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DF Reference Collection / Re: Something from the beginning of Cold Days that really bothered me(spoilers, duh)
« on: November 22, 2013, 03:12:55 PM »
it appears that many who are troubled by the events in the original post are missing the forest because they are totally occupied with the mainicured garden. Stated otherwise, they are trying to apply rules from one carefully defined structure (Western Judeo-Christian human culture) to an entirely different and much less constrained structure ( The (Unseelie) Winter faerie culture, as defined by Jim based on historical references)
Why in the world would the rules be even vaguely similar? Because they used to be humans (some of them)? what if none of them were Western Humans, what if they were from the Assyrian empire ( look it up, arguably the longest lasting, and most viciously cruel human society that ever existed, over 1000 years)? what if they were from the Mongolian empire of Genghis Kahn, where there were many laws, but the punishment for almost all of them was death?
What if they just followed the one law all living creatures do, that if it can kill you, you leave it alone, unless you are forced into a confrontation?
in a society defined by never trust anyone, never turn your back on anyone, might makes right and the strong can have whatever they can take (well defined in the chapters preceding the party), and the only real rule is to not upset those who can kill you (say, Mab), then you define your place in that hierarchy by killing. Its that simple. As many as you need to, or want to, or are forced to not exceed.
you can also be defined by not being able to kill but being protected by another who can (see "marriage" in less well regulated societies than the ones in the modern West)
The world we live in and the one Jim writes in are defined by the aggressive use of force, those who can use it, and their victims or dependents who will not or cannot.
Why in the world would the rules be even vaguely similar? Because they used to be humans (some of them)? what if none of them were Western Humans, what if they were from the Assyrian empire ( look it up, arguably the longest lasting, and most viciously cruel human society that ever existed, over 1000 years)? what if they were from the Mongolian empire of Genghis Kahn, where there were many laws, but the punishment for almost all of them was death?
What if they just followed the one law all living creatures do, that if it can kill you, you leave it alone, unless you are forced into a confrontation?
in a society defined by never trust anyone, never turn your back on anyone, might makes right and the strong can have whatever they can take (well defined in the chapters preceding the party), and the only real rule is to not upset those who can kill you (say, Mab), then you define your place in that hierarchy by killing. Its that simple. As many as you need to, or want to, or are forced to not exceed.
you can also be defined by not being able to kill but being protected by another who can (see "marriage" in less well regulated societies than the ones in the modern West)
The world we live in and the one Jim writes in are defined by the aggressive use of force, those who can use it, and their victims or dependents who will not or cannot.