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Three
Pillars of Power
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| Since his election three years ago the President
of the Gallente Federation, Souro Foiritan, has been
embroiled in a silent war with the Senate of the Federation.
At stake is the question where the ultimate power within
the Federation lies. The third pillar of the Federal
government, the Supreme Court, has also been dragged
into this covert war, fought on a broad front. Foiritan¡¯s
predecessors in the Presidency were weaklings and they
were frequently brow-beaten by the Senate. In time,
the Senate began to see itself as the true leader of
the Federation, something that Foiritan is now furiously
trying to overturn. In recent months many political
events that would normally be considered quite insignificant
have been blown out of all proportions as the feuding
sides use them as a pretext to attack each other. Yet
the battle lines have been slowly solidifying, revealing
the underlying ideologies that the three sides really
stand for.
While the Senate has become the champion of big bucks
business and entrenched interests, Foiritan has masterfully
maneuvered himself into becoming the people¡¯s
man - using his boyish charms to ride the wave of popularity
he enjoys throughout the Federation. The leaders of
the Senate - such as the astute Jaq-Foix Netharin and
Maridane Wilfort the extremist - have used the lobbyists
and the moneymen to build themselves a formidable position,
though many feel this fortress of special interests
is becoming more and more like an ivory tower every
day. In this tug-of-war where the very foundations of
the Federation are at stake the arsenals of the adversaries
are filled with deceit, sleaze and words of hatred and
they fight each other with armies of lawyers, hordes
of PR stunt men and the voice of the media. And yet
for all their efforts the only casualties so far have
been truth and reason. Yet even those have found a champion
- the Supreme Court. In the political havoc the Supreme
Court has acted as a beacon of common sense - a solid
rock for the hard pressed masses to lean on to weather
the storm that threatens to engulf them. As is so often
the case when a war for the fate of millions rages the
survival of the weak is most at risk. It is here that
the Supreme Court has found a cause worth fighting for
and it is doing all in its power to uphold the principles
of the Federation - brotherhood, fraternity and equal
rights to all men.
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