could have been. It's almost purely a Meizhen vs. Sun Liling show, now. Which is fine, but it's not great. Xuan Shi has nothing to do in the scene; he doesn't need to be reined in(not with regards to anyone actually present) and can't constrain anyone else who's here. Zheng Fu is more of a question mark, but besides verbal sparring with Meizhen and maybe being scandalously chill with jungle heresies, there's not much for him to do here either exactly because the Zheng are so disconnected. And we don't want him verbally sparring with Meizhen, because that just sucks up oxygen from the Bai vs. Sun dynamic that is actually related to the plot that's been trying and failing to get off of the ground for actual years, in-game and out.
Frankly, we don't have time for Zheng Fu's shit; especially if Ling Qi's going to continue being something of a dick towards him, which hearing a Bai clan-character assessment has 0 chance of changing for the better. I doubt it'll make it worse either, it just won't move the needle at all. There's no place for Xuan Shi and no space for Zheng Fu, in the action.
To summarize, the established constellation of Emerald Seas/Thousand Lakes/Western Territories/Peaks/Savage Seas/Alabaster Sands geopolitical tensions is anemic in terms of detail, needs all the help it can get, is directly relevant to the political issues the Sun are bringing to our doorstep, and has caused major narrative distortions every time it has been skipped over. This would be something like the 4th time.
It's past due. This isn't really a choice. The Zheng are a side show and need to clear out of the way or introduce themselves in a way that isn't mutually exclusive with a main plotline.