Madokami above. I go on vacation for one day.

On degemming as an action:

Let me begin this section by asserting it to be clear and obvious that action must be taken to prevent Rionna from doing harm to others. This is, at this point, not simply my own moral argument, but GM fiat.

Absent an extraordinary event, then:

-She must be prevented from using her magic. She has demonstrated by her words a willingness and ability to murder with it, ergo it must be denied to her.

-She must be prevented from re-obtaining her magic.

-We must not, in that process, allow her to witch out.

People, myself included, have in the past likened degemming to killing. But it is not killing: it is coma.

We have, to my eyes, at most two options here. We can keep Rionna concious and chained. Or we can separate her gem from her body.

There was, for a long time, an assumption on my part that the former was inherently more moral than the latter: that gemming someone was simply wrong as long as there was an alternative.

But that is a supposition based on a view that living is inherently good and enjoyable.

Before I changed my vote to Godwinson's, I asked myself this: would Rionna be happier in chains or gemmed?

Quite frankly, given that either option involves dissipating her shades, and goven what she has said, I cannot imagine that she would enjoy being concious, except for the advantage of being able to try to work against her imprisonment!

Give me a case otherwise! Show me where she has a pasttime, a care, beyond her own grief and her sister's killer. Show me some evidence that it would be more moral to chain her than to put her in a coma! Do this, instead of simply saying "we shouldn't do that." Because I simply said that, and I feel that that was fallacy.



On doing bad things:

Honestly, I expect Sayaka to be more eloquent than I on this topic.

We must restrain Rionna's ability to do evil, because she has expressed intention to use that ability to do evil. That is a moral imperative.

We must do her no unnecessary harm. That is a moral imperative.

As far as I am aware, that's it for morality, here in this section. Hospitality or guest right is another matter.

It has been heavily implied that Rionna did not and does not abide by these moral imperatives: "I raised the shade of my sister's killer," she said. This is depicted as unnecessary harm, as opposed to Sayaka's powers which are not. This raises the question: is necromancy evil in PMMM? For many of us the answer has been a resounding "Duh." For others, not so much.

It is my opinion that Firnagzen meant to portray the raising of shades as an action which was an inherent violation of "do no unnecessary harm" in a situation where the raising was not needed for protecting oneself or others. Frankly, I wish we would have just gotten a GM post on that, because then I wouldn't need to type this.

Did he succeed at portraying that? Many feel he did. Clearly, others do not. What he did succeed at portraying was showing that Rionna does not care whether or not she is abiding by "do no unnecessary harm" in her raising of shades. Her reply to us asking if the shades suffer was that she doesn't care. That alone should be enough to distinguish her from us in this matter, and it astounds me that people would claim otherwise. Someone with a declared ability and intention to commit murders whose response to the moral imperative of doing no unnecessary harm is "I don't care if I'm doing unnecessary harm or not" is OBVIOUSLY distinguishable from Sabrina's proposed actions here.



On hospitality and guest right:

Note that I do not have this section "on our word." We have given word that we will protect those who abide by our requests of being excellent to others, among other declarations. But we have given Rionna no promises and no guarantees, as she has given us none. If she had wanted she could have asked us on arrival for a mutual promise of hospitality, and we would have given it, because of course we would have!

It is worth remembering why she did no such thing: because she wanted to reserve the right to murder us. Because she came here expecting to murder us. Because she did not want to be our guest.

It reflects in what she has done, no? The attempt to affect our mind. The threats, the casual disregard...

And yet, some argue that we are her host, and that it is not our place to lower ourselves to that level. That we extended an unspoken guarantee to her when we did not turn her away on arrival. That her attack on us was justified by the implication that we were holding her.

It is a good argument. It rings true in certain ways. And yet it falls apart under inspection.

Let us suppose that we have a moral imperative to keep our word, and that we have given her an unspoken guarantee of safety for the duration of her stay.

We additionally have a moral imperative to not endanger people unnecessarily. So, lets say we threaten her so that she doesn't do anything for the duration of her stay. Okay.

When does her stay end?

Do we guarantee her safe passage home? Okay.

So we attack and subdue her in Edinburgh the next day and haul her back to Japan, in an operation that exerts twenty times as much stress on us and our friends, involves twenty times more danger for us, pushing at the moral imperatives of no unnecessary harm and not endamgering others unnecessarily, and produces... What difference?

And what does doing that make our unspoken guarantee, anyway? "You're safe as long as you don't go home, and as long as you abide by our demands while you're here"? That's no guest right.

So, no. I agree: we have an imperative to not break our word. But we've given no word, and any word one might say we've implied is at best ludicrous and at worst immoral.


Giving Rionna a chance:

What I understand this argument to actually mean is this: people making it think that if we let her go and put in a bunch of effort, we can convince her agree to the things we want without bloodshed.

First off, I want to say that I think the way this is being delivered is honestly pretty disingenuous, because what I'm seeing written on it amounts to "we might be able to accomplish this and we should try." There's no accounting of the complications involved or the difficulties or the risks. Nobody is suggesting a real plan for pursuing it beyond "let's try to talk with her on even ground and see what we can do."

And yet, there are clear complexities involved in it that we can already see, and which everyone suggesting it is ignoring.

Example: one of the key things we can basically assume Rionna won't budge on quickly, if at all, is the topic of her sister's killer's shade. She is, presumably, engaged in doing unnecessary harm to that shade/soul -- given all the "I raised her shade" and "I hate her" bits, I think she clearly *wants* to do that.

But nobody is mentioning the difficulty of getting her to give that up, only how we should talk with her on even ground.

The real question is, is there something we could do that she would agree to give up the shades and stop murdering for? And in part that has been answered -- she wants her sister back.

What isn't answered is whether or not she'd give up her shades -- including that of the killer -- for her sister. And, for that matter, whether she'd cooperate with us is also unanswered.

The only thing I've imagined which could bring back her sister would be a wish, because presumably she doesn't have her sister's shade, or she'd be trying to bring it back to life -- or so you'd think.

But suggesting a wish to her... There's little reason for her to give up what she has before or after hearing that suggestion. From what I've seen of her I don't think we can trust any deal with her around that.

Anybody saying we should "give her a chance" needs to first lay out a coherent plan for how to do that *and also how we should expect it will yield some result except her being a much tougher opponent.*
 
Gemming Rionna is the only way we can be reasonably certain of being able to detain her to begin with. Anything less leaves her with the potential ability to still pull something dangerous off.

And by 'reasonably certain' we mean 'we're resorting to an alpha strike with overwhelming force because Rionna is the single mostly likely magical girl to be able to stay conscious and keep fighting after her soul gem/body connection is severed'.
 
I'll maintain the first thing to come into contact with Riona after the anti magic blast should be the anti magic enchants, both on her body and soul gem. Much simpler to tag her with a bunch of chains/rope/duck tape enchanted with antimagic than trying to put the gem in a box.
That's a wonderful, wonderful typo. :rofl:

But you raise a good point. I'm going to think it a bit more. By the way, my own take would be on the likes of making a second privacy field in timestop, this time around Riona's soul gem to cut its connection with her body

For the Witchbomb part, Sayaka knows there's a secret we asked if she wanted to learn, so we can just ask whether she chose to learn the secret. (Of course, this kind of puts pressure on her in an unfair way.)
I'm worried about it, actually. I don't want to pressure Sayaka but I get Sayaka may agree on her own volition if we ask (in the sense of "I need to know you said I can take it, tell me"), she already seemed pretty convinced earlier.


And yet, some argue that we are her host, and that it is not our place to lower ourselves to that level. That we extended an unspoken guarantee to her when we did not turn her away on arrival. That her attack on us was justified by the implication that we were holding her.
It was me who raised that argument first, but your wording is imprecise, at least for my take on it. The argument was if we offered a meeting at a later time Riona would be our guest until that time (I said until the plane leaves, I mistyped): what I forgot to write was that right now Riona isn't our guest because she arrived to our turf uninvited.
 
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Gemming Rionna is the only way we can be reasonably certain of being able to detain her to begin with. Anything less leaves her with the potential ability to still pull something dangerous off.
I don't think that's true, actually. Given she's the Soulguca, I doubt de-Gemming her is enough. I think the most safe way to detain her is to, from timestop, tag her with Anti Magic Enchantments (in a way she can't take them off) so as to restrain her magic completely (tag both her body and Gem to be sure) and at the same time restrain her physically.

Also at the same time Anti Magic blast the area against dangerous shades.

Quite frankly, given that either option involves dissipating her shades, and goven what she has said, I cannot imagine that she would enjoy being concious, except for the advantage of being able to try to work against her imprisonment!

Give me a case otherwise! Show me where she has a pasttime, a care, beyond her own grief and her sister's killer. Show me some evidence that it would be more moral to chain her than to put her in a coma! Do this, instead of simply saying "we shouldn't do that." Because I simply said that, and I feel that that was fallacy.
I think at this point, if Riona's safely restrained, we should ask her, rather than decide this ourselves.

We could argue amongst ourselves whether Riona would prefer this or that, but if it's about what Riona would prefer, then as long as it doesn't compromise security, it's her we should ask, not ourselves.

If she wants to be conscious, or be in a coma, as long as neither makes her more dangerous, shouldn't it be her choice? This is part of humane imprisonment, which I believe is what we're going for.

So it would be more moral to chain her if, again, this didn't allow her to do more harm than being Gemmed, and she chose it.

Did he succeed at portraying that? Many feel he did. Clearly, others do not. What he did succeed at portraying was showing that Rionna does not care whether or not she is abiding by "do no unnecessary harm" in her raising of shades. Her reply to us asking if the shades suffer was that she doesn't care. That alone should be enough to distinguish her from us in this matter, and it astounds me that people would claim otherwise. Someone with a declared ability and intention to commit murders whose response to the moral imperative of doing no unnecessary harm is "I don't care if I'm doing unnecessary harm or not" is OBVIOUSLY distinguishable from Sabrina's proposed actions here.
There was the concern that Riona might have been in denial, which would make sense with saying 'I don't care' - because then if she did check whether the shades were suffering, had a conscience, and found they were, she'd despair.

Turns out she doesn't have a conscience, but the point was to not shove Conscience Riona and No Conscience Riona under the same rug.
 
Show me some evidence that it would be more moral to chain her than to put her in a coma!

If your argument is that placing in a coma may be more humane than imprisonment, and that this is a point in favour of coma, then the obvious solution would be to *let her choose* which of the two treatments (coma or imprisonment) she prefers.
 
That's a wonderful, wonderful typo. :rofl:
It's... not actually a typo. :V

wikipedia said:
Duct tape, also referred to as duck tape, is cloth- or scrim-backed pressure-sensitive tape, often coated with polyethylene.

And by 'reasonably certain' we mean 'we're resorting to an alpha strike with overwhelming force because Rionna is the single mostly likely magical girl to be able to stay conscious and keep fighting after her soul gem/body connection is severed'.
I mean, we could also purée her, Gem included. Darn our pesky morals. :p

Giving Rionna a chance:
I think we crossed past this point when we found out what her Wish seems to have been.

I've been thinking Riona's a case of Wish Mindwhammy, or close enough that the chance of us getting through to her before she's scheduled to leave, is somewhere around the realm of e elevated to the negative eighty seven.

Literally possible, I think around the realm of possibility that if you throw yourself against a wall, you'll come out the other side unharmed.

That's really it. Riona will kill if we don't forcefully stop her. I don't think that can be argued at this point.
 
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Gemming Rionna is the only way we can be reasonably certain of being able to detain her to begin with. Anything less leaves her with the potential ability to still pull something dangerous off.

Again the wording of the plan isn't about gemming her until we find a way to securely detain her (which I don't object to), it's about gemming her until we have the ability to try to rehabilitate her (which is the thing I object to).

The two ideas are VASTLY different. The second one about 'rehabilitation' implies that if we believe her to be beyond rehabilitation, she'll stay forever in the box.
 
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The thing I still don't get about Rionna is why she's even killing people nowadays. She has a lot of shades, a city to herself, and grief controllers won't bring her sister back because it's the wrong power-set. So why bother with them? Aside from the fact they are a threat to everyone around them, but thread consensus has already decided she's Evil so she probably doesn't care about that.

You could argue she's actually a serial killer, but if she was she'd be more insane. For example she wouldn't talk to us, because we're close enough to her target of choice that she couldn't help herself. She'd have opened with trying to steal our soul inside the privacy sphere.
 
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I mean, we could also purée her, Gem included. Darn our pesky morals. :p
I mean, I think our spar with Yuki showed pretty effectively that monomolecular razor clouds are fucking fantastic and that if conventional tactics don't prove effective we should render everything except her soul gem into a fine red mist. We can heal/reconstruct her afterwards, and it ought to get the message across that 'you done fucked up'.
 
As post-humans, we inherit all of what humanity has to offer. In the case of setting a limit upon our use of de-gemming, we might use a fixed time interval as a standard, instead of a relative (and somewhat utilitarian) definition? We have "schedules" as a concept, no need to invent "term" for this one case, the concept is here already. The point of debating this is to become able to restrain our own bad choices. If we force ourselves to periodically deal with our issues, we are likely to seek the correct solution at some point?

We will not need to use de-gemming, if we prepare for other means well.

Mind, I think that Rionna CAN be restrained alive, once we get rid of her Batcave and other resources. If her magic is down, and there are no more Shades, she is just a very angry combat cyborg, like every other one. Not special without her powers.
 
I mean, I think our spar with Yuki showed pretty effectively that monomolecular razor clouds are fucking fantastic and that if conventional tactics don't prove effective we should render everything except her soul gem into a fine red mist. We can heal/reconstruct her afterwards, and it ought to get the message across that 'you done fucked up'.
The problem* would be that that doesn't actually stop her from using magic, just as de-Gemming her wouldn't. She's prime candidate to being able to function as a gem. :p

*Other problems also exist.
 
It'd also make a hell of a mess. :V
"Sabrina are you OK?!"

"YES! I AM! DO NOT COME INTO THE BUBBLE!"

"You don't sound OK-"

"I'M OK MAMI JUST DON'T COME IN. I need... I need a shower, god this is gross."

"What's...?"

"But I need to stay inside this bubble so I need to go into trance for half an hour. I need a sonic shower. Just wait out there, OK?"

"But-"

"And don't peek!"

*Splutters and blushes incoherently*
 
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If your argument is that placing in a coma may be more humane than imprisonment, and that this is a point in favour of coma, then the obvious solution would be to *let her choose* which of the two treatments (coma or imprisonment) she prefers.

Why are you advocating so strongly for treating a demonstrably unreasonable and amoral person as though she will be listening to reason?

All you are doing is pushing for courses that place us and our friends at incredible risk for basically no gain whatsoever.
 
*looks at current leading vote*

Waitwaitwaitwaitwaitwaitwait!!!!

Doesn't having Sayaka copy Riona's powers automatically witchbomb her the second she sees a witch???? Shouldn't we wait to see if she actually wants to know the witchbomb, before telling it to her?
 
Why are you advocating so strongly for treating a demonstrably unreasonable and amoral person as though she will be listening to reason?

All you are doing is pushing for courses that place us and our friends at incredible risk for basically no gain whatsoever.
I don't follow Aris other arguments, but at least the part you quoted is pretty clear: If Kai is really saying we should choose between Gemming and restraining for Riona based on what Riona would prefer...

would Rionna be happier in chains or gemmed?

Quite frankly, given that either option involves dissipating her shades, and goven what she has said, I cannot imagine that she would enjoy being concious, except for the advantage of being able to try to work against her imprisonment!

Give me a case otherwise! Show me where she has a pasttime, a care, beyond her own grief and her sister's killer. Show me some evidence that it would be more moral to chain her than to put her in a coma! Do this, instead of simply saying "we shouldn't do that." Because I simply said that, and I feel that that was fallacy.
This sounds really dishonest.

Whether Riona would be happier in chains or gemmed is something that's literally only up to Riona.

Kai's opinion, not the one opinion that matters if we want to decide what would make Riona 'happier'.

This is an actual argument, but one that has nothing to do with the rest of this quote, nothing to do with Riona's happiness. If Kai wanted to argue that Riona should be Gemmed because that's safer, that makes complete sense. Divorced from the question of Riona's happiness. Together, these two arguments make no sense whatsoever.

The third paragraph, with exclamation marks and demands and such, combined with the rest, makes this look thoroughly dishonest. Like a preacher trying to convince a multitude by yelling grandiously, but not actually saying things that make sense.

Should we Gem Riona to make it harder for her to escape? I'd say that'd be safest, but not that much safer than applying Anti Magic Enchantments to Riona's Gem and Body, and restraining Riona's body physically. Still a point that could maybe help in making sure Riona can be transported to prison more safely.

Should we decide ourselves whether Riona would be happier Gemmed or chained? No, not at all, that doesn't make sense. To start with, just about literally anyone would prefer to be conscious than not, unless they were in heavy pain, so wut?

*looks at current leading vote*

Waitwaitwaitwaitwaitwaitwait!!!!

Doesn't having Sayaka copy Riona's powers automatically witchbomb her the second she sees a witch???? Shouldn't we wait to see if she actually wants to know the witchbomb, before telling it to her?
Yes.
 
I don't follow Aris other arguments, but at least the part you quoted is pretty clear: If Kai is really saying we should choose between Gemming and restraining for Riona based on what Riona would prefer...

This sounds really dishonest.
That's a fair point, though I will remain with Kai's vote for the moment largely because I believe that it I see a safer option.

If we want to go into what Rionna would prefer then I think it's obvious she'd choose whatever gave her the most agency, but she would do so not for the sake of comfort in prison but rather for the sake of attempting to effect an escape at the earliest possible point she can expect to succeed at such.
 
I'd have the rest of the group a bit more agency, but that's just me nitpicking. For now:

[X] Onmur

Apologies for not having read your current plan properly before.
 
I think it's obvious she'd choose whatever gave her the most agency, but she would do so not for the sake of comfort in prison but rather for the sake of attempting to effect an escape at the earliest possible point she can expect to succeed at such.
... But also because of course she doesn't want to be held in a magical coma. :V

Well, I'd give her high odds of being aware as a Gem, so more like, she wouldn't want to be deprived of her senses and exist in a void of darkness for any length of time.
 
... But also because of course she doesn't want to be held in a magical coma. :V

Well, I'd give her high odds of being aware as a Gem, so more like, she wouldn't want to be deprived of her senses and exist in a void of darkness for any length of time.

I still don't follow why being aware as a gem is just being assumed so readily, we have seen nothing to suggest that to be the case, and I suspect she's never been gemmed before in her life, so even if she is theoretically capable of it, she would still need to learn how.

That said, I have one nitpick.

--[X] Make sure Riona remains time-stoped at all times.

Maybe it's just me, but this part of the vote feels like it can be read as keeping her active in timestop, I dunno why, it just scans funny to me.

Also, 'stopped'. Two 'p's.

[x] Onmur
Adhoc vote count started by Spectral Waltz on Sep 12, 2018 at 4:40 PM, finished with 759 posts and 50 votes.

  • [X] Use grief to communicate with Mami, have her call for Homura to timestop now. Give Rionna no time outside of the privacy field to send commands to her shades.
    -[X] While doing this, continue speaking to Rionna so as to distract her from what you're doing. Get her attention focused entirely on you.
    [X] Once in timestop, explain shade hazard then create a griefhax soul viewing effect (like the one used to observe Oriko's soul), and use it to avoid any lingering shades, then bring in Sayaka. Explain what you've learned about Rionna to them. You're not going to let that stand.
    -[X] Explain plan to team, ask for input and advice.
    --[X] Plan: Have Sayaka or Kirika enchant an antimagic box that suppresses Rionna's magic (and not our group's). Timestop degem Rionna immediately into the box while blasting antimagic at her. Have Sayaka try to copy Rionna's magic, so that we can try to put the shades to rest, and have access to someone who can diagnose soul maladies on hand. Keep Rionna's body stored in Homura's shield or our hammerspace for the foreseeable future, until we've got enough other girls working with us, and stability, to try to rehabilitate her.
    [X] If anything goes wrong during this plan, and Rionna looks to become combat capable again, immediately degem with all needed force.
    [X] null
    [X] Act. Visibly restrain yourself. Agree verbally to leave her alone, but ask what she tried to do, first. Keep Riona unbalanced.
    [X] At the same time, signal Mami to tag you and Homura and have Homura activate her magic.
    -[X] If Riona is somehow included in timestop:
    --[X] Act first: Detain Riona with Grief Fog, take the Gem, threaten to break it.
    --[X] If anything goes wrong, no holds barred. Purée her. Save the Gem unless Riona still tries to attack.
    --[X] Otherwise, continue.
    [X] In timestop:
    -[X] Consult Mami on the danger of tripping Riona's shades. Explain briefly. Employ Grief hax if needed.
    -[X] Leave, convene with Mami and Homura.
    --[X] Make sure Riona remains time-stoped at all times.
    --[X] Things went wrong, get Sayaka and go to Oriko's. Insist if needed.
    --[X] Get Kirika to enchant everything you might need to antimagic Riona, Gem and body.*
    --[X] Explain eveything. Avoid Social Bombs.
    -[X] Plan (listen to opinions):
    --[X] Blast Riona and her surrounding area with Anti Magic (Sayaka and Kirika).
    --[X] Use Anti Magic restraints on Riona and her Gem.
    --[X] Restrain Riona completely.
    --[X] Mami and Homura know their roles better than you do.
    -[X] Enact plan.
    [X] Call Mami for an emergency timestop meeting.
    [X] On timestop, make sure the whole group (Homura, Mami and Sayaka) is in the meeting
    [X] Discuss the situation in timestop with Homura, Mami, and Sayaka.
    [X] Kill her
    [x] Fine. Release the isolation field.
    [x] Tell Riona you regret that she wasn't able to find what she was searching for here.
    [x] Given the circumstance, while it's regrettable, I agree it's best that you leave Mitakihara at your earliest convenience. Further I must insist that you don't create anymore shades in our city for any reason or I'm afraid conflict will be unavoidable. That said, wish her a good night.
    [x] Leave with Mami. You're done here.
    [x] When you're out a considerable range from Riona, contact Homura by phone for a timestop meeting. Update Homura and Mami of the situation. You weren't able to come to any agreement with Riona. Bring up Riona's intentions to leave in the morning and threat assessment. Avoid social bombs.
    [x] Ensure she doesn't leave this bubble under her own power, either by calling a meeting and then alpha-striking her or by alpha-striking her right now.
    [X] Shrug casually
    -[X] Alright. Wasn't planning on keeping you trapped anyways, anti-spy zone is for spies like QB, not you.
    --[X] Release the field, hug Mami, telepathically request time-stop.
    ---[X] Discuss.
    [X] Cleansing offer.
    [X] If that's so, then when and why did she go from seeking justice to judging people without knowing their crimes, unjustly taking other people's sisters? When did she give up, and start spending her time inflicting pain instead of trying to get her sister back?
    [X] Don't allow her to leave. Don't allow her to harm you. Don't allow her to harm herself. Use all means necessary.
    [X] Talk to her:
    -[X] There are/were options. Just as an example, she could have cut a deal with a potential, that she would fulfill their wish and some in exchange for them using their wish to bring back her sister. Somebody somewhere would go for it. Healing is a common enough wish, and not difficult to provide.
    -[X] Argue that the only thing she's accomplished with her current track has been to inflict pain on others and deny herself any hope of getting what she actually wants.
    -[X] Argue that the incubator tries to provoke isolation and infighting for a reason: less cooperation means less chance of people getting what they want, and thus better rates of witching. She could always punish the architect if she's not satisfied yet. A shot at that, you can provide.
    [X] Agree to end the meeting shortly.
    -[X] Tell Riona you regret that she wasn't able to find what she was searching for here.
    [X] Release the Field.
    [X] Before letting her be, call her out and get concessions in exchange for her actions, without pissing her off too badly:
    -[X] Priority: Arrange a new meeting before she leaves, with plenty of time to spare.
    -[X] Priority: She does not attack nor use magic against anyone in Mitakihara.
    -[X] She'll answer all our questions next meeting.
    [X] Go. Once you're away:
    -[X] Timestop meeting. Include Sayaka.
    -[X] Explain everything. Avoid social bombs. Don't take sides, be impartial.
    [X] Use grief to communicate with Mami, request immediate timestop. Give Rionna no time outside of the privacy field to send commands to her shades.
    -[X] While doing this, continue speaking to Rionna so as to distract her from what you're doing. Get her attention focused entirely on you.
    [X] Once in timestop, create a griefhax soul viewing effect (like the one used to observe Oriko's soul), and use it to avoid any lingering shades. Go bring in Sayaka. Explain what you've learned about Rionna to them. You're not going to let that stand.
    -[X] Explain plan to team, ask for input and advice.
    --[X] Plan: Obtain an antimagic box that suppresses Rionna's magic (and not ours) using Kirika's enchantment. Timestop degem Rionna immediately into the box, with an antimagic pulse from Sayaka active as you do. Have Sayaka try to copy Rionna's magic, so that we can try to put the shades to rest, and have access to someone who can diagnose soul maladies on hand. Keep Rionna's body in stasis in Homura's shield, until we've got enough other girls working with us, and stability, to try to rehabilitate her.
    [X] If anything goes wrong during this plan, and Rionna looks to become combat capable again, immediately degem with all needed force.
    [X] Your power is to enslave and torment other magical girls?
    - [X] If you continue on this path, it will lead to conflict between us in future.
    [X] But for now, you came to Mitakihara in peace, and we'll ask you to leave in peace.
    - [X] If we can get your word to leave Mitakihara in peace, we'll drop the shield and escort you to the airport.
    [X] add to TODO list: develop soul shielding, liberate Edinburgh.
    [X] Your power is to enslave and torment other magical girls?
    - [X] If you continue on this path, it will lead to conflict between us in future.
    [X] But for now, you came to Mitakihara in peace, and we'll ask you to leave in peace.
    - [X] If we can get your word to leave Mitakihara in peace, we'll drop the shield and escort you to the airport.
    [X] add to TODO list: develop soul shielding, liberate Edinburgh.
 
I'd have the rest of the group a bit more agency, but that's just me nitpicking. For now:

[X] Onmur

Apologies for not having read your current plan properly before.
While you're here... did you develop any thoughts on Sayaka and copying Riona?

My only take right now would be something like:

[] If Riona's successfully detained, don't drop timestop.
-[] Pull Sayaka aside. Make sure to not be overheard. Ask whether she decided whether to learn the secret or not.
--[] Do your best to not pressure her.
-[] If she says yes, carefully explain the Witchbomb, with emphasis on the fact you're fixing it, and that Sayaka can help.
--[] Ask Sayaka to copy Riona (while Riona's still Anti-Magicked).
---[] If that works, ask her to try and take control of the shades for future reviving.

It's kind of... content for more than an update on its own? I guess that doesn't matter, but it's such a sensitive topic, it feels bad to not dedicate an update to Sayaka's Witchbombing.
 
I still don't follow why being aware as a gem is just being assumed so readily, we have seen nothing to suggest that to be the case, and I suspect she's never been gemmed before in her life, so even if she is theoretically capable of it, she would still need to learn how.

For me, it's more about threat assessment. We have a safer way to contain Riona than Gemming her: Anti Magic bindings.

Slap those on her, her Gem, and restrain her physically at the same time, and she'll be just as harmless as if she was de-Gemmed and she didn't know how to act as a Gem.

These can all be done at the same time with enough precision. From timestop? Instant action.

Meanwhile, if we Gem her, there's a chance she'll still be active afterwards. Maybe not a big chance, but one that exists...

Maybe it's just me, but this part of the vote feels like it can be read as keeping her active in timestop, I dunno why, it just scans funny to me.
Maybe I shouldn't use the phrase 'at all times'? :thonk:

How about this?

--[X] Make sure Riona remains time-stopped without fail.
 
All you are doing is pushing for courses that place us and our friends at incredible risk for basically no gain whatsoever.

No, that's a complete misrepresentation of my positions.

I initially pushed for deescalation. Not fighting Riona at all, until we had a significantly stronger force and more international allies, and perhaps an established ruleset of forbidden behaviours to go along with our interventionist international policy. This has been vetoed since, but it would probably be the safest course.

*Then* in deciding between Onmur and Kaizuki's votes, part of the reason I similarly voted for Kaizuki's plan was greater comparative safety:
If Riona must be imprisoned either today or tomorrow, then today is safer for all of us.

It's only now at this latest argument that you can claim me to be going for an unsafe course, but I have confirmed time and again that I'm okay with gemming Riona *until she can be safely detained*.

So again I'm not asking for anything that's even one iota more *unsafe* from our perspective. What i'm pushing for might just not be as *convenient* as putting Riona in a box and then forgetting about her.

What I'm constantly doing is pushing for rules of behaviour. Rules guard against treating our 'wants' (our personal grievance, our personal outrage, our personal convenience) as if they are shoulds. Taking our mere greater *convenience* and making it a moral imperative, as people are sometimes biased to do.

In this case if the more convenient thing to do is presented as *coincidentally* as also the more humane thing to do, then it's time to double-check our judgement. A similar real-life argument (death penalty being supposedly more humane than imprisonment) is usually similarly answered by me with 'why don't you let the convict make that choice then?'
 
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