Revolutions

11.23-The Trial of the Earthlings

34 min
Apr 21, 2025about 1 year ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Episode 11.23 covers the establishment of Mars's first elected government in 2251, the formation of the Martian Navy, and the controversial tribunals to try prisoners from the Independence Days. The episode focuses on the trial of loyalist leader Bruno October and explores tensions between those advocating harsh treatment of Earthlings versus those promoting an inclusive revolutionary vision.

Insights
  • Legal proceedings can be undermined by public pressure and inflammatory rhetoric, even when evidence-based systems are in place to ensure fairness
  • Newly formed governments must balance competing ideological factions while establishing institutional legitimacy and rule of law
  • Military leadership must navigate political constraints and personnel morale when making strategic decisions about resource deployment
  • Scapegoating and dehumanizing language ('Earth or Death') can rapidly escalate from rhetoric to violence against targeted populations
  • Institutional safeguards (transparency, appeals processes, presumption of innocence) are only effective if leadership enforces them consistently
Trends
Rise of xenophobic nationalist movements ('Red Caps') using inflammatory media to influence judicial outcomesEmergence of counter-movements ('Black Caps') advocating for inclusive, egalitarian revolutionary principlesTension between military/security apparatus autonomy and civilian legal oversight in post-revolutionary governmentsStrategic redeployment of military assets from defensive to offensive postures in multi-theater conflictsUse of public media and videography to shape political narratives and mobilize public opinion during trialsIdeological fragmentation of revolutionary coalitions into competing factions with different visions for societyExtrajudicial violence by security forces despite formal legal proceedings and tribunal systems
Topics
Post-Revolutionary Constitutional Government FormationJudicial Tribunals and War Crimes ProsecutionMilitary Navy Organization and Strategic DeploymentXenophobic Political Movements and RhetoricCivil-Military Relations and Command AuthorityPublic Media Influence on Legal ProceedingsDeportation Policy and Citizenship RightsCapital Punishment and Sentencing in Revolutionary JusticeIdeological Factionalism in Revolutionary MovementsExtrajudicial Killing and Security Force AccountabilityWitness Testimony Reliability in Tribunal ProceedingsPolitical Propaganda and Inflammatory SpeechInstitutional Checks and Balances in New Governments
Companies
Omnacore
Primary antagonist corporation; Martian Navy being formed to fight Omnacore forces in Earth orbit and defend against ...
3-Core Coalition
Allied faction requesting Martian Navy reinforcements to counter Omnacore's numerical advantage in Earth orbit conflict
People
Marcus Leopold
Principal author of Martian Constitution; organized tribunal system to legally process prisoners and ensure due process
Jose Calderon
Security chief advocating for mass deportation of Earthlings; encourages surveillance and harassment despite legal pr...
Axel Cartwright
Organizes Martian Navy and leads strategic decision to deploy fleet to Earth to support 3-Core against Omnacore
Lee Wei
Co-organizes Martian Navy with Cartwright; supports offensive strategy of deploying to Earth rather than defensive po...
Booth Gonzalez
Hero of Battle of Phobos; assigned to Admiralty staff for public relations value despite preferring to captain own ship
Ivana Darby
Elected to new ministerial position after Director role abolished by Constitution
Alexandra Clair
Proto-Black Cap leader within Guard; opposes Calderon's xenophobic tactics and harassment of Earthlings
Jao Lin
Most influential media figure of revolution; creates content promoting inclusive 'Every Martian Matters' ideology
Kenji Grue
Posts inflammatory rhetoric against Earthlings; uses tribunal proceedings to inflame public opinion and pressure judges
Bruno October
Tried and convicted of organizing insurrection against Mars; executed via asphyxiation despite weak circumstantial ev...
Coyote O'Hara
Third-generation shipper; joined mutiny in 2247 and now serves in Martian Navy eager for combat
Billy Shrimps
Former container fleet officer and smuggler; fought at Battle of Phobos; now serves in Martian Navy
Abilene Wren
Ship-born orphan with unknown parentage; lifelong space dweller; mutineer who joined Martian Navy
Helena Wells
Met Booth Gonzalez at reception; began stormy relationship with him during pre-Navy period
Kinder James
Held in orbit awaiting trial; easier to prove guilt of compared to Bruno October
Mabel Dore
Held in orbit awaiting trial alongside Kinder James and other alleged traitors
Quotes
"Earth or Death"
Kenji Grue / Red Cap MovementLate February 2251
"Pity you're killing me, I know where the bombs are hidden."
Bruno OctoberApril 15, 2251 - execution
"No Martian would ever be deported ever again. That's just no longer an available option."
Episode Host (describing Martian sentiment)Mid-episode
"who can tell what happened, there's nothing we can do. What's really concerning frankly is the dissension in the ranks you are fostering with your malicious gossip"
Jose CalderonMarch 29, 2251
Full Transcript
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You can reach great listeners like yourself with podcast advertising from Libsyn Ads. Choose from hundreds of top podcasts offering host endorsements or run a pre-produced ad like this one across thousands of shows to reach your target audience in their favorite podcasts with Libsyn Ads. Go to LibsynAds.com today. That's L-I-B-S-Y N-Ads.com. LibsynAds.com. Hello, friends. Before we get going this week, I have some good fun things to say. We are coming up on the final run of episodes in the Martian Revolution. After this week, I will be taking a week off, so there won't be an episode next week. But when I come back, it will be for the final six episodes of the Martian Revolution. That's right, there's only six episodes left. We are officially approaching the end game. But what I want to do right now is put a few things on your collective radar. First, there will be Martian Revolution merchandise available at cottonbureau.com. We are finalizing the designs as we speak, so is it available yet? No, but I do want you to get hype for it. In the meantime, you can right now go to cottonbureau.com. For all of your revolutions and history of Rome merchandise needs. The other thing is that I've got this notion that what I really want to do is a live, in-person reading of the final episode of the Martian Revolution right before it drops into the podcast feed. So I'm going to be in New York the last weekend of May, and that is when the final episode of the Martian Revolution is set to drop. I have no idea how many of you out there would come to such a thing, but to help me gauge interest, I have set up an Eventbrite page. So if you'll be around New York the last weekend of May and think you can come to such a thing, let me know and we'll try to secure an appropriate venue to fit everyone who wants to come. So the link to that Eventbrite page is in the show notes, so I'm not going to say it because it's just a bunch of random numbers and symbols. Finally, I want to once again say thank you so much to everyone who has become a patron at Patreon, and if you go to patreon.com. Or I should mention patreon.com. You'll be able to get all these episodes ad-free for smooth listening. Thank you so much for supporting me. I know you all just want me to keep doing this forever, and if I can, I will. So go to patreon.com. Thank you so much. And now, let's get back to Mars. Hello, and welcome to Revolutions. Episode 11.23, The Trial of the Earthlings. We left off last time with the ratification of the first Martian constitution on December the 11th, 2250. Marcus Leopold was the principal author of the constitution except in one critical area. Jose Calderon got the assembly to carve out a constitutional exemption for the Martian guard to pursue the enemies of the Revolution, which I'm sure will be fine. Meanwhile, up in orbit around Mars, newly minted admirals Axel Cartwright and Lee Wei began organizing the ships and shippers in the environs of the Red Planet into the Martian Navy. This week they will finish that job and then point themselves towards something to fight. So the Martian constitution set a date for elections six weeks after the ratification of the constitution. The so-called stewards continued to preside over Mars in the meantime, but there wouldn't be much of a change in personnel when the elections finally happened. All of the stewards, saved two, entered themselves as candidates for the ministries they had been running since the Independence days. One dropped out because they were quite sick, the other didn't run because she had only agreed to serve temporarily until a proper constitution took effect and then she would resign. I won't trouble you with either of their names because they just came and went pretty fast. But the rest of the stewards put themselves forward to stay on in their positions. It was practically a foregone conclusion that they would all win. I mean, these were some of the most famous names and faces in the Revolution. But the stewards did not run unopposed and in the election of 2251 we see candidates appearing who represented the budding shoots of new ideological species emerging from the recently tilled political soil of Mars. There were candidates from Tharsus and Elysium running to ensure that the drift towards Olympian supremacy did not go unchallenged. A few ran on platforms that cranked up red cap tendencies to the max. They were aggressively pro-Marshan, anti-Earthling and now isolationist to boot. They advocated cutting all ties with Earth completely. And then there was also a click forming in the old A-class running on a platform of divvying up and privatizing huge swaths of Martian society. None of these fringe candidates got more than 5% of the vote, but this was their first showing, not their last. On January 27th, 2251, the first government of the Republic of Mars took up their offices and got to work. Each of the new ministers set about trying to reshape and reorganize their ministries to fit the Constitution, which obviously included the abolition of the employment class system, upon which so much of the previous social, legal and economic administration of Mars had been based. Now as I said, most of the faces were the same. Marcus Leopold was now Minister of the Law, Jose Calderon was still Commander of the Martian Guard. Ivana Darby, I should mention, was now elected Minister of Personnel, as the role of Director had been abolished by the Constitution and replaced with that rotating Executive Consulship. I don't have the time to dig into the details of all the other ministers, so I will just say that if you're looking for a nice gift for the Martian Revolution enthusiast in your life, there is a pretty great vid series called The First Ministers, and each episode is a full biography of each one of them. Because I'm here trying to tell you the entire story of the Martian Revolution, and so I can't really stop and spend a ton of time on what Astor Jubin was doing with the Ministry of Sports and Recreation, but it is a great story. The fact that Kordor Hockey never missed a season, even during the sieges, is a testament to their efforts to keep up morale even in the worst possible conditions. But I can't stop and talk about that, because I do need to talk about the newest part of the Republic of Mars, the Martian Navy. Since the dramatic events of the Independence Days on Mars and the evacuation of Lunaport back around Earth, no space shipper could sit in the middle any longer. During the second sorting of ships, you either rendezvoused with the anti-Omnacore shippers at Mars, or heated an Omnacore order to return to Earth. For those who chose Mars, there was no hope of reconciliation or reintegration with Omnacore. Those days were over. And the only way they were going to survive was to join the Martians and defeat Omnacore together. So the Martian Constitution created the Martian Navy and declared an open recruitment policy. Any shipper who wanted to join could join, and as incentive they were promised equipment, parts, technicians, financing, and benefits. For most of the shippers, the decision was easy. Not only would they need the equipment, parts, technicians, financing, and benefits, but after the evacuation of Lunaport, the fight was now deeply personal, and none of them wanted to sit on the sidelines. As they organized the ships and personnel into chains of command and logistical groupings, Admiral's Cartwright, Wei, and a handful of other trusted officers did a strategic survey of the situation to determine what the Martian Navy would be used for. The first thing they concluded is that container ships needed to be protected at all costs. They were what Mars and 3-Core had to get FOS-5 back to Earth, so until such time as it was safe to send them back to Earth, they would remain in the environs of Mars. Their former security escorts, meanwhile, would form the core of the fighting fleet. They would be supported and augmented by cargo ships that could either themselves be shielded and armed for battle, or put to use serving in some logistical support capacity. In the end, they numbered 287 security gunships and 515 civilian ships. In terms of raw numbers, they could really tip the balance against Omnacor. The second thing they concluded was that there was nothing for them to do around Mars. Omnacor had ordered all of their ships to return to Earth to support the war effort against 3-Core. They had been embarrassed and forced to retreat at Lunaport, but they would command a numerical advantage if they brought their entire fleet to bear. Since that order went out in August 2250, there was zero indication the new leaders of Omnacor had any intention of sending a fleet to Mars. No signals, no movements, no orders that anyone on Mars could detect. Omnacor was concentrating all their efforts at home. For now. As I've mentioned previously, Admiral Cartwright had been in regular contact with high-level executives over in the 3-Core Coalition for years, and they all agreed that the best use of the Martian Navy would be to sail it back to Earth and engage directly in the effort to win control of the space around Earth. 3-Core was presently outnumbered and badly needed reinforcements. It would be stupid to have the Martian Navy sit back in a purely defensive crouch around Mars. If they did that, they would help guarantee that they would have to face an Omnacor invasion fleet at some point, because Omnacor would win the war. Cartwright was totally amenable to this plan, as were the officers around him, and they were all quite confident there would be zero dissension in the ranks for a plan to fly back home to Luna and kick the frack out of the bastards of Omnacor. They were right about that. Cartwright in way formalized their strategic analysis and recommendations and took it to the Martian Ministry. There was heated debate among the Martian leaders over whether it would be wise to have the ships depart for Earth and leave Mars itself vulnerable to future attacks. It was the Martian Navy, after all. But once everyone had their say, Cartwright reminded them that the Shippers who now form the Martian Navy were mostly from Luna, and that not only did he believe this was the best strategy, but if the Ministry didn't approve the plan, it was not going to go over too well with the officers and crew of the Martian Navy. He hinted that there may in fact be a mutiny right out of the gate if they were told to sit here on Mars while their loved ones back home were in danger. So the Ministry agreed rather than trigger a fatal mutiny right out of the gate. Cartwright and Way were ordered to, quote, construct and lead a fleet to Earth and enter the war against Omnacor in such capacity as presents itself. And then they got to work organizing, supplying, arming, and training the Martian Navy. Booth Gonzalez signed the Dappel Up for service in the Navy as soon as enlistment started. On paper he was just another captain of a cargo ship, but Gonzalez was a special case from the beginning. He was, after all, one of the most famous people on Mars. He was the hero Phobos. In the months since that battle, his social calendar was full practically every single day. He was a living symbol who sometimes triggered rapturous reactions from people he met. He was the man who had saved them from nuclear fire. People wept when they saw him. These extreme reactions made him a bit uncomfortable, but in general, Gonzalez enjoyed himself mightily during these months, especially as he made a more formal acquaintance with Helena Wells at a reception in his honor in a horticulture garden. That night was the beginning of their rather, um, stormy relationship. But that much socializing on the surface was eventually exhausting, and by the time the Martian Navy was recruiting, Gonzalez signed up and was ready to go. He was a shipper, after all. His home was space. But even here he presented a special problem. Gonzalez himself just wanted to be the captain of the Dapel. He did not want a high rank. He didn't know anything about military strategy or tactics. He had never been in charge of anything more than his own ship. His mother, Val Gonzalez, ran the business, not him. But Cartwright and Wei felt they would be wasting a valuable resource if he was merely the captain of one ship. They assigned his sister, Victoria, to command the Dapel during the voyage back to Earth, while Captain Gonzalez would be assigned to the Admiralty staff. There he could serve as an officer inside the high command that other cargo shippers trusted. But mostly, his public relations utility far outweighed anything else, and that's why he was with the Admiralty. So they could keep him safe, and so they could keep an eye on him. Gonzalez chafed at the idea, but even Marco and Victoria said, Yeah, you're more valuable to them than over here with us. So he boarded the flagship when it was time to leave, and he would spend the trip to Earth and the company of Cartwright, Wei, and the Admiralty staff. Now, of the civilian shippers who joined the Martian Navy, and who were among those happy that one of their own was so close to the Admiralty, three deserve special note. The first is Coyote O'Hara, who was a third generation shipper born in Lunaport in the year 2221. She and Booth Gonzalez were nearly the same age, and they had known each other for years. O'Hara had been among those who joined the Mutiny in 2247, and later joined the Anti-Omnacore Underground with the Gonzalez family during the era of the agreement of 2248. O'Hara had been en route to Mars in August 2250, and so she missed both the Battle of Phobos and the evacuation of Lunaport. She was now eager for the chance to finally see some action. The best biography of Coyote O'Hara is Firestarter, The Life and Battles of Coyote O'Hara, by Niels Krum. The second was a former container fleet lieutenant named Billy Shrimps. Shrimps was born on an orbital platform in 2209. He attended the Fleet Academy and joined the service in 2231. He had served as a supply officer in the fleet for the next 12 years. His performance reviews were middling, but that was because he was mostly focused on being one of the most adept smugglers in container fleet history, a real wizard when it came to faking cargo manifests. He knew how to exploit every aspect of the sloth and neglect of the later bird years. In 2243, he decided to drop out of the service for reasons that are still unclear and start his own independent shipping operation. This was an exquisitely timed decision as it was right before Timothy Werner and the new protocol screwed up everything. So instead of settling into an easy life as an expert smuggler, Shrimps struggled for the next three years just to hang on. He too was a mutineer in 2247, but unlike O'Hara, he had fought at the Battle of Phobos. The best biography of Billy Shrimps is by Cecil Gonzales. It's called An Officer and a Pirate, the several lives of William Q. Shrimps. Finally, we have Abilene Wren. Wren was born on board a ship at a date that was never actually recorded. She in fact does not appear in any official records at all until she's four or five years old when it was noted that an orphan child was living on board a ship called the Black Forest under the care of its first officer. Wren's parentage and true age remain totally unknown despite many attempts by historians to track it all down. Wren grew up aboard ships and rarely came down to any surface for any reason. Even orbital platforms were too stationary for her taste. So she too was a mutineer in 2247 and in August of 2250 she was halfway back to Earth when news of the evacuation of Luna Port broke and she turned around and headed right back to Mars. The best biography of Abilene Wren is Rogue Warrior, the revolutionary life of Abilene Wren by Linger Bellow. But at the moment, none of these three had done anything to deserve biographies. They were just captains of cargo ships being folded into the mid-level of the Martian Navy's chain of command. But as you probably know, they will soon become much more than that. And if you don't, then you will. Because they do. Before the Martian Navy could leave for Earth, however, they were sucked into Martian politics. Because now that the Constitution had taken effect, they could move forward with tribunals to deal with the prisoners they had in the stockades. Bruno October and the loyalist insurrectionaries, Randos who had been swept up by the Martian Guard in the aftermath, and also don't forget about the officers of convoy group 11 still being held in orbit on a converted passenger ship. And then finally Mabel Dore, Kinder James and the alleged traitors in their orbit. The Navy got caught up in this because Jose Calderon and a lot of other people wanted to quickly process the earthlings and sentence them to deportation back to Earth. He wanted to load them onto vessels and deport them from Mars on ships that would accompany the fleet back to Earth. But Marcus Leopold was not just going to let Jose Calderon deport everyone back to Earth. Instead, his Ministry of Law organized a tiered tribunal system to evaluate, judge and process detainees, properly, legally. There were at this point about a thousand detainees in all. To staff the tribunals and deal with all these detainees, Leopold recruited from the ranks of the veteran advocates of Omnicorzo legal division. He brought them in and assigned them to roles as judges, defense advocates and peoples advocates. At the lowest tier, three judge panels would do a first pass evaluation of individual cases. The accused would have the right to present a defense, produce evidence and were at least technically presumed to be innocent. In the sense that they did not have to prove they were innocent, the people's advocate had to prove they were guilty. Then the tribunal would render a verdict. This is how most of the cases would be dealt with as most of the cases were open and shut. Difficult cases could be kicked up or rung to a panel of intermediate judges who would either investigate further and render a verdict, or kick it up to the final arbitrator, the high tribunal. So, what might happen to these people? While for earthlings, the best case is that they were found innocent. Plenty of detainees had just been swept up in raids or were in the wrong place at the wrong time. With any luck, now would be the time the mistakes would be revealed and they would be released. If you were found guilty of a crime against the Martian people, of which there were several varieties, then yes, the sentence would indeed be deportation back to earth. But one thing I need to make very clear is that though deportation was an option, perhaps even the preferred option for earthlings, not so for Martians. One thing that came out of the revolution, something that was now almost irrationally seared into the Martian psyche, is that no Martian would ever be deported ever again. That's just no longer an available option. We do not deport Martians. Earthlings can be deported, fine, but not Martians. For Martians, punishments included service, fines or other financial penalties, temporary confinement, prolonged confinement, but beyond that deportation was out of the question. They would not even consider voluntary exile as an option because it would be so easy to turn voluntary exile into quote-unquote voluntary exile, if you know what I mean. But some cases were so bad that the other punishments did not fit the crime, and that meant there was only one punishment left. Death. Executions had been rare on Mars, though not unheard of. Usually people who committed heinous crimes weren't killed, they were sent to Saturn. But there had been a few. And of course there was also execution adjacent stuff like what had happened to Jose de Petrov in the original Red Caps back in 2229. But just so you know, when it comes to these tribunals, death is now on the table. As the trials were set to begin in late February 2251, Kenji Grew really caught fire. He posted daily whipping up anger against the Earthling prisoners. They didn't belong here, they weren't Martians. This is who they are, and this is what they do. They relentlessly plot to hand us back to Earth. So let's hand them back to Earth, or kill them, doesn't matter to me. And this is when the phrase Earth or Death entered the lexicon of Red Cap phraseology. Those were the two options for Earthlings on Mars. Earth or Death. All of this had an effect. As the tribunals started incidents of harassment, assault, vandalism and property damage against Earthlings, Earthlings who weren't even involved, mind you, jumped markedly. Jose Calderón, meanwhile, continued to add to the stockade population as he hunted the enemies of the Martian people. His tactics were increasingly offensive to Alexandra Clair. Technically, she was just a captain in the Martian Guard, but obviously she was more famous than Calderón was, and so there was no way for him to maneuver her out of her position without her kicking up a massive fuss. This is how she held on to her rank and post, while more and more openly becoming the hub of proto-black Cap descent, the people who wanted to prevent the Martian Guard from turning into some xenophobic paramilitary force. Now, though these were difficult and dangerous times, this turned out to be the period of the most fruitful collaboration between Clair and Jao Lin. They were at this moment totally synced up on their vision for an egalitarian, communal and universal revolution. Every Martian mattered. So while Clair and her black Cap comrades in the Guard discussed how to defend these ideals, Jao Lin went to work to spread the ideas to the broader public. Jao was already the most influential videographer of the revolution. His work both shaped events as they were happening and continued to shape our own understanding of the revolution here some 250 years later. From Redjust as Red Freedom to Every Martian Matters to the packaging and presentation of the Gemini vids, Jao's work practically is the revolution. Here in February 2251, he expanded on the Every Martian Matters project, now focusing on the testimony of Earthborn Earthlings who had fought in the revolution, or Martians who could testify for Earthlings who had died for Mars during the revolution. The fundamental proposition that they all deserved their spot on Mars as much as anyone else was becoming one of the core pillars of black Cap ideology. The trial of the Earthlings, as these tribunals were collectively dubbed, began on February 22, 2251. The judges opened their chambers and started churning through cases. Most of them were easy. The People's Advocate would present unambiguous video footage of the defendant firing their gun in some corridor or five-way during the Independence Day, and it would be a unanimous three-nothing guilty verdict, sentence forthcoming, next case. But others were not so clear, especially for people who had been picked up in the aftermath of the Independence Days. Many were being held on very flimsy pretexts, or in at least several cases. They were supposed to have already been released, but due to some error or oversight, they were still being held in the stockade. When the lowest rung of the tribunals stumbled into such cases, and the People's Advocate offered no compelling reason to convict them or keep them in custody, they were let go. Cases that were sticky or complicated one way or the other were kicked up to the higher-tier panel of judges and left to them to sort out. Leopold paid close attention to the proceedings and was satisfied with the course they were taking. Bakenji Grue was posting angry polemics every day against letting these dangerous Earthlings walk free. If the tribunal had found them innocent, then that didn't mean they were innocent, it meant there was something wrong with the tribunal. He published the faces of Earthlings who had been let go next to conveniently poor-resolutioned face shots of loyalist insurrectionaries during the Independence Days and saying, see, this is them, and they've been allowed to walk free. We need to stop this ridiculous theater and deport them en masse and be done with them all. Eventually, the tribunal got to Bruno October. When he walked in, he was immediately flagged to be kicked up a rung. The Martian Guard had induced several suspects in custody to name the ring leaders of the insurrection and the name Bruno October kept coming up. So October was sent up to the higher panel who immediately kicked him up to the high tribunal. But the problem for the high tribunal was that proving Bruno October was the mastermind of the insurrection was harder than they thought. Now, just to refresh our memories, October had been taken into custody after his own men stunned him and handed him over to the Martian Guard in exchange for leniency. And while those men had said October was the principal leader of the whole thing, none of them had actual proof of this. Now, he was objectively guilty of being caught under arms, no one disputed that. But how did anyone know he was the ultimate mastermind? Witness statements invariably said, oh, I heard it from a friend, or they couldn't remember who they heard it from. In one fun exchange, Witness A said they heard it from Witness B and then Witness B was interviewed and they said, no, no, no, you've got it backwards. I heard it from Witness A. And beyond these claims that seemed like a bunch of people reporting rumors they didn't have firsthand knowledge of, there did not seem to be any hard evidence proving October was the ring leader. He was obviously much better at covering his tracks than Kinder James. When October himself was questioned by the Tribunal, he muddied the water still further by simultaneously denying everything he was accused of while also taking credit for things there's no way he could have done. And I mean, wild stuff. He said that he invented corridor hockey, that he created Flamin' Hop Maven's infamous biomass recipe, but it had been stolen from him. He also said that he was a quadruple agent actually working for separatists on Saturn. You mean the moons of Saturn? No, no, no, Saturn, the planet itself. Saturn for the Saturnians. It was all transparent nonsense, but it did make him seem like a crazy fabulous to might tell people he was the mastermind of the loyalist uprising. And that's why everyone was repeating it. These Tribunal sessions were open to public vid channels to encourage transparency and avoid the Tribunals becoming secret, unaccountable star chambers. But that meant people like Genji Grue could feast on the proceedings. For him, there was no doubt. October was guilty and he was playing crazy. There was more than enough witness testimony to convict him and the fact that it was all unreliable and there was no corroborating proof did not matter to Grue at all. And he made it very clear that if October wasn't found guilty, that it would spark a riot to rival the three days of red itself, because he would make sure of it. As Grue inflamed public opinion the trial of the Earthlings and October in particular deepened divides inside the Martian Guard. Calderon obviously set the tone from the top and he continued to encourage invasive surveillance and harassment of Earthlings. Genji Grue's posts were left open for all to read at Martian Guard stations throughout Mars. This to the mounting horror and disgust of the proto-Blackcaps. This was all pushed right to the edge on March 29th, 2251 when one of the Earthlings who had been acquitted by the Tribunal, his case was dismissed because he wasn't the guy, he just had the same name as the guy, was found dead by a Martian Guard patrol. Except when other guards showed up, including a few Blackcaps, it was clear the patrol had not so much found him dead as found him alive and then killed him. The Blackcaps on the scene reported this to Claire who took it to Calderon who shrugged and said, who can tell what happened, there's nothing we can do. What's really concerning frankly is the dissension in the ranks you are fostering with your malicious gossip and unfair characterizations of what I am trying to do here. The shape of their forthcoming conflict was coming into focus. Meanwhile, on the first week of April 2251, the Tribunals handed down all their final verdicts. The vast majority of those Earthlings found guilty were indeed sentenced to deportation back to Earth. But 23 individuals were found guilty of being leaders not just followers and among them was Bruno October. After much internal debate, the three judges of the High Tribunal eventually decided to give weight to all the circumstantial evidence against him and find him guilty of organizing and leading an insurrection against the Martian people. The announcement set off a wave of cheering from those Kenji Kru had promised would riot if October was acquitted, which I must say the Tribunal was very aware of when they handed down their verdict. October's was a weird case because the Tribunal got it right. October was guilty as sin, but the decision was not great from a legal point of view and it did not set a great precedent for future Tribunals. October and these other convicted ringleaders would not be deported back to Earth though. Their crimes against the Martian people were too great for that. Instead, they were sentenced to death. The 23 ringleaders were held in a stockade on the old B levels for a week and then on April the 15th their sentences were carried out. They were removed from their cells in groups of five, taken to an interrogation room where they were secured in chairs. The final decree sentencing them to death was read aloud again, then the oxygen was sucked out of the room. Deprived of oxygen, they passed out and then they died. After that the bodies were removed, oxygen was pumped back into the room and the process repeated itself. Bruno October was a part of the last group, there was just him and two other remaining ringleaders. But after October was let in and secured he managed to get in one last dig on his way out of this life. As the air was being sucked out, just before he passed out and died he said very clearly for all to hear, Pity you're killing me, I know where the bombs are hidden. Then he passed out and then he died. It was too late for anything to be done or to find out what he meant. Jose Calderón was there to witness this execution and he did not like what he heard one bit. The trial of the earthlings showed two possible future paths for Mars and the revolution. On the one hand they had mostly successfully run a fact and evidence based legal proceeding that had mostly successfully separated the guilty from the not guilty. That was good. But the tribunals also showed that public pressure and rabble rousing could get the facts and evidence suspended if people just felt like the defendant was guilty. That was not so good. In October's case it was a happy coincidence that he was actually guilty. Future tribunal defendants would not be so lucky as all of this is about to be cranked up a notch when we turn our attention next week to the trial of the earth worms. Meanwhile, Admiral Cartwright and Wei had told the Martian Ministry in mid-March that the navy was ready to sail. But they were told to wait until the trial of the earthlings was completed because there would be hundreds of deportees who would need to be sent back to earth. Cartwright and Wei grumbled a bit about being saddled with these prisoners. But even they could see that if the earthlings were not deported it probably would trigger some kind of riot on Mars and that was the last thing anyone needed. So instead they identified some suitable ships, worked out the logistics, and in mid-April loaded the deportees aboard. These included, I should mention, the officers of convoy group 11 who because they had never stepped foot on Mars were not afforded citizenship and had no rights and so the ship they had been on since the battle of Phobos was added to the prisoner ship convoy. It was not clear what would happen to any of these people when they got back to earth. They just had to go. They could not stay here. On April 30th, 2251 the Martian Navy departed for earth in three fleet groups. Next time they will indeed tip the balance of the scales back on earth and help three corps gain the upper hand against Omnicor. That is, until a catastrophic failure of leadership, coordination, and execution tip the scales right back. Tip the scales over really. Knock the scales over and smash them. And what that did was lead the road back to Mars wide open for any who may care to make the trip. Like for example, an Omnicor invasion fleet. Music playing Please stand clear of the gap. Another morning, another reminder there's a gap to be careful of. But maybe it's time to bridge the one between your nine to five and your dream of living life on your own terms. At HSBC, we know ambition looks different to everyone. Whether it's retiring early or leaving more for your family, we can help. Because when it comes to unlocking your money's potential, we know wealth. Search HSBC Wealth Today, HSBC UK, opening up a world of opportunity. HSBC UK current account holders only.