2 members
As Long as the objective is sane, it is not evil
Jacqui Kaul was born on Severus (Keil III) on June 19, 2908. When Jacqui was born, Wyndale Kaul, her sister, was 16. Jacqui always felt in the shadows of her older sister, and kind of resented her older sister’s accomplishments. That’s why she a bit of a rebel, even over what was done in the Takagi Turks. Takagi Turks was about ideas, down with the Man, Jacqui was just rebelling with no focus. With Wyndale’s death, when Remitar told her of her about her not too perfect sister, she was intrigued. That changed her perception of her sister.
Turns out Wyndale’s was wilder than the family projected. Yes, Wyndale tone down the rebellious ways and got serious, which was after the accident that took the lives of two of the Turks. All, including Remitar, had a change of perspective after the accident. The accident was in 2913, when Remitar was 19 and Wyndale was 21. That may have been when Wyndale was introduced to the “condition” and Remitar felt guilty because he didn’t “catch the disease.”
After her wild day and the accident, Wyndale became a respectable part of society. Wyndale became a noted scientist, before she succumb to the disease she was doing research on. Jacqui reached out to Remitar. She wanted to know more about her sister, as she was estranged and the two hasn’t talked for almost 10 years before she died. Remitar was going though own rough patch, and reminiscing about her sister, both worked through their separate grief.
Through the years, both have become like siblings. Jacqui is a bit of non-conformist, like her sister, and Remitar has taken the role as an older brother. Some scrapes Jacqui has gotten into, Remitar has come her aid, sometime monetarily, sometimes with advice, sometimes with force. When Remitar was attacked and stranded in the Nyx system, Jacqui mounted a rescue mission to Nyx and found Remitar.
As of the beginning of 2953, Jacqui was recognized as part of Remitar’s organization, and Jacqui made Remitar part of hers.
The freedom to express varying and often opposing ideas is essential to variety of conceptions of democracy. If democracy is viewed as essentially a process – a way in which collective decisions for a society are made – free expression is crucial to the openness of the process and to such characteristics as elections, representation of interests, and the like.
This is a one-person operation. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.