Racing the Darkness: A Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri Fan Fiction Photoessay


Raiding hulls being fitted out at Morgan Shipworks, buyer unknown.

Violent weather was the norm above Planet's small oceans. Signal range was poor and visibility poorer still. A perfect breeding ground for piracy.

This pair of low-visibility gunboats use watertight hulls rated for submersible operations at depths of up to 50 meters.

The dual-cannon turret being hoisted by the foreground crane was an oddity. Retractable conventional weapons mounts posed problems of maintenance and resupply that ship designers sought continuously to overcome. Within a century of Planetfall, most warships used solid-state, high-power radio frequency directed energy weapons. Despite a steep reduction in range when compared to gunpowder artillery, these systems were both mechanically simple and highly effective for area defense.


Lt. Shoshana Araujo, Observer Squadron Resh, Gaia's Landing.

Aerial photo-reconnaissance was critical to optimizing base operations during the colonial period. Pilots ran herd on detached work crews, flew border patrol missions too dangerous for leg infantry, and tracked the movements of xenobiologicals.


The fullest expressions of the anti-humanist sentiments that cost Miriam Godwinson her judgeship were made manifest in The Mistake, a Conclavist installation built to emphasize that no machines built by men could ever truly exceed them.​

Sources:
First image is "Hyundai Heavy Industries" by Wu-Gene on DeviantArt.

Second image is "Gate Station 6 flight bay" by Blaxlight on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.

Third image is "The Oracle Speaks" by iamrudja on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.
 

Pilgrim snowtracks descend the High Divide after yet another fruitless search for fortune and glory.

As Oscar van de Graaf chafed under the terms of his contract with the United Nations, so individual Pilgrims despised their indenture to his Society of Adventurers. Individually and in groups, members of the New 2000 exhibited risk-taking behaviors unthinkable in factions with higher social cohesion and less exclusive conceptions of property rights. Excess resources and discretionary effort that could have been repurposed for the benefit of the whole community was expended on personal projects so that participants could earn enough money to buy out their own contracts.


Over more than a century, computer diagnostic systems installed by United Nations EarthMed collected more than four yottabytes of unsifted genetic, physiological, and neurological data on mission passengers and crew. [1] The Unity Crisis presented a golden opportunity for those in-the-know to dispatch agents like this one into the ship's wiring basins in search of the choicest taps. (It was often a lost cause: as this vid-cap shows clearly, cables were run with callous disregard for subsequent tracing. It was believed that the crew could simply recover desired materials at the far end: from the discs to which they would be written.


Drop Pod infantry were a last resort. No faction had the uncontested air superiority to contemplate recovery of units stranded after a failed assault, and very few pilots were rated for combat flight.


Sources:
First image is "2023-09-13 7-58-30 PM - 00407 - 1024x1024" by rothvalor on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.

Second image is "Spaceman" by Northground on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.

[1] This number is intentionally small compared to the probable speed of digital information proliferation forecast for the 21st century. The Racing the Darkness setting is data poor compared to our own.

Third image is "Dropships" by Supertrust on DeviantArt.
 

Datajack Cinder Roze receives routine chemotherapy.

The radiological disaster that caused the survivors to flee Unity was a significant determinant of cultural, technological, economic, and military activity on the world below for decades thereafter.

Comprehensive, and often aggressive, chemotherapies were a concomitant of daily life--not only for the chronically radiation-sick First Generation, but their natural-born offspring as well. The surest sign of a so-called "Live-Birth" in adulthood was their permanent transcutaneous medical port.

An overwhelming share of scientific work on Chiron fit neatly within the field of traditional oncology. Even engineers were expected to deliver solutions for the frail bones and weakened muscles of colonial workforces before being unleashed on other projects.

Each society dealt with large-scale radiological sickness. The University, Labyrinth (Hive), Ascendancy, Peacekeeping Forces, Digital Oracle, and Legacy Initiative implemented mandatory genetic screening. Nearly all factions offered incentives for their "clean" subjects to reproduce. Solar cultists rejected life-saving interventions, determined that nothing would interpose between themselves and the "harsh graze" of their deity. The Ascendancy forbade natural reproduction altogether. The New State stopped short of ordering citizens to test but nevertheless heaped social condemnation on those who declined. Among the New 2000, sickness was not acceptable grounds for release from indenture, and Oscar van de Graaf successfully set the precedent that a child inherited their parents' status of debt-peonage.

There were stark dividing lines between the firm and the infirm. Every health crisis placed a heavier burden on those still able to complete the labor essential for mere survival. Robots became closely associated with notions of physiological inadequacy, fueling interest in the anthropocentric philosophies of J.T. Marsh and Tamineh Pahlavi. Militiamen demanded special acknowledgement for shouldering their rifles: who else could do it? Field crews notoriously resented the easy living of the much larger number of "stay-behinds" in any base operations hierarchy.

Like the oil baronies of Old Earth, the Dreamers of Chiron escaped retaliatory obliteration for their outages only because they were the most-complete approximation of a pharmaceutical clearinghouse anywhere on Planet. (Old Ian Dunross had known enough to equip his vendetta-magnet of a son with a dispensary worthy of the Geneva Hospital Complex.) Medical and laboratory supplies had a value to raiders above food, ammunition, and energy; only water stood in higher esteem.

Most Unity survivors were afflicted with high doses of radiation, including those in the amidships and forward sections of the vessel. However, certain compartments were known to have benefited from heavier shielding--either conventional lead barriers or intervening detritus. Survivors known to have been transported in those spaces, carefully singled out using computer simulation, were eagerly recruited and bitterly contested.

Sources:
Image is from The Expanse.
 

Dubbed "His Glory" by Conclavists and eyesores by most everyone else, lightning conductors harnessed the massive energy potential of Chiron's frequent electrical storms. Nwabudike Morgan described them to his investors as "the closest thing to pulling money from thin air," although turning a profit meant being first to pull the battery packs.


Sea bases like this neo-Spartan installation with the apt name of Agony, were important links in the brisk trade between the continents of Shamash and Golgu but placed intense demands on faction resources due to the very high pace of saltwater corrosion and the violence of Planet's intense wind and waves. Life in sea bases was duller than that on land, and the daily work demands on residents more intense, but there was never any shortage of volunteers: the risk of hurricanes was counted preferable to that of psychic assault by mindworm boils.


Tensia Manwaring, an overseer serving the New 2,000, uses a data visualization rig.

Every faction leader lived in terror of a labor revolt. If it wasn't drones, then it might be machines. Overseers gradually learned to respond to failed disc functions in the same methodical way that they had the social indicators of potential violence.


Sources:
First image is "structure concept" by OUT-MAX on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.

Second image is "Belltower_SeaBase Deus Ex 3 DLC" by Gryphart on DeviantArt.

Third image is "FUTURE MINER" by stefanlanecreative on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.
 

Nwabudike Morgan's every decision was calculated a specific statement about what his philosophy could offer the disaffected Talents of rival factions. The geothermal power complex of Apollonian Vents made glittering promises in the night that were bound to be spoiled by the reality of the shift sirens come morning.


Left. Australian bitter-ender Marvin Capsom led a rapid-reaction force for the Neo-Spartans. Easily mistaken for an audio link, the wire running to his left ear is actually a neural shunt. Capsom served in Battleaxe Sector, the long frontier across which the Spartans often clashed with their unfriendly Gaian neighbors.

Shunts changed the user's biochemistry to suppress the sympathetic neurochemical reactions triggered by psychic attack. Effectively, the user produced fewer of the neurotransmitters linked to anxiety, buying time to take protective action.


Right. Neo-Spartan Corporal Daniela Farias, a turret gunner on a Chaos Rover, lost an arm to spalling at the Battle of the Morning. She chose mechanical limb replacement to hasten her return to duty. Lab-grown limbs had a lower rate of rejection but nerve connections didn't reach maturity for at least two years.



Tendrils of red fungal smoke waft from the wreckage of the University's biological research station at Campo Izquierdo.

Contrary to the terrified testimony of routed militia, the chemical rounds only
mimicked the experience of a Mindworm attack. One great advantage: the troops often abandoned their fighting positions (and fighting vehicles) in search of greater safety, leaving rich pickings for the vultures.
Sources:
First image is "100" by Revolucci on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.

Second image is "Pieter_Jun Deus Ex 3 DLC" by Gryphart on DeviantArt. Concept art.

Third image is "Hummer3000" by Ubermonster on DeviantArt.
 

A mag-lev passenger train passes the lively Habitation Core of Morgan Trade Center.

Mass transit solutions suited frontier societies that often lacked the excess economic capacity, general wealth attainment, or prevailing peace and security required for a consumer car culture.

Politics also had a role to play. Gaians associated individual transport with waste and vanity. The individual had no rights that Yang, Cobb, Cohen, or Anhaldt were bound to respect. Even where populations valued personal independence and some enjoyed a modicum of it, the absence of a broad prevailing peace made it too dangerous to travel far from home except in numbers. Spartans and Tribals left their stockades only in the company of war parties. Morganite business leaders colluded to discourage the success of products that might expand the social choices available to their drones.

Social mores taught Believers, New Staters, and Peacekeepers to place the interests of the group ahead of the individual, and mere geography kept inhabitants of the Ascendancy and University bound up in their mountain fastnesses.


Salvage was the necessary obsession of every faction. Here, two scouts of the Digital Oracle evaluate how to remove larger pieces of wreckage from a crash site fortuitously close to their power station at Fontaine de la Connaissance.

Pictured is a Spanish contribution to the
Unity Mission, the YZ-10, manufactured by EADS-CASA in the late 2030s. The YZ-10 contained vertical micro-nurseries and were loaded onto special gyroscopic racks that rotated so the live plants within could receive sunlight through large ocular windows at either end. Eight detachable retrothrusters gave the pods some hope of landing with their precious consignments intact.

This pod suffered a catastrophic malfunction during the final phase of deceleration, but even if the plant matter proved a total loss, the metals, trace fuels, and electrical components were surely welcome.



Spartan overseers supervise the first digging at Xerxion, MY0.

After two decades of collaboration on military projects, Yugoslavian state aerospace firm SOKO joined Callaron Heavy Locomotion and South African firm SANY to bid for the Mission contract to develop a self-contained drill rig able to deploy directly from orbit. The result was the Тираносаурус (tyranosaurus), completed in 2036.

The machines had a mixed reputation. Tested at over a dozen dig sites throughout the Jovian Belt, including in dense atmospheres and under high gravity, they demonstrated very high survivability during orbital drops, good handling, and excellent fuel efficiency, factors that led to their subsequent acceptance by the Unity Project Team. Yet the Тираносаурус also required a very large crew of three dozen and near-constant maintenance.

Santiago launched two Тираносаурус machines from Unity ahead of her landing pods and soon put them to work building her second base at Xerxion.

Frustrated at the need to essentially rebuild the Тираносаурус every few weeks, the Spartans dismantled both their copies in place long before Xerxion was placed under siege. The decision was a strategic error, for it delayed the creation of additional settlements that might have helped the Spartans expand their war effort and from which relief might conceivably have been deployed to prevent or break Xerxion's encirclement.


Sources:
First image is "Going fast" by n1n0sl4v on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.

Second image is "After the EM pulse" by n1n0sl4v on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.

Third image is "3302436" by dainbramage1 on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.
 
Commissioner Pravin Lal said:
If we as a species are ever to receive pardon for what we did to the Earth, how can we deny the possibility of individual redemption? - Our Next Journey

Sister Miriam Godwinson said:
As the hourglass steadily emptied, new and more pressing inquiries were put to us around how best to plug gaps in the knowledge base that the expedition would require. Genius does not always cohere with moral rectitude. - Reckonings


Brigadier Junaid Dad Alrehman was a senior planner in the Pakistani Army Strategic Forces Command and among the 154 general officers in the Pakistani, Indian, and Chinese militaries judged by the International Criminal Court to be potentially culpable for the Six-Minute War. He was apprehended by INTERPOL in Omdurman, Sudan, in 2059 and placed in a United Nations penal colony in Denmark awaiting trial. In 2068, Alrehman was sentenced to re-socialization and handed over to the U.N. Mission to Alpha Centauri Corrective Services Division for internment as a colonist bound for Chiron.[/CENTER]

The origins of the Six-Minute War lay in what was either the rogue or accidental launch of a Pakistani nuclear-tipped Gidh-II ground-based missile at New Delhi during a period of intensifying conflict over the disputed region of Kashmir. The launch occurred immediately after receipt by Pakistan of false reports that Indian ground forces had crossed the Line of Control near Punch and two days after Indian Air Force HAL Bhanvar M fighter jets sank the Pakistani helicopter cruiser Humayun in its patrol zone due south of Karachi. Decision-makers in the Pakistani National Command Authority chose to fire much of the rest of their country's nuclear arsenal out of fear it would otherwise be destroyed in an Indian retaliatory strike. Reports vary with respect to the role played by Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force officers present in Islamabad for these conversations.

Alrehman denied involvement in the general launch decision, calling nuclear war a travesty, but was convicted because paper records confirmed his presence at a key meeting held prioer to the Pakistani National Command Authority's authorization of additional strikes. Some Pakistani survivors of the Six-Minute War saw in Alrehman's courtroom defense as a microcosm of their own sense and experiences of the war. Support for Alrehman spiked in October 2065, when the Pon de Replay phreaking collective leaked internal U.N. revealing the Secretary General's desire for the World Court to "set aside lingering questions, however fair," about the nature of his guilt so that "a sense of closure might be achieved." Further outcry arose after release of a second tranche of documents proved some Unity Mission planners had lobbied for Alrehman to receive a specific sentence of service after becoming better-aquainted with his history in the field of military organization. At the time, Mission Planners faced the unprecedented challenge of attempting to choreograph management of the ship's unknowable cargo after landing.

The U.N.'s decision to accept prisoners sparked passionate, and frequently violent, debate that touched on themes of equity, redemption, historical memory, and practical need. The combined convict pools included thousands of political prisoners, including public intellectuals sometimes considered exemplars or luminaries in the Free World, but also hardened criminals and terrorists. In the sciences, Aleigha Cohen led spirited debate over whether to preserve data obtained through ethically dubious means, such as through experimentation on prisoners, while Prokhor Zakharov skirmished with the U.N. scientific establishment over his recruitment of researchers from so-called Pariah States, a collection of nations that varied depending on the perspective of the beholder.

Alrehman's reputation as a high-value colonist far preceded him. Acting on intelligence provided by Struan's, Roshan Cobb marked Alrehman's cryobed for transfer to his landing pods and placed the evacuation procession under heavy guard--a wise decision since ARC mercenaries staged an ambush as the Struan's party left the relative safety of the Containment Unit. Once on-world, Alrehman was made a civil planner in White Rabbit's Refuge, helping to mete out the faction's very limited stock of supplies. In this, Alrehman was widely considered a fair, if sparing, administrator.

Governor van de Graaf was not to be denied his prize. After two years in the Dreaming Dens, Alrehman was sold on to the Pilgrims. Van de Graaf owned Alrehman's contract personally and tasked the Brigadier to help organize the faction's foundering research efforts.

Sources:
Image is "today photo study" by Eidenet on DeviantArt.
 

The Unity Crisis. Final hours. A loyal member of the United Nations Security Forces wields a machine pistol in close-quarters fighting outside Planetary Cartography. Note the use of a national symbol at the left shoulder--most likely an inadvertent violation of the Mission Charter caused by the U.N.'s over-reliance on surplus.

When the Peacekeeping Forces tried CEO Nwabudike Morgan in abstentia for the crime of piracy in late MY7, Commissioner Pravin Lal's prosecutorial team relied heavily on footage recovered from cameras in the passages outside Unity's sensing blister, where scratch forces under Chief Astronomer Buchra Toledano had gone down swinging against two SafeHaven strike teams. (As a stowaway, Morgan could not be tried for mutiny, but what other conclusion could be drawn from the presence of Morgan's life guards at so remote a location on Unity's hull?)

The PZL-designed blister mounted Zeiss optics and was capable of detaching from the mothership to operate as a permanent satellite. Despite a total loss of connectivity to external sensing mounts, the blister's computers already retained thousands of hours of image-taking when the micrometeorite struck. This information informed Morgan's decision to bring his people down in Golgu rather than follow the majority of survivors to Shamash.


Lieutenant Commander Buchra Toledano was found by responding U.N. Marines with her skull cap removed and her brain missing.

Toledano had the distinction of being one of a handful of non-Warsaw Pact scientists to spend time aboard Soviet Venutian habitats as part of a three-year exchange sponsored by the Non-Aligned Movement. She worked another fifteen years with the Martian Terraforming Project while training for the Unity Mission. During this period, she received privileged access to the full set of tapes created by the U.N. from the Pathfinder Probe transmissions, mounting the most comprehensive study of those records to date.

Sources:
First image is "Space marine assaulting Drax' space station" by Ankhati on DeviantArt.

Second image is "Woman on Mars" bny Obsidian Planet on DeviantArt.
 
Commissioner Pravin Lal said:
The essential requirement for freedom is vigilance, and the essential requirement for vigilance, curiosity. It is not enough merely to watch for danger. One must also learn the names and faces under which it masquerades. - What We Left Behind Us



The New 2,000 built a string of outposts on its shared border with the Human Labyrinth in MY11 and 12, some of them integrated with the faction's main sensor web. Stakeholders voted for public improvements like these only begrudgingly. Many complained that the cost of the towers should be borne entirely by the Pilgrim households nearest to them, evincing a parochial meanness that continually bedeviled Governor Van de Graaf's attempts to promote a common defense.

War parties raised by specific Pilgrim leaders occupied the towers during periods of immediate danger, but the Stakeholders refused to finance permanent garrisons so that, by MY13, half the towers had been seized by Hive Security. They were then used as jumping-off points for raids against Montauk Wells and Grey's Ferry, the settlements in whose interest they were first established.



Planet pearls were not geodes at all but ossified biomatter resulting from malfunctions in the reproductive cycles of mindworm boils. Pearls had very high potential chemical energy. The first colonists to encounter planet pearls mistook them for the egg sacs of native fauna. Thinking to advance the understanding of Centauri biology, they instead discovered the first Chironian fuel source used by the human colonies.


Holnist infiltrators swarm from hiding to begin the rampage that will doom Unity. This pair wears the uniform of the U.N. Security Forces but carries hand weapons that promise to inflict compromising damage to the ship's hull. Holnism has sometimes been described as an apocalyptic death cult: its adherents usually believed that the human species would perish within their own lifetimes and often had no ambitions beyond exacting a bloody vengeance against the institutions they alleged had abandoned them. After completing their spasm of killing, hundreds of Santiago's fair-weather allies chose to perish with the ship, condemning the Sergeant for her cowardice and warning that the survivors were merely delaying the inevitable.

Sources
First image is "Control tower" by Werkzeugmacher on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.

Second image is "Orange planet" by Werkzeugmacher on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.

Third image is "EVA Marines" by TheNameslessVoid on DeviantArt.

Author's Notes
Given its subject matter, the quotation used here should feel closer to an encapsulation of Colonel Santiago's philosophy than that of the peace-minded Pravin Lal, but any conversation about the future of democracy must inevitably reckon with the institution's fragility--and the active defense that free peoples must mount in its interest.
 
Vehicle Chassis: Combot (Walker)

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Even after decades of robotic proliferation, the United Nations continued to shy away from adopting such weapons for its own security forces. Partly this was motivated by its focus on sublethals and commando forces skilled in their use. Another was the inherent political difficulties and ethical dilemmas - absent AGI, no software system was free of flaw. Even a drone spraying tear gas rounds could accidentally concuss civilians. In the face of such tragedy was the programmer at fault? The mechanical engineer who designed the firing apparatus? With platforms powered by adaptive learning and long ponder, should the software breeder be held liable? With remote operated drones, would the pilot be put on trial, or the multiple layers of military officers, civilian commanders, and, often, law enforcement officials who signed off on the approval in shared responsibility? Which system is to blame? The war machine or the war machine?

The 21st-century saw unparalleled use of a new form of militarized drone: humanoid weapons platforms. The public was entranced by clanking combatant ’bots carrying out their orders with true mechanical perfection. As these clockwork machina marched forth, burning villages without moral compunction or fear, atrocities mounted. In response, the U.N. flailed about uselessly with nonbinding resolutions even as each permanent member of its Security Council freely used servomotor servitors in wars and police actions.

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However, during one of the last cycles of the construction of the UNS Unity, dubbed the season of “Open for Business” when multinationals temporarily became the project's driving force, amoral gigacorporate boards decided there should be no opposition to cost-effective solutions. Even as the U.N. with its Byzantine bureaucracy and innumerable NGOs squabbled in the wake of American departure from mission leadership, the boards elected ARC founder Oscar van de Graaf as their CEO of CEOs, the Director-in-Chief of the corporate junta that was the Unity Mission Industry Standards Board. Van de Graaf’s opening remark was, “Screw it, just get it done.” While Unity was Open for Business, that slogan was law.

The case for incorporating militarized machines was simple. It was already known that Chiron hosted alien life, some of quite considerable size and unknown temperament. Better to bring along soldiers not limited by such petty concerns as breathing to defend frail human colonists. Robotic platforms also had plenty of general-use applications. Tireless and complaintless, they were considered a boon for working in vacuum and other hostile environments. And so, in addition to General Atomics Corporation and American Machines, two more vendors signed up to provision the mission with robots.

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A D-9 Volker SAP patrol unit under fire from uMkhonto we Sizwe resistance fighters in the streets of Durban

Johannesburg-based robotics company Tetra Vaal notoriously served as chief supplier of law enforcement automatons throughout Africa. The D-9 Volker, its premier bipedal drone model, enabled authoritarian police departments and imperialistic governments alike. Boasting pinpoint sharpshooting skills, superhuman strength and agility, and data feeds compatible with any law enforcement intelligence system, they empowered regimes desiring tight order at minimal expense of their own human resources. Programmed with a wide variety of civilian interaction modes from Benevolent to Hostile, the Volkers were a common sight in the dense urban environments of the colonial empires, chasing perpetrators- whether criminal or dissident- through shantytowns with predator speed. For less than-megalopolis sized communities, even a single Volker was often sufficient to boost local police departments’ crimefighting abilities. Indeed, many organized criminal organizations turned to sophisticated guerrilla cyber-warfare in their fight against the koperkêrels (Afrikaans for “copper police”), using homegrown ICE code and improvised EMP devices.

The militarized FC-3 Vaas variant, boasting more protective armor, greater higher firepower, and thousands of warfare routines in its onboard computer, was also a popular- and pricy- offering from Tetra Vaal. These walking weapons platforms proved to be force multipliers in the many colonial counterinsurgencies that swept the continent throughout the twenty-first century, most notably the Azanian Uprising.

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Tetra Vaal’s combat robots were interlinked with remote homebase operators who could review full imagery captured by the networked mobile platforms. While they did possess sophisticated tactical intelligence for use in policing or military situations, no authorized unit was given a personality of its own. In terms of Weapons Automation levels as determined by the Society of American Military Engineers, they were at level 6, considerably high, but lacking in any sort of simulated anthropomorphization common in personable artificial intelligence (P.A.I.) systems. For over a century, public imagination was titillated by the possibility of truly self-thinking machines and the Turing imitations that mimicked human behavior. Recognizing this popular fear of rampaging rogue robots, Tetra Vaal installed a digitally ergonomic portable interface layer running a militarily-hardened fork of TograOS on their Vaal platforms, allowing operators the ability to slave units to PDAs or TrueVu specs and assume direct control.

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While robotic labor became normalized in American society, perpetual fears of mechanical revolution lingered. Here is the disproportionate police response to SUN·E, an American Machines household service unit suspected of homicide in 2040s Chicago. The machine was later acquitted

The addition of Tetra Vaal combots faced a different ethical challenge. Its prominent use by the South African apartheid government (not to mention formerly in Rhodesia and by Portuguese African colonial administrations, the Belgians, and the Pied Noir regime of Oranais) continued to be roundly condemned by the United Nations. More importantly, Morgan Industries founder and CEO Nwabudike Morgan, a key stakeholder of the Unity Mission Industry Standards Board, presented sharp personal objections to Tetra Vaal’s inclusion. In a surprise break with his prior seclusion from public life, Morgan appeared before the press to denounce TV and all of its works. In an uncharacteristic turn from his normally jovial public persona, Morgan thundered against “profiteers of oppression enabling small-minded bigots.” He spoke passionately at length about his own experiences struggling against the open prejudice he faced while visiting South Africa as a youth, of being watched over by machines of merciless hate in the streets of Cape Town, of seeing Black and Coloured people marched away by early-gen combots to containment communities behind barbed wire. Morgan concluded that bringing such machines would “forever stain the stars with human hatred.”

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Tetra Vaal CEO Joshua Abdon Haldeman fiercely contested the accusations. Declaring that his company held no allegiance to any particular government or ethnicity but to the entire public at large, he swore up and down that “not a single line of prejudice” had been written into his machines. His words failed to convince the masses of public admirers who sympathized- and sided- with Morgan. Facing a public relations storm unlike any before, the company opened itself for examination, permitting auditors from the ISB to examine the source code. The U.N. dispatched fact-finders and data librarians to dive deep into the computerized corpus, and even sent code breeders to examine the self-evolving neural networks itself. Months later, the Boraine Report determined that the Tetra Vaal codebase did not classify human visual data sets according to race, or even specific ethnicity. Rather, the machines had gone even further; with all of the mobile surveillance video footage collected by patrolling Volkers, as well as data provided by the national South African Police Service, the company had essentially mapped out the probable identity of any individual its police units came across. Tens of millions throughout the country- and hundreds of millions more throughout Africa- were subject to intrusive observation by the company and its governmental clients.

Despite the bombshell, Haldeman treated the report as an exoneration. And indeed, many casual observers in the public were content by the fact that Tetra Vaal was indiscriminate in its persecution of the law. Even so, in the face of threats from Morgan to launch a series of class-action suits on behalf of every citizen living under combot-patrolled territories, the ISB had to act to prevent the Unity project from cracking even further. Thus, they arbitrated a deal: the Tetra Vaal combots provided for the expedition would have all individual-identification capabilities stripped from their codebanks. Furthermore, despite being awarded a lucrative contract to supply mere hundreds of walkers in exchange for brand visibility at a global level, leading to untold future market expansion opportunities, Tetra Vaal would be consigned to be a junior non-voting member of the ISB. Finally, to assuage Nwabudike Morgan from further personal opposition, Morgan Industries had its contract expanded to provide even more resources and personnel to the Unity project, at a level that nearly rivaled Director-in-Chief van de Graaf’s own ARC contingent.

All were satisfied by this. Tetra Vaal and Haldeman were glad to be rid of the entire imbroglio. The U.N. felt it had dealt a modest blow against both invasive software and violent hardware, even if it was mostly ceremonial. The ISB was glad that the project could get moving again, though DIC van de Graaf warily eyed the Morgan expansion. Morgan Industries and its SafeHaven parent company proclaimed that this was “one more step towards peace in our space.” And returning to his post-public life seclusion, Morgan smiled as he prepared for offworld travel.

CEO Nwabudike Morgan said:
A skilled negotiator is not above the use of unhappy emotion, strong language, or moral outrage. Business negotiations can tell stories as personal as any parable, and a true businessman crafts narratives as adeptly as the most overwrought thespian. When your opposite number feels your anguish, he begins to see you as a brother. Even the most savage lion becomes an injured housecat worth soothing when it shows you the thorn in its paw. -Empathy, the Weapons Manual

Notes:

Tetra Vaal is from Neill Blomkamp’s titular short film, the Tempbot short film, and Chappie.

The original Joshua Haldeman was the research director of Canada’s branch of the Technocracy movement from 1936 to 1941. He later moved to South Africa. He is also the grandfather of Elon Musk. Long story.

Abdon was the Biblical judge of Israel who succeeded Elon. His name means “servile” or “service”, which perhaps fits a passage about robots.

Alex Boraine was one of the main architects of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

Image Credits

Details of police robot is from Chappie concept art by Christian Peace

Footage of police robot is from Tetra Vaal

Militarized robot is from Elysium

Robot under police interrogation is from I, Robot
 
Sister Miriam Godwinson said:
Mind-machine interface focuses attention on what we might be able to put in, when what comes out has always been far more important. - We Must Dissent


Digital intermediation was first presented as a medical solution to address catastrophic brain damage and neurological birth defects, but the technique was used as a form of state-sanctioned punishment at least as early as 2040.

Behind the Iron Curtain, free of ethical fetters, amateur barber-surgeons like Aleigha Cohen applied the skills learned in conventional laboratories to experiment on prisoners, creating the first of what some called a new species. Were they computers powered by human organs? Humans who had become totally suborned to machines?

Involuntary intermediation was the stuff of nightmares and drew prompt condemnation. Dr. Pravin Lal of the U.N. Medical service described the victims as "reanimated corpses." Dr. Prokhor Zakharov, the Voice of Soviet Science, didn't address them at all. From her Alpine perch, Tamineh Pahlavi warned that Cohen was "taking humans making something else entirely." But Cohen claimed the only difference between a drone and a "normal" human was their preferred medium of communication: drones expressed themselves through text and gesture, not the spoken word. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the extent to which complicit regimes concealed the extent of their abuses by clever manipulation of test runs was never addressed to the satisfaction of mainstream medical opinion. It was rumored that the Soviets tried total intermediation on captured spies as an alternative to traditional interrogation techniques prior to their execution, only to find that they were plumbing personal fictions as often as facts. Both the Americans and the Chinese explored intermediation as a pathway to create superior analysts but reached competing conclusions as to whether the results were any more compelling than when computers and humans worked separately. And it was obviously possible to create mere automatons, but there were few good reasons for doing so.

Experts debated for decades on whether traces of the individual were still observable at any given extent of overall brain replacement. In the United States, work on digital intermediation was often carried out in strict secrecy. Results reporting lagged decades behind the experiments that produced them. Many states and territories passed laws against the technology from a position of fear, limiting the extent to which even obviously-legitimate medical care was available for those who had no other options. Western Europe and much of Central and South America did the same.

On Chiron, digital intermediation programs were stood up immediately by the Human Hive and the Digital Oracle. The Free Drones exposed a long-running Morganite initiative in MY62. Most intelligence services suspected that the University of Planet was in the same business, although no proof was ever put forward to the Planetary Council. In the case of the Cybernetic Consciousness, questions were more nuanced since Aki Zeta-5's followers were all presumed volunteers and the faction's ambassadors to the outside world still conformed outwardly to certain stereotypical models of human behavior.

Sources
Image is "Ader713 A Monster Look Like Old Radio. Lens Flare" by sashander on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.
 
Vehicle Chassis: Combot (Roller)

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Houston-based Rambler-Crane Systems was renowned for its multiple series of treaded “roller” combatant robots. Borne upon ruggedized continuous track systems, Rambler-Crane models like the iconic B-9 Robby could bypass difficult terrain from battlefield craters to autumn mud and achieve speeds rivaling that of sports cars. Equipped with dual tripartite pincers armed with Tesla electroshock projectors whose power ranged from crowd dispersal to scorched earth, they were towering, fearsome sights upon United States Space Force space stations, patrolling hallways as constant guardians. Equipped with a second pair of instrumentation claws used for fine manipulation, they were also commonly used for nonviolent applications such as repair work aboard the orbital installations. When equipped with jets, rollers could even perform tasks in zero-G. Though they were a mainstay against hypothetical space insurrectionists, their most famous military role was at the Battle of Boston Harbor, when a single company of National Guard was able to hold off against nearly a battalion-sized Holnist assault force thanks to firing support from little more than two dozen rollers (“the Glorious Thirty”). With such an impressive pedigree against internationally-vilified rebels and insurgents, Rambler-Crane’s admission into the ranks of Unity vendors was uncontroversial and unanimous.

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Rollers were equipped with a fully-immersive, intuitive holographic user interface that even a child could use

Rambler-Crane combots had even more rudimentary intelligence than Tetra Vaal’s policing units, capable of both identifying immediate threats and tracking those pre-programmed by operators, but nothing akin to the more extensive battle tactics available in the military-grade drone platforms used in Hypersurvivalist Wars counterinsurgency. Any fear of robotic revolution remained in the province of fantasy.

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UNS Unity evacuees during Planetfall crisis. Mission Chief Roboticist Sylvia Gauss pictured left, back row

The lack of armed robotic servitors during Planetfall was another lost opportunity among cascading fiascos. From the onset, Captain Garland declined to activate any automated defenses capable of lethal effect, specifically forbidding the use of combots. While this was decried by General d‘Almeida and other senior officers as yet another counterproductive example of the captain’s unyielding utopian idealism, there was method to Garland’s decisions: he surmised that the appearance of murderous war drones would be horrific for mission optics, inciting further mutiny. Indeed, if the Kellerites had seen Unity walkers (Tetra Vaal Volkers white-labelled for the mission) mercilessly assaulting their positions and emotionlessly slapping organic restraints onto their comrades, it was probable that they would have taken arms against the Unity crew directly. Such was their total revulsion towards the excesses of modern technology. Spartan mutineers and Holnist hyper-survivalists alike had a near-instinctual animosity towards the bipedal combots, bearing blood grudges against them from the civil wars from Earth. Any dormant Unity walkers were smashed on sight or else ransacked for spare parts, and a tech-savvy follower of Santiago slashed into the ship datalinks and uploaded malicious metaware that disabled many of the combots as they approached Chiron.

However, this reluctance against mobilization proved to be a grave miscalculation. As electrical fires broke out in battle-damaged compartments, indiscriminate use of knockout gas flooded corridors, shelves of heavy crates and barrels tipped over and fell upon passengers, and the ship’s loss in structural stability exposed entire areas to vacuum, the Unity staff was confronted with the absence of powerful tools. While some servitors were switched online towards the tail end of the crisis, by then it was too little, too late.

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One notable exception was the Defense of the Primary Aft Machine Shop. At about the midpoint of Planetfall, a Spartan raiding team led by former SEAL Team 3 operative Walton Purefoy was tasked with capturing crucial machine parts and 3D printers. A southron convert to the colonel’s militant cause, Purefoy and his team of predominantly non-Holnist veterans of the Second American Civil War deftly infiltrated the large workshop under the very noses of U.N. Security Forces, overpowered the guards, and dug into entrenched positions. Defended from counterassault by heavy blast doors and a level of professionalism unmatched by most Holnist units, the raiding team took hapless Unity mechanical engineers hostage and ordered them to pillage their own stores, to be donated to the Spartan cause. Of the nearly sixty engineers and scientists present in the machine shop, only about a dozen were able to seal themselves into a secure sub-garage containing vehicles and heavy equipment. As they frantically attempted to summon external aid, Purefoy’s Spartans soon came knocking upon the bulkhead, using the engineering crew’s own mechanical drills to penetrate the barrier.

Chief Roboticist Sylvia Gauss took command of the scattered escapees. Dialing into the machine shop’s local datalinks, the Helvetian automaton specialist countermanded the captain’s orders, powering on the three Rambler-Crane units housed in the sub-garage. After several tense minutes of hasty bootstrap procedures initiated decades after the units’ last power cycle even while Spartan-hijacked drills hummed outside, the machines’ lights flickered on. Gauss then overrode existing restrictions and assumed direct control, unleashing the full capabilities of the CKD protocol. Though greatly outnumbered, the three rollers wheeled smoothly forth as the bulkhead door opened with a hiss and click, obliterating the invaders with electroshock pulses blasted from outspread firing pincers. The Spartans, caught completely unawares, could not react fast enough against the combots. Eschewing sublethal defaults, Gauss amped up the voltage, and the brigands- both trained paramilitants and opportunistic defectors caught up in the action- were thrown across the room by manmade ball lightning. Purefoy himself was grievously injured in the counterattack, scalded by a glancing electrical blast. Ordering a retreat, he and the few survivors limped back to the main Spartan host. Meanwhile, Gauss and her engineers successfully vacated the machine shop with all the supplies they and their robots could carry, later linking up with AEL Director Johann Anhaldt.

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Centauri Monopolist Acquirer-class combots, tactical custom FC-3 Vaas walkers refurbished for targeted strike operations in conjunction with Probe Teams, prepare target for extraction at Dreams of Green during the Asbolus Reclamation Minor Vendetta of M.Y. 23

The compartment of Unity walkers and Unity rollers finally came of use in the decades following Planetfall. Prior to an industrialized state of development, robotic servitors were a highly-desired resource in Cargo Pod retrieval operations. Entire conflicts were fought over scavenged General Atomics worker servitors, American Machines’ MULEs, Tetra Vaal law enforcement walkers, and Rambler-Crane multi-role military-grade rollers. If activated, these machines contributed immeasurably to the factions that claimed them, doing the work of many humans, ensuring order in their respective social experiments, and defending entire bases against mindworm assaults (for a time, until the boils began to adapt). Even when access was keyed to the biometrics of a long-gone crew officer or corporate executive, and there was no way to switch on the dormant units, they were still an invaluable source of electronic components that could not be manufactured for mission decades if not centuries. As time went on and more mission-provisioned combots were discovered, factions began modifying them for their own specific purposes.

Casting

Sylvia Gauss is portrayed by Heather Graham as Dr. Judy Robinson from Lost in Space (1998)

Notes:

Walton Purefoy is from Far Cry 2.

The CKD protocol, of course, stands for Crush, Kill, Destroy.

The Battle of Boston Harbor was an American police action in this continuity, not anything UN(N) related.

Sylvia Gauss is from my Second Ship project.

Image Credits

Rolling robot images are of the Robot from Lost in Space (1998)

Rolling robot in black is AMT's 1/6 scale Robot model built and painted by The Great Canadian Model Builders

Bipedal robots crouched over captives is from Elysium
 

Dr. Florencia Canessa in the sub-levels of White Rabbit's Refuge.

Hard experience with the Pathfinder Probe taught the United Nations that exceptional care had to be taken to preserve the mental fitness of passengers and crew at every stage of the project, from training on Earth through colonization on Chiron. To develop medical recommendations for the Unity Mission, planners formed a study group led by behavioral psychiatrist Florencia Canessa, Director of the Instituto de Adaptación Social at Urugay's Universidad de la República. Canessa's well-respected theories on emotional responses to overcrowding, nutritional, and sensory deprivation were grounded in more than two decades of field work in the cantegrils and digidens of Montevideo. For further insights, the study group partnered with Urugay's National Rehabilitation Institute to access to isolation units in the city's seventeen prisons beginning in October 2031, decades before most of the mission's senior staff positions were filled.

The study group's report called for significant modifications to the U.N.'s early vision for nutrition, exercise, and recreation, leading ultimately to design changes for the ark itself and significant construction delays as contractors doubled the number of hydroponics bays so that the colonists could enjoy an uninterrupted supply of fresh food. Training cycles for supervisory positions were extended by three months to introduce intensive workshops in team-building, conflict de-escalation, and small group justice. The calisthenics regimens practiced by Spartans, Hivers, Morganites, and Peacekeepers were faithful to manuals set out by the study group. Millions of light strips were ordered to combat mood disorders in the first Habs.

Canessa was badly wounded in a car bombing at the Rio de Janiero Space Elevator Complex in 2048. Med-techs rushed her into cryogenic suspension--an early test for the Maartins-Sarains Preservation Method then used worldwide to address mortal injuries. Canessa was reawakened for life-saving surgery in 2062 but suffered the common side-effects of Maartins-Sarains: necrosis of the fingers and toes, requiring amputation. She received prosthetic replacements and then was returned to cold sleep via the Wespe-Quinn-Vagner Process.

Canessa was one of nearly two hundred officers abducted by operatives of Struan's Pharmaceuticals in an attempt to build their faction's penitentiary system. To avoid a worse fate, she accepted an overseer's position, marking time while the so-called Dreamers descended into worsening stages of madness. Caught in this web, Canessa had direct exposure to the work and teachings of Dr. Aleigha Cohen. Canessa held Cohen in extremely low esteem. Following her rescue by Peacekeeping Forces, Canessa derided Cohen's work on the Planetary Datalinks, accusing the other behaviorist of overgeneralizing her conclusions, which drew from "a series of special, tragic cases that no ethical person would seek to reproduce."

Sources:
Image is "Surprising" by ERAL2 on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.
 
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Unity Tech: Robotic Labor

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Directrix Sylvia Gauss said:
Innovation is often thought of as linear trajectory, an arrow flying towards the horizon. But progress requires branching paths explored by convergent trailblazers, even loops as long-shelved discoveries are dusted off by later seekers. Both Hero’s engine and artemisinin slept centuries in obscurity. Despair not when you find yourself retracing the steps of your forefathers. We must master our past to deliver the future. - Telos and Techne

By the time of the mission to Alpha Centauri, tireless mechanical “replacement labor” had held up Earth’s economy for decades. Androids- automaton humanoids- served humanity in every capacity from skyscraper-builder to soldier to sitter. They were ideal for construction, menial labor, and operating in the radiation-doused, high-acceleration hazardous environments of outer space. And so, the Industry Standards Board wasted no time wrestling amongst itself for profitable positions as the provisioning vendors for the mission. Enormous sums were dispatched to select members of the Unity Robotics Conservancy in bids to secure their own bids. In the end, the servo pool for the ship was more varied and mismatched than its vehicle fleet, even when discounting combot models.

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Westinghouse Electric W3-K “Werk” updating Captain John Garland on the Unity bridge shortly after hibernation awakening

Park Chaebol’s RDU laborer-watchmen, Carrington Mobile Systems’ C.R.A.S.H. units, General Atomics Corporation’s worker tripods, an entire cybernetic cavalcade was to roll off the landing ramp alongside human colonists upon arrival. Unfortunately, it was not to be. Planetfall not only wasted enormous amounts of human life and supplies, but also untallied numbers of Positronic™ architecture artificial minds. Nascent factions scavenged and stole what they could, even as many units were damaged from the fighting and emergency landings.

Both before and during the long jaunt through the dark, Westinghouse Electric Corporation’s W3-K Hawat-class starship systems avatar peripheral, popularly known to the crew as “Werk,” cogitated and calibrated. From the years-long training of the passengers up to the fires of Planetfall, Werk served as the embodiment of the Unity main computer, summarizing the vessels’ vast sensor data into human-digestible language and calculating assessments. Though originally looked upon with suspicion by the more Luddite members of the staff, its snappy briefings and technical advice became endearing. Though it actually had relatively low amounts of simulated anthropomorphization, officers found its clipped, no-nonsense lack of demeanor to be all the more valuable and charming- for a machine. Sadly, Werk disappeared during the breakup of the Unity. From destruction at the hands of future AXIS acolytes to uplifting by the Cybernetic Consciousness’ venerated Algorithm, endless rumors swirl about its fate. More than simply a valued crewmember, some- particularly Legacy Initiative tape-divers- swear that Werk contained a massive backup of the Unity Data Core, making it a priceless reliquary of the old world.

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The Von Neumann Robot Cluster Control at New Roswell. The Memory of Earth were neutral pragmatists when it came to using automatons for work, drawing upon the history of unmanned probes as mankind’s heralds to the stars - and the career of militarized drones as humans’ faithful dogs of war

Grimes said:
Cmon, you’re not even alive
If you’re not backed up on a drive
- “We Appreciate Power”, Datalinks

On Planet, scaling robotic labor required more than salvaging spare work units from Supply Pods and the atmo-sizzled ruins of the ship. Truly productive gains were finally unlocked after librarian investigations rediscovered crucial research for administering an automaton workforce, chief among them A.I.-driven teleoperation. The digital dilemma between the expensive processing-consumption of running fleets of fully-automated machines and the high personnel cost of hosting armies of human remote operators was solved by combining the technologies of Enhanced Latency Mitigation and Optical Computers.

New high-tech Robot Cluster Controls sprouted across Chiron, boasting state-of-the-art Mentor-series computers based on the venerable Positronic™ architecture and the latest in communications capabilities. Existing stock of Unity android workers were implanted with Gnosis computers, with ingenious heuristics that allowed them to mimic a rough approximation of intelligence based on prior training by the Mentors at home base. The Robot Cluster Control provided coordination of robot workers and autonomous vehicles alike, with fully encrypted communications and electronic counter-countermeasures. And when machines returned to their bases, fully stocked repair and fueling bays greeted them at the Control. Thanks to this cutting-edge facility, factions were able to finally establish parity with pre-mission usage of robotic labor.

Philosophical battles broke out between the cleavages of tech-minimalist Conservationism, roboskeptic Disk Obedience, and cyber-pollyanna Polymorphic Spree, dividing the factions into intellectual camps on how much robotic labor was permissible. Even as the datalinks flooded with discourse, governors on the ground still built Robot Cluster Controls for their respective bases and mandated robotic labor. They cited the cost efficiencies of turning tedious- and often dangerous- work over to man’s metallic brethren, and justified the tech as little more than an updated version of the original equipment the Unity had brought from Earth.

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Besides the company's signature combot Volkers, Tetra Vaal also supplied unarmed TPS-829 Hoyt automated bipedal office drones for routine clerical work deemed too mundane and unworthy of human effort. While reasonably popular among the gigacorporate managerial classes, most white-collar workers have historically found their lack of social graces and flat affect to be particularly unremarkable. As such, most workplaces typically treat Hoyt units as autonomous office appliances, little more intelligent than staplers or coffee synthesizers.

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The Unity Mission Industry Standards Board also considered the use of the Working Joe labor synthetics of Sigg Europa AG. Built by the Helvetian industrial combine to be multirole machines equally capable of loading stockrooms, repairing equipment, supporting customer helpdesks, or wait-staffing, the Working Joe was heralded as the missing link between dumb operator-dependent faceless robots and more sophisticated androids with human-mimetic features. Sigg explained that by endowing the Working Joe with just enough local intelligence but ultimately slaved to central intelligence servers, override capability rested in the hands of their owners. And by designing the Working Joe’s visual appearance to be obviously inhuman, its creators claimed that employees and customers alike would be psychologically at ease with self-apparent synthetics.

Unfortunately for Sigg, the ISB ultimately discarded the idea, ruling that Working Joes still appeared too humanlike while simultaneously too alien, triggering an uncanny valley effect detrimental to colonist morale. This mirrors the state of Working Joe adoption in the solar system at the time of mission launch: the model was largely used not in population centers, but remote installations such as the lonely helium-3 mining platforms around Jovian gas giants.

Notes

The Robot Cluster Control facility is based on the Robot Command building from Outpost and the Robot Command Center from Outpost 2: Divided Destiny. Here’s a short story about the latter, from which I got the inspiration for Werk’s name. Cybernetic Teleoperation is the research tech that unlocks the building. Perhaps coincidentally, Surviving Mars has the similar Drone Hub Infrastructure building.

Volker” is derived from the old Germanic words for “people, tribe” and “army, warrior”, and “Hoyt” is either the Old Norse word for “descended of the mind or spirit” or a Middle English name meaning “long stick.” Put the two together and you get a nod to Far Cry 3.

While I included two preexisting fictional companies, Tetra Vaal and Rambler-Crane from the 1998 Lost in Space remake, I decided not to include the ‘actual’ Seegson from Alien: Isolation, as that felt insufficiently obscure enough to be an Easter Egg.

The convoluted formula for the name of the company who actually made the uncanny valley androids: Seegson is supposed to be founded by one Josiah Sieg, but for some reason in the game there’s an area named Josiah Sigg Executive Apartments, and like much of the Alien universe, Sigg and Son is a Joseph Conrad reference. In real life, Sigg Switzerland AG is a real company that makes designer bottles. (Here, Europa might refer to them expanding to the whole of the continent, or their operations on Jovian moons.) But yes, these androids are built by a bottle company.

Also in the game, the synths are considered inferior to Weyland-Yutani androids because they don’t look human enough, while here they are a little too human and off-putting. Working Joes just can’t catch a break.

Image Credits

Header is the new Atlas from Boston Dynamics

Purple robot is the Robot advisor from Alien Legacy

Red building on alien planet is the Drone Hub from Surviving Mars

Robot photocopying is from Tempbot by Neill Blomkamp

Working Joe ad is from Alien: Isolation
 
Spontaneous Atmospheric Shock Amnesia

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William Shakespeare said:
Let us not burden our remembrances with a heaviness that’s gone. - The Tempest, Act 5, Scene 1

Among the more curious of afflictions that have affected the Unity diaspora since the Planetfall disaster is sudden memory loss. Hundreds if not hundreds of thousands of cases were reported in the early years of colonization. Personnel forgetting everything from where they are and what they are doing to the fundamental question of who they are. Spontaneous Atmospheric Shock Amnesia - SASA, whimsically nicknamed by Sinophone colonists as 傻傻 - occurs unpredictably, both among those who have personally witnessed great trauma during the violent dissolution of the mission, to those who have remained in cryosleep for mission years until retrieved from a supply pod.

This seemingly random phenomenon has been attributed to post-traumatic stress disorder, cranial damage from pressure fluctuations during reentry, radiation poisoning, difficulty adjusting to latent high nitrogen levels, xenofungal spore allergies, grav oversensitivity, chemical weapons attacks, microwave weapons attacks, subsonic weapons attacks, exposure to riot/tear/sleep gas during civil disorder, depression, fatigue, survivor guilt, alienation of the soul, and even preternatural mind control, whether Chironian or Kavithan. However, a folk explanation is widely accepted: faced with an overwhelming hostile environment, some minds simply choose blissful ignorance. Perhaps SASA is a disguised blessing, an explanation for why rates of suicide and psychosis have been marginally lower than expected for such a failed mission.

The fate of sufferers varies from faction to faction. Attempts to facilitate recovery range from near-Earth quality treatment at the sanatoriums of U.N. Health Authority to wing and a prayer efficacy at the sparrow colonies of the Valley of Tirzah. Regardless of the medical outcomes, such societies emphasize palliative care and compassion towards those who were struck by involuntary forgetfulness. On the other end, both the prefects of Chairman Yang and the stadtholders of Governor van de Graaf are often suspicious of those who claim to have forgotten everything, prescribing harsh labor, mental torture, and even nerve-stapling as quick cures for feigned shirk. Somewhere in the middle are cultures of inquiry and investigation- researchers at the University of Planet and entrepreneur-founders at the Centauri Monopoly alike seek ways for SASA patients to regain their memories, the better to publish a paper or sell patent medicine from a working solution.

Notes

傻傻 means “foolish,” or perhaps “naive,” in Mandarin Chinese.

In Ben-Hur, the titular Judah Ben-Hur’s mother is named Miriam and his younger sister is named Tirzah.

Image Credits

Pill-eating haunted astronaut is “Madness of Mission 6” by Colie Travis Pitts (travis76)
 
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Name: Robin Huxley
Rank: Master Sergeant
Position: Forward Contact Team
County of Origin: United Kingdom
DOB: 05-04-2036

Service Record:
Born 2036, Cornwall, to a military family. Attended Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, specialising in counterinsurgency tactics, mechanised warfare, with a minor focus in political sciences. Joined British Territorial Army upon graduating, seeing action in Edinburgh Retaliation (Second Scottish War of Independence outside U.K.) in a tank division she later commanded. Spearheaded use of efficient anti-militia tactics towards end of the conflict, crushing all nationalist opposition in Northumberland, earning the nickname of “Boudicaa” from Briton and Scot alike. Returned to a hero’s welcome to Truro, said to have deterred incipient Cornish separatism simply with her presence.

Served as an Imperial expeditionary advisor in the Canadian Troubles. Controversially led armoured cavalry unit in crowd suppression action during Battle of Montréal. Civilians cowed and separated from armed irregulars besieging the airport, but oppressive optics further tarnished Anglo-Canadian efforts in winning hearts and minds, ultimately losing Quebec. Had further success east- awarded honors from both Confederation of Canada and revived Dominion of Newfoundland after victorious Gros Morne campaign against the Vinlanders, Holnist-offshoot hyper-survivalists hiding among island’s fjords. Modified snow speeder tanks for “stealth” ambushes, one of her most infamous tactics.

After reassignment to Australia, became guest professor on governmental theory at Northern Territory University. Undertook study of aboriginal societies as part of master’s in applied history, focusing in nomadic cultures. Published thesis “Correlational Trajectories Across Declining Premodern Civilisations”, featuring a novel repurposing of tank munition vector calculus formulae for historical projections. Formed a veterans unit of fellow anti-militiamen, the Darwin Road Warriors. Infamous for racing through the outback in demilitarised tank chassis. Personally witnessed ratification of controversial Farewell With Honour agreements in Canberra.

Record within the British Empire and reputation for carrying out stabilising missions earned fast-tracked assignment to Unity mission. Originally recommended for security team officership, volunteered instead for J.T. Marsh’s Forward Contact Team. Given latitude to recruit fellow former veterans for mission, placing many anti-survivalists and former tank crew in key positions. While their military experience was seen as an invaluable asset among his team, the warden was disappointed to find their discipline lacking, their demeanors brusque and unserious, and their loyalties undeniably not with him. When Huxley later declared herself Khagan upon news of the main ship's destruction, he was all too happy to discharge her and her followers.

It has been observed that former Darwin Road Warriors members within the Unity security force behaved erratically in a coordinated fashion during Planetfall, and are linked to the disappearance of mathematicians from the science team, along with several librarians possessing key archival data. It is unknown if these personnel are in contact with Huxley or any other former members of the FCT.

Psych Profile: Wanderer Restorationist
Superb combat prowess due to comprehensive knowledge of tactics and talent at repurposing opponent strategies to use against them. Units under subject’s command maintained strong esprit de corps through fraternal bloodshed. Not content to stay in one place, favoring movement and activity instead of passiveness and caution. Scorn for the contented and sedentary possibly rooted in family’s mobile military lifestyle, working class roots.

While known to be an outspoken critic of Nathan Holn’s neo-feudalistic survivalism, subject agrees with latter’s assertions of a slow “dum-dum decay” of society, leading to inevitable collapse and complete dark age. Morally opposed to hypothetical catastrophe, in contrast to Holnist dogma. Instead favors the rejuvenation of civilisation by a return to the mutual separation of urbanized and frontier societies. Reduced from hegemony, smaller urban sedentary core would be forced to engage in healthy competition, spurred on by challenges from the periphery. Excerpts hint at a far long-term restoration of universal empire via nomadic conquest, plans determined by precisely engineered social engineering according to statistical modeling. Ideals conveyed in NTU teachings, inspiration unclear, possibly TwenCen works.

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Huxley and fellow Former Contact Team scout rest on a heavy cannon buggy during early reconnaissance of Planet. The former Darwin Road Warriors’ tendency to add cosmetic customizations to their vehicles and even their uniforms was another act of unprofessionalism bemoaned by Warden Marsh


Visions of Alpha Centauri


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Faction: Darwin Raiders
Classification: Outpost sub-faction
Founding Base: Great Karakorum

“The hyper-survivalist militias of old Earth were wrong. Humanity had not fallen, nor were we in a decline. What was truly at stake was stagnation- should we be content forever to live soft, innocent-bystander lives? Perhaps the masses can, but we shall not. To the wilds we’ll go, taking what we need from the complacent, until their cities fall, their nations break, and our nucleus lives on.”

-- Khagan Robin Huxley, “The Tartars of Tomorrow”​

Casting

Robin Huxley is portrayed by Lori Petty as Rebecca Buck in Tank Girl.

Notes

Robin Huxley is from my Second Ship project. (see synopsis for design notes)

Portrait originally created for A House United: An Alpha Centauri NationSim

Adaptation Notes

Earth dates affixed to a Unity launch date of 2071, which appears to be the most-recently cited year in the mainline Racing the Darkness posts. Assuming the voyage still took around forty years, I’d say that final approach and Planetfall occurred in A.D. 2112, designated Mission Year One.
 

The Yugoslav VTI Бедем ('bulwark') scout car equipped two generations of United Nations peacekeepers in some of the most hostile operating environments imaginable, serving as ably in the 46°C heat of the Danakil Desert as in the -30°F chill of the Lunar Catacombs.


The mass mobilization of corporate auxiliaries in the United States and the IOEZ after 2040 was prefigured by the widespread use of armed private security in North America and Europe to escort commercial atomic cargo, especially low-yield warheads and spent nuclear fuel, a century prior. These companies, often staffed by war veterans, repackaged and sold their services overseas from the 1980s.

Here, fighters of the American Hound Dog Battalion bombard French Foreign Legion positions outside Fort Dromard, Bilma, in Niger, in 1986. The Hound Dogs were still around almost three-quarters of a century later to prop up Nwabudike Morgan's customers in secessionist Louisiana.

Toshiko Arii, foremost among historians of the Twentieth Century, explained the consolidation of significant military capabilities in United Nations hands between 1945 and 2000 as a consequence of four converging factors:
  1. The collective guilt of the international community over the violence surrounding the Algerian War of the 1950s and '60s, the 1964 Katanga Secession, and the 1994 Rwandan Genocide.
  2. Political cover provided by the Soviet Union, which correctly forecast that most U.N. military operations would further the interests of national independence movements also supported by Moscow.
  3. The mass mobilization of resources through the United Nations by the Non-Aligned Movement to combat colonialism worldwide.
  4. The transition of private military corporations during the time period in question from the corporate adjuncts of particular governments to functionally autonomous entities with access to an international marketplace of war-fighting skills and equipment, allowing them to confront national armies on equal terms under specific conditions.
Sources:
First image is "Boxy Armored Car" by SvetTheFallen on DeviantArt. Created using AI tools.

Second image is a still from the current war in Ukraine dated to May 2023, credited to AP Photo/Libkos, and found on Military.com in a May 16, 2023 article credited to Drew F. Lawrence titled "Russian Mercenary Group Claims American Veteran Killed in Ukraine Firefight."
 
Unity Tech: Less-Than-Lethal Weaponry

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General Sam Carter,U.N. Security Force (ret.) said:
Direct intervention is always part of the game. In my day, we were just more civilized about it. My unit killed a bunch of Afghans one time, but we weren't proud of it. In fact, our liaison at the U.N. went to the funeral. In my day international peacekeepers were citizens first and soldiers second. Try to remember: people have rights. Don't just shoot everything that moves.

Among the supreme ironies of the UNS Unity is that while the industrial warzones that built the vessel were heavily-policed with security perpetually operating on “shoot-to-kill” rules of engagement, the mission’s own armory was relatively light in lethal armaments. Though alien megafauna was a concern, limited amounts of heavy weaponry was present in comparison to the overwhelming abundance of nonlethal arms. Some of this dated back to ancient bureaucratic decree- following the heavy bodycount of the “Years of Flechettes”, the United Nations resolved to take a softer, if no less firm, line against malefactors at its space elevator sites. Military experts developed new kit stressing defensive capabilities and sporting state-of-the-art less-than-lethal equipment. From riot prods to gas grenades, tranquilizer shredders to stun batons, submission rods to psych-whips, this new array of sub-lethals became standard peacekeeping weaponry, and so were carried to the stars by Unity.

The vast majority of the nearly nine thousand U.N. Security Force personnel aboard the ship possessed experience from other services. These included former U.N. Peacekeepers and U.N. Marines to veterans of national and multinational militaries, to the scant former corporate security contractors “gone public,” and even rumors of ex-survivalist defectors. A lesser-known service quietly present was the United Nations Special Operations Coalition, a black ops unit of the U.N. Intelligence Cell tasked with antiterrorism efforts for the Alpha Centauri mission. Preventing attacks on the space elevators, protecting orbital and lunar training facilities, rooting out infiltrators among the crew- the UNSOC was a sharp, serrated dagger the Secretary-General could wield in times that called for a specialist touch. Unique among similar black bag groups, the UNSOC was intensely trained in nonlethal weaponry, and called to employ such measures by default. This mandate from the Secretariat was less motivated by humanitarian ideals or mercy, but rather a desire to capture live targets whenever possible, so as to better serve the interrogation staff at the Intelligence Cell.

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Left- Standard UNSOC Space Elevator counterinsurgency trooper. Right- Elite UNSOC operative, in street parlance a “Knight Killer”

Developments in the materials sciences enhanced security doctrine. After over half a century of lackadaisical investment, in the 2050s breakthroughs by Togra Labs chemical engineers finally resulted in a new generation of quick-sticking adhesive tacky materials that could be used in sub-lethal combat, quickly trademarked as StickyFoam. Essentially chemically-reactive aerogel laced with Buckytubes of incredible tensile strength, StickyFoam was used to disable individual assailants all the way to rioting mobs and enemy vehicles by freezing them in place. Togra StickyFoam cannons were even mounted on armored vehicles of private military corporations during the Badlands campaign of the Hypersurvivalist Wars, in which they were a key asset at immobilizing Holnist vehicles.

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Battle of Bridge City, wherein American Reclamation Corporation private security Jaguar-class platforms defeated Holnist forces driving stolen U.S. military equipment. Note the use of ‘foam and fry’ tactics of launching RPG rounds at immobilized units, the Togra coloring on the ARC vehicles (a stipulation of their corporate partnership)

Despite widespread use, only a handful of prototype personal StickyFoam launchers were brought along for the trip. Mission leadership balked at the possibility of flooding entire corridors with foam. Despite this, the nonlethal technology did see some use during Planetfall. Most often they were employed as a stopgap fire extinguisher, a dicey operation as their chemical composition could damage irreplaceable machinery. The few combat instances of StickyFoam during Planetfall were almost exclusively against armored adversaries, including one defensive action that successfully held a hijacked CMC-300 suit in place for no less than seven minutes before its rebel operator was able to reboot the napalm projector systems and burn through hardened aerogel.

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Left- Crew member in environmental suit for impromptu fire protection prepares to enter conflagration with a StickyFoam launcher. Right- Extracted helmet cam footage of the late Cpl. Jaydo Watkins, U.N. Security Force, Battle of Forward Surgical Bay E

Two other major types of sublethal weaponry en vogue on Earth at the time of mission launch but went unrepresented on the ship included microwave emitters and precision combat waterjets. While directed energy active denial systems had been used by American military and law enforcement forces since the beginning of the 21st century, the high power expenditures, and bad institutional memories of New Los Angeles City Guardsmen and NLAPD officers firing microwave beams indiscriminately into crowds of starving rioters, made them prohibitively expensive for interstellar security. However, knowledge of such weapons was preserved, and would see use on Planet after technological advancements made energy weapons commonplace. These low-powered maser “heat rays” could focus patches of intense heat on unruly subjects, causing pain and minor burns and forcing them to submit or scatter.

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Watchers of Chiron Juggernaut-class social stability enforcement platform performs sentry duties outside of Bentham’s Blockhouse during the drone riots of M.Y. 91

High-pressure water jets had been used for industrial precision cutting since the 1930s. By the end of the century, weaponization of the hydro-technology enabled the staunching of dozens of protest movements and rebel insurgencies throughout the colonial empires. On the lowest settings, these waterjets resembled traditional water cannons for crowd dispersal. On higher settings, they could cut through layers of metal, utterly destroying enemy vehicles and structures. Like masers, waterjets were severely resource-constrained, making them a non-starter in the hydro-scarce theater of space. However, they later became a novel armament employed by the aquatic factions of Chiron, whose militaries primarily operated in or near water.

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Fragmentary footage of a Nautilus Pirates Manta-class amphibious shagokhod during a shore raid. The blue lensing effect is not merely cosmetic or for psychological effect, but rather light from a synthetic crystal focusing the stream.

Notes

Tech quote assembled from lines by character from Deus Ex.

StickyFoam is a weapons type from Outpost 2: Divided Destiny. Here is a short story about it.

Togra Labs is an adaptation of Togra University from Pandora: First Contact

Water jet cutter as weapon concept inspired by Metal Gear RAY from Metal Gear Solid 2

Image Credits

Unit insignia created by modifying the post-war United Nations Space Command logo

Trooper from Deus Ex. Operative from a Greek Deus Ex fansite

Vehicle battle from Outpost 2: Divided Destiny

Red astronaut and helmet footage from Prey (2017)

Vehicle with dish from Outpost 2: Divided Destiny

Waterjet robot footage from Metal Gear Survive
 
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Name: Trung Thi Hoang
Rank: Sky Captain
Position: Shuttle Pilot
County of Origin: Vietnam
DOB: 03-08-2033

Service Record:
Born 2033, Hai Phong, Vietnamese Soviet Republic. Father a seaplane pilot, mother a futsal player. Taught to fly at early age, receiving amateur pilot license shortly after sixteenth birthday. Studied Developmental Neuroscience at Vietnam National University. Five months into Master’s program in Neuropsychology, the Fourth Indochina War began with the signing of Zhao-Rivière Agreement. Father’s plane downed by Golden Chinese fighters during naval action in Second Battle of Cấm River.

Enlisted in Vietnam People’s Air Force following the fall of Hanoi. Completed F-88 Lion flight training, assigned to 989th Fighter regiment, Le Thi Thu Nguyet “Iron Bird” Squadron during Southern Pacification Campaign. Took part in the Battle of Hải Dương, scoring first kill. Launched the final volley that sank the GCV Yuan Shikai. Joined counteroffensive against invaders, fought in pivotal Battle of Spratly Island. Charged with insubordination for choosing to provide cover to a civilian convoy instead of pursing a Golden Prince-Marshal. Reassigned to desk job as psych ops officer.

Served as mental health liaison to Soviet expeditionary forces after French Indochinese Union forces crossed 17th parallel, activation of WARPAC. Learned deep scanning, personality restoration techniques, combat meditation from GRU military advisors. Conducted landmark psych survey pinpointing cause of Annam Syndrome to French use of sonic subliminal stimuli weaponry. Recalled to frontline service after French Indochinese launched second invasion via Lao associated state. Deployed to western front, present in initial wave that captured Vientiane. Scored a career high of three kills against AAE bogeys, providing crucial cover to 967th Khe Sanh “Steel Viper” Squadron that destroyed the Indochinese Aéronavale armored war dirigible Sisavang Vatthana.

Shot down over enemy territory during Central Highlands campaign. Captured by Golden Chinese-affiliated counterrevolutionary bandits, held for forty days in infamous Camp Cloud Cobra. Feigned defeat under torture, offering false intel that convincingly misdirected enemy assets. Despite malnourishment and sleep deprivation, formed plan with fellow prisoners including Vietnamese military servicemen, Warsaw Pact advisors, kidnapped locals, Cambodian refugees, and enslaved tribespeople. Prison revolt successful; later decorated with Military Exploit Order for role as orchestrator.

Remained in region for the duration of war. Fellow prisoners formed core of irregular unit Army of the Phoenix, conducting guerrilla strikes and acts of sabotage against Chinese, French, and comprador forces alike. Oversaw liberation of mercenary-occupied native villages. Became involved with one Y Thih Enuol, ethnic Rhade tribal fighter and former Cloud Cobra inmate. Gave military leadership to Y Thih while retaining internal overwatch of unit, including punishment of looters, other offenders. Forging deep relations to local tribes, Phoenix brought expelled all invader and comprador-collaborator bandits from operation area.

Fought in Spring Festival Offensive precipitating Chinese withdrawal. Golden China’s invasion formally ended after breakdown of Zhao-Rivière. Paris affirmation of French Indochinese sovereignty over Kouang-Tchéou-Wan proved to be final straw for Beijing. Deferred bereavement leave after Y Thih was KIA by retreating Golden Chinese; sought reassignment to embedded combat psych officer role in post-New Delhi Treaty push against France. Oversaw deprogramming of Indochinese prisoners captured during final southern campaign; paper “Demonic Rhythms: Initiation and Indoctrination Practices of the French” well-received, receiving commendation from Warsaw Pact psych researchers. Promoted to captain by end of war.

Did not return home to remaining family. Worked on reconstruction efforts in Central Highlands DMZ among Montagnard villages. Became activist on behalf of tribes, using prestige as war hero advocate for government recognition of their wartime service, conferment of veteran benefits. Led womens’ rights campaign modeled after empowered tribeswomen of the Rhede, Cham, Mnong. Publicly repudiated EuroAm ninth-wave feminist consensus.

Subsequent activities drew more controversy. Demanded prosecution of leaders responsible for Vietnamese military’s program of retaliatory torture of invader POWs. Lobbied for blacklisting individuals identified by United Nations as probable war criminals. Accused of extrajudicial vigilantism against human traffickers, operating sleeper cells of postwar Phoenix veterans in defense of highlands tribes against intruding development corporations. Appointed by U.N. Alpha Centauri Mission Committee for flight record and psych work. Designated survey shuttle pilot, Unity auxiliary helmsman, tertiary non-emergency psych staff.

Like many impromptu leaders born during Unity crisis, Trung rallied former comrades and the lost and desperate alike. Ex-Phoenix professionals stood guard and fought off attacking Holnist brigands while Trung toiled alongside her new followers to prep the shuttle bay for launch under rapidly unraveling circumstances. Tragically, the mission’s entire contingent of surveyor shuttles was lost to structural damage caused by a Holnist suicide bomber. Viewing the entire senseless loss of life as further continuation of the irrational conflicts of Earth, and of the tyranny of the violent against the helpless, Trung brought as many innocents as she could, notably leaving behind surrendered Holnists, and took flight to the new world.

Psych Profile: Cognitive Guardian
Extroversion and public outspokenness belie deep analytical abilities and keen observational skills. Subject presents a vibrant, imperious spirit cultivated by wartime service. Calm exterior and courage under fire ensure that subject performs admirably under high-stress crisis situations. Subject is not first to speak, but abundantly responds with detailed and deeply-considered responses when presented with provocation. Diagnosed with hyperkinesthetic acuity at early age, enabling extraordinarily high levels of spatial and motion awareness that is an asset for aviatory duties.

Driven by a deeply personal code of ethics, subject seeks to defend all those around her. Tragedy instilled fierce hatred for unwarranted aggression, deep empathy for the oppressed. Postwar estrangement from surviving family indicates potential sublimation of personal loss into societal aspirations, avoidance of unresolved pain.

Memetic analysis indicates that subject chiefly motivated by sense of justice towards the defenseless and desire to prevent further suffering. Activism for prosecution of war criminals included calls for more comprehensive personality tests, psychological monitoring of military personnel for potential antisocial tendencies, even the application of such screening on civilian leaders and public servants. Critics have labeled such methods the formation of a “People’s Panopticon.”

At-times fiery commitment to social causes, concern for the marginalized, potential distraction from central objectives. Capacity to command presents a threat to mission cohesion. Recommend subject assigned to secondary roles and sanctioned from ideological discussion whenever possible.


Visions of Alpha Centauri


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Faction: Phoenix Nation
Classification: Outpost sub-faction
Founding Base: Phoenix Rising

“We fly from old Earth covered in ash, dreaming of a better home. But those responsible for the great pyre are still among us. There can be no peace, no new world, until the lion lays before the lamb. Violence is a malady of the mind; all maladies must be cured.”

-- Monitor-Protector Trung Thi Hoang, “Seeds of Earth”​

Casting

Trung Thi Hoang is portrayed by Veronica Ngo as Paige Tico in Star Wars: The Last Jedi.

Notes

Trung Thi Hoang is from my Second Ship project. (see synopsis for additional design notes)

Adaptation Notes

Given RtD’s Long Cold War setting, here I have North Vietnam surviving indefinitely, a lone holdout while the rest of the region including southern Vietnam remains a colonial subject of the French Union. Also in the setting China is apparently still under the rule of the dynasty that Sheng-ji Yang once served, rather than whoever was behind the Crimson Succession. Here, both form an Agreement to invade and divide the VSR between themselves.

As in my Second Ship, the Phoenix Nation’s ideology is built upon human liberation followed by a guarantee of no more abusers, no more despots. To achieve the latter, Trung aspires to use cutting-edge psychological techniques to at least suss out potential malefactors, if not prevent them entirely. Since this setting is one where the legacy of colonial empires still exist- even if they're not actually present on Planet- and many speculative mind work exist, just see the Dreamers, there might be more active appeal for such a faction. Internally, they have a culture of appreciation and celebration of downtrodden peoples. They also have somewhat of a matriarchal outlook. (This is a remnant of originally making them a neo-feminist faction based on David Brin’s descriptions in Earth and The Postman, until I realized his concepts are unsalvageable.)

I like thinking of factions in terms of the four empires from EVE Online (they’re low-key pretty good archetypes for sci-fi human civilizations), and the Phoenix are most similar to the Minmatar.
 
Chairman Sheng-ji Yang said:
The essential conceit of nuclear power operations is conformity to procedure. The intent--production of safe, reliable fission--is well-known and unchanging, and the goal is simple: prevention of error. [1] But in such an environment, there is no consideration for the plasticity of thinking so essential to the as-yet unforseen challenges of interplanetary colonization. We are packing our tool chest with the wrong equipment. - Dispatch to the United Nations, No. 7

On February 2, 2059, the San Francisco Chronicle broke an open secret: Unity Mission leadership was experiencing deep divisions over the role atomic energy would play in the expedition.

Atomic safety was the professed obsession of every national government and countless non-governmental watchdog organizations worldwide. Vast differences of opinion over exactly how Earth had come to lie on its death bed did not blind any of the command staff to simple reality: Earth was experiencing a man-made nuclear winter. In the making of great profits and great wars, the planet's life-sustaining waters and soils had been poisoned beyond humanity's capacities to restore them. More than three billion excess deaths between 1945 and 2045 were tied, directly or indirectly, to the use of commercial and military atomics. Some believed that the answer was to abandon fission entirely, while others insisted that its benefits remained vastly underappreciated, and that the expedition would require every tool at hand to deal with expected conditions on Chiron.

More than thirty years into expedition planning, the United Nations certainly faced strong incentives to find in favor of the continued emphasis on atomic energy. Nuclear pulse propulsion was the basis for all fast space travel, including Unity's complicated star drive. Because of the technology's ubiquitous acceptance worldwide for more than a century, most Unity vehicles from Scout Rovers to Landing Pods used nuclear power plants. Logisticians warned that 93% of expected future donations of vehicles, more than 75% of donations of light machinery, 95% of donations of heavy machinery, and 52% of donations of computers would be foreclosed to the Mission if it placed a moratorium on the further acceptance of nuclear fuels. Furthermore, radiological safety protocols made up a significant portion of the training regimens administered to colonists and crew at all levels. In one of the last memos he would author in the position of Interim Chief of Staff to Apsara Mongkut, Dr. Pravin Lal affirmed the "practical inadmissibility" of de-nuclearization "except in the most limited applications." Still, to provide themselves with top cover, the U.N. commissioned a study into that very possibility, Hydrologist Dr. Helmut Muntz of the Technical University of Munich presiding.

To nobody's surprise, on December 31, 2050, Muntz's team tendered a comprehensive plan to phase out the mission's atomic energy sources within no more than ten years of Planetfall. The plan, which recommended various initiatives to lay in the makings for a non-nuclear industrial base, was staked on five key points.
  1. That history had demonstrated the unfitness of both historical and contemporary atomic safety regimes to forecast or mitigate even the consequences of commercial fission. In short, the Muntz Report judged, "There is no such thing as safe nuclear power."
  2. That use of commerical nuclear devices on Chiron risked dramatic impacts on its ecosystem at a time when the colonists would be unable to make confident predictions about the long-term consequences of doing so, effectively risking rendering the world uninhabitable, resulting in total mission failure.
  3. That the mission was devoting more precious payload to nuclear safety equipment than would be needed for a comparable clean energy technology base.
  4. That inadequate security made it imperative for Unity to pursue maximal reductions in the quantity of fissionables carried aboard.
  5. That the probability of nuclear accidents, based on the number of nuclear-powered assets embarked, was already unacceptably high.


Dr. Helmut Muntz, c. 2045.

Muntz, already ill with the degenerative nerve condition that would take his life in 2064, devoted his final years to a pressure campaign on behalf of the report that made him a household name. His most consistent fellow travelers, then or later, included Sister Miriam Godwinson, who lent her considerable rhetorical genius to the cause of de-nuclearization by giving a series of lectures on her experiences ministering to victims of nuclear accidents inside the Arctic Circle; Political Officer Sheng-ji Yang, who used Chinese government channels to criticize mission training; Forward Contact Team (FCT) leader Jeremy Tanner Marsh, another prominent environmental conservationist; and, after her accession to the mission in 2070, Lady Deirdre Skye, who feared for the viability of the mission's food supply. By that late date, both expedition Master-at-Arms Rachael Winzenreid and U.N. Marine General Marcel Salan were privately in concurrence with Muntz's conclusions, warning Mission Control that they felt unable to make guarantees as to the adequacy of safeguards to prevent misuse of the mission's stockpile of atomic devices.


Derivatives of the grossly unreliable General Electric Beetle, which inherited all the mechanical insufficiencies of their forbears, were so unsuited for their intended purpose of servicing Unity's reactor vessels that Dr. Johann Anhaldt filed six complaints with the U.N. Office of Internal Oversight Services. None was ever resolved.

Zakharov's people mostly used their lead-shielded Beetles as mobile screens against Spartan attack in
Unity's reactor halls, though hundreds were aboard the Landing Pods that made it down to Chiron.

The argument quickly spun out a personal dimension. At her selection boards, Skye emphasized the unreliability of Soviet record-keeping and pointed to long-swirling rumors that Unity's Chief Engineer (and her future superior), Prokhor Zakharov, was ambivalent toward the strictures of atomic safety.

Zakharov led the counter-charge, and, making rare common cause with Unity Atomic Energy Laboratory chief Johann Anhaldt, accused Muntz of "rank hysterics." Without atomic tools, they estimated that the pace of colonial development would be delayed at least fifty years. As to the careful preservation of the Chironian ecosphere, neither man accepted this as a legitimate mission objective, and pointed out its absence from the relevant charter. On the same side of the fence, Unity donor Nwabudike Morgan, with Zakharov as his ghost writer, submitted statements to the effect that commercial atomic energy's benefits to human society far outweighed its costs, and that it was irresponsible of Muntz to blame a technology for the mistakes of its handlers. To bolster his argument, Pseudo-Morgan focused on advances in nuclear medicine, the relationship between nuclear mining and sea bed development, and the broader impacts of space travel and development.

Classified appendices of the Muntz Report, amounting to more than seven hundred pages originally withheld from publication, were included in the final radio transmissions broadcast to Unity from Earth as it crossed through the Oort Cloud. At a meeting of the Planetary Council in MY25, Annunciator Sathieu Metrion pledged to locate and publish the report as part of his faction's service to other mission survivors.


The M65 atomic cannon, popularly "Atomic Annie," was the inspiration for a range of commercial nuclear cannons entrusted to the FCT.

Marsh was unable to stand by his convictions: the FCT was ultimately a nuclear-powered affair, and their dangerous work placed them at the forefront of nuclear accident rates among all factions.

To avoid the temptation of using the big guns in anger and lacking the means to produce conventional rounds of good quality, Marsh spiked the thirteen tubes still in his possession during the Hunters' vendetta with Oscar van de Graaf. Three others were unaccounted for, having been retained by their attending road crews when first disavowing Marsh's leadership.

Sources:
This quote was inspired by U.S. Navy Captain L. David Marquet's description of the nuclear navy in Turn the Ship Around! (2013).

For more on the GE Beetle, see Tim Bean, "The GE Beetle: Our Giant Atomic Robot" on orangebean. The original photo of the Beetle seems to be taken from a 1951 issue of Life magazine.

Our Helmut Muntz is computer scientist Anthoiny Wojcik of Illinois Tech.

Image of the "Atomic Annie" is from a July 17, 2023 story in autoevolution by Benny Kirk.
 
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