Becoming
a Warden is not a career in the normal CT sense. The TAS only hires
veterans, those who have experience and a record of public service.
Applying
to join the Wardens is a lengthy process. The applicant is
interviewed extensively, including by priests and monks with
spiritual insight to spot the selfish or unstable. The player and his
referee should discuss the reasons for joining the program, and if
the referee is persuaded, let the process proceed.
Warden
training takes one full year. Using the CT experience rules, the
Warden-in-training receives one level of Liaison skill (they are
supposed to peacefully resolve disputes) plus one level of skill from
this list (roll 1D6):
- Medical
- Administration
- Leadership
- Legal
- Unarmed Combat
- Survival
Payment
will never be great, but the service offers room and board year round
at TAS facilities. Annual salary is equal to Retirement Pay, as if
the PC had served one additional term in their service. Minimum
salary will be the same as for five terms. Long-serving Wardens will see pay rises on the same term basis.
Once
the trainee has completed the first year, they graduate and take
assignment in a specific world/system. Transfers are possible after
one year of a four-year term of service. Wardens can retire at the
start of any four-year term. The last thing the trainee has to do
before taking assignment is to take the Warden's Oath, in the
presence of a representative of the TAS and a priest, and recite
from memory Psalm 82: 3-4.
The
Warden's Oath
I
am a Warden.
I
am a protector.
I
am a light shining against the darkness of chaos and oppression; an
unyielding wall of defense for the widow and the orphan.
I
will never forget or deny the inherent dignity of all mankind.
I
will extend mercy to all who ask it of me; but woe to him who thinks
that I am a fool.
I
will use only the force necessary to maintain peace and order; but
woe to him who thinks that I am weak.
I
will do all in my power to uphold the rule of law; but woe to him who
would use Law as a tool of oppression.
I
will do all in my power to defend the right as God gives me wisdom to
see the right.
I
am not a soldier or an agent of any government. I am a defender of
those who cannot defend themselves.
I
am a Warden.
Verses
for the Warden Corps to live by:
Psalm
82: 3-4
Defend the poor and fatherless;
Do justice to the afflicted and needy.
Deliver the poor and needy;
Free them from the hand of the wicked.
Do justice to the afflicted and needy.
Deliver the poor and needy;
Free them from the hand of the wicked.
Psalm
146: 9
The Lord watches over the strangers;
He relieves the fatherless and widow;
But the way of the wicked He turns upside down.
He relieves the fatherless and widow;
But the way of the wicked He turns upside down.
Isaiah
1:17
James
1:27
Pure and undefiled religion before God and the Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their trouble, and to keep oneself unspotted from the world.
My
vision of the Wardens program is of an organization that has its
flaws, because it is run by fallible humans, but tries to correct
those flaws, and genuinely live out the ideals set forth in the
creed. The TAS is not a 'secret society' manipulating people in the
background; they and the Wardens believe in their stated ideals and
try to act accordingly. In a genre where the 'corrupt organization'
is a common trope, whether it be a business, government or religious
organization, I say the Wardens are genuinely altruistic. They try to
do good, watch out for their own, and work hard to keep out or weed
out the ones who are self-serving and try to use the Warden badge for
their own ends (see article 6).
Wardens
are like US Marshals of the Wild West – just less likely to shoot
people.
Using
the Martial Arts rules article from JTAS, I can create a defensive
martial art, similar to akido, which the Wardens will teach to
priests or monks, so that they can defend themselves or others
without attacking!
I can't say how much I love finding Traveller articles with Bible verses! Especially on Easter morning. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteHe is Risen! A blessed Easter to you (although this year the Orthodox won't be celebrating Easter until the first of May, because of calendar differences).
DeleteCheers! And to you too when you get there! (Did I read earlier this year of moves to reconcile - and fix - the date?)
Delete