(Untitled)

Nov 19, 2008 17:53

Somehow Geoffrey figured this duty would fall on him sooner or later, and now three different elements had converged to make it his turn: he was on the Council, he wasn't running in this election, and he was, in fact, master of this stage ( Read more... )

harriet jones, richard winters, william de worde, dick grayson, buck compton, council, joe dick, dr. rollie saunders, gathering, glen bateman, quatre raberba winner, barbara gordon, joshua lyman, peter pevensie, guy burgess, edmund pevensie, robb stark, jack harkness, jill langston, coraline jones, logan echolls-harkness

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fourforone November 19 2008, 23:20:01 UTC
Speaking in front of big crowds like this feels natural and for a second, I almost feel like I ought to have a sand table in front of me and a board behind me announcing the name of our mission. So maybe it's not Operation Overlord or Market Garden, but it's just as important. I'd always figured, back home, that I'd wind up serving my country and community and if I can't get back there, I don't want to let this one see poor days, either.

"Afternoon, all," I begin easily with a smile. "For those of you not playing in the baseball league and if you aren't, join us," I take a moment to entreat. "Well, for those of you who don't know, I'm Lieutenant Buck Compton of Easy Company. Many fine friends of mine were kind enough to sign a petition so I could speak here today and have a fair shot at running and I'm endlessly grateful to them for that chance. I'm not going to stand here and give you some rigid platform because the truth is, just from what I've seen, this place seems mutable as anything, so what I will do is give you a look at my ( ... )

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curiously_cora November 19 2008, 23:30:51 UTC
Coraline thought it was very easy to tell Buck and her daddy apart. Besides the whole age difference it was much easier because Buck talked a whole lot and Cain rarely ever did. Somedays she was lucky to get a 'Behave kid' from Cain. Where as Buck seemed to be able to talk and talk and talk. Well much more then Cain at any rate.

"Hi Buck," Coraline said waving cheerily to him. "If you were elected what would you do for the children of the island?"

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fourforone November 19 2008, 23:32:54 UTC
"Well, a devoted Little League would be a first step," I reply easily as I unleash my most charming grin in Coraline's direction. "That one's been on my mind a while, now. I'd like to see a tightening up of school subjects with some mandatories. Doesn't mean they have to be boring, but it's good for every kid to learn math and lit," I say, more seriously now and I get a flash of Webster somewhere in my head, going on with those useless facts of his. "But I think what we need to do most is just respect the children and make sure they're being raised into fine adults because you, them, all of you kids are bound to be our next great generation."

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curiously_cora November 19 2008, 23:52:20 UTC
"But I like playing with the Grown Ups and I'm really good." Coraline said not really liking the idea of a little league that would mean that she'd have to play with the babies. Mandatory lessons also sounded boring. She made a face that said her exact thoughts on the subject. "Won't be as great as you or Joe or Mister Nixon, you're heroes. Thank you for answering my questions."

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dogbitesman November 20 2008, 00:01:55 UTC
"Lieutenant Compton," William said, when he had the man's attention. "Are you saying you don't have any plans or ideas as to what you'd do if elected? There is a limit to mutability, even on this island."

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fourforone November 20 2008, 00:08:04 UTC
I give a nod in deference to William de Worde, only knowing about him through the articles he's written and it's something else to meet him. "Truth be told, I have a list in my sock drawer," I joke warmly, but the smile fades into something more sober. "I'd like to see a stricter core curriculum at the school in addition to most other classes, I'd like to see a volunteer assembly of Island people because elected officials can only do so much and willing citizens who want to take up the call and volunteer should have a shot in helping do the Council's work. I'd like to honor more holidays for people, more accomplishments. The thing you believe in most, we should be respecting that and for me, well...I'd like one day in April to have a moment of silence and I hope that's not asking too much. Weapons registry is a fine idea and so is the ITF, and I'd love to see more bridging of departments so as to further communication and encourage special projects that bind the ties of the way this Island works ( ... )

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dogbitesman November 20 2008, 00:23:00 UTC
A list! A genuine selection of ideas and projects. William considered this something of a marvel in the area of island politics, and felt it was his duty to nurture it. With questions.

"When you say a stricter core curriculum, what do you think that should consist of?"

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fourforone November 20 2008, 00:27:03 UTC
"Well, and don't get me wrong because hell, I loved phys ed as a kid and was studying to be a phys ed teacher, there seem to be a couple that have the core competencies attached. I know I'd rather have my child learn to read before they learned to shoot a gun or use a sword and maybe that's not what all cultures are like, but I'd prefer that the people using those weapons could know how to read an article about them or a piece of technique submitted to a journal," I point out. "Beyond that, the simplistic of mathematics and science. People ought to know why things work the way they do. And if adults want to spend their days learning, then more power to them. It's good to see when people can admit they don't know every ounce of knowledge in the world," I go on, cringing slightly at the memory of too many an Officer who embodied that very thing.

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dogbitesman November 20 2008, 00:30:54 UTC
"You're not the first to bring up the absence of general sciences," William murmured, making a note. "Now, backing up to that list in your sock drawer... what do you mean by moral matters?"

William was always wary when the word moral was in play.

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fourforone November 20 2008, 00:36:39 UTC
"Things you might cringe at if you saw them published on the front page of the newspaper," I offer my very best opinion of the matter. "I've seen a lot of men come from different moral backgrounds. Hell, Dick is a fine man, but he's cut from a different cloth than me. Better one, really," I admit. "Say it was a medical case of a woman who had been taken advantage of. There's a legal aspect, but there's a moral aspect involved as well. And maybe we don't have the right to be judging that, but it deserves to have a light shone upon it, if only to get people's voices out there as to what their morals and beliefs are." I've done this often, this speaking for a cause. It's part of why I joined to fight a war. "Sometimes we fight for those morals and sometimes people have to fight for us. Maybe that's all I mean to say. That they ought to deserve to have a light shone on them."

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dogbitesman November 20 2008, 04:48:24 UTC
"Right, I suppose I'm just not clear on what you foresee a judicial body doing with regards to the morals of the community," William said, rubbing the left side of his temple. "Specifically, not just symbolically."

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fourforone November 20 2008, 10:37:29 UTC
"In my belief, most legal matters have a moral side to them," I point out. "Specifically," I clarify, "what a judicial body would do is dissect the moral aspects of a situation. Specifically, they would have to be well-capable of looking past their cultural norms, seeing what's best for this community, and being morally sound. They have to not forget that for every precedent they set, they are changing people's lives," I continue, giving all my attention to William and feeling slightly like I'm in a briefing. "So," I go on, grinning now. "Let me ask you something. You ever watch these things and sit there thinking 'I could do a better job'?" It was a curiosity, really, after he'd finishing reading the last stack of election-specific papers. "How come you haven't run?"

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