Oct 30, 2024 4:32 am
Shelyna Artmitage steps up to the microphone, she seems to be running this event.
• Emma, how does it make you feel that the woman in charge deemed you worthy of sending her aid to talk to you and warn you? How do you feel about your handling of that? Handling that could easily be construed as rude?
"I don't mean to sound British." Shelyna opens with a joke. "But we need to talk about the weather." She waits a moment for any titters of laughter to die down. For all her power and confidence she is not actually a very good public speaker, having very little patience for the niceties of small-talk and inconsequentialities.
"It is clear that the weather has been messed with." She states. "No matter how much many of us want to deny it. If it were just rain, maybe we could overlook it, but if this continues we face real danger to our city, our country, and our way of life, the infrastructure can not sustain this for long."
She looks around at the gathered people of power and consequence in the country. "If anyone has anything useful to tell us..." she emphasises 'useful' in a vain attempt to avoid exactly what comes next...
There is a clamour for attention. As always, the loudest are the first to speak, but, as usual, they don't always have the most considered or coherent responses. Chief among the theories are that the vampires are to blame —'they never liked the sunshine!'— and the French —'see how the rain stops at the channel!'— and some other, much more bizarre theories (someone always blames 'aliens').
What do you do?
• Emma, how does it make you feel that the woman in charge deemed you worthy of sending her aid to talk to you and warn you? How do you feel about your handling of that? Handling that could easily be construed as rude?
"I don't mean to sound British." Shelyna opens with a joke. "But we need to talk about the weather." She waits a moment for any titters of laughter to die down. For all her power and confidence she is not actually a very good public speaker, having very little patience for the niceties of small-talk and inconsequentialities.
"It is clear that the weather has been messed with." She states. "No matter how much many of us want to deny it. If it were just rain, maybe we could overlook it, but if this continues we face real danger to our city, our country, and our way of life, the infrastructure can not sustain this for long."
She looks around at the gathered people of power and consequence in the country. "If anyone has anything useful to tell us..." she emphasises 'useful' in a vain attempt to avoid exactly what comes next...
There is a clamour for attention. As always, the loudest are the first to speak, but, as usual, they don't always have the most considered or coherent responses. Chief among the theories are that the vampires are to blame —'they never liked the sunshine!'— and the French —'see how the rain stops at the channel!'— and some other, much more bizarre theories (someone always blames 'aliens').
What do you do?