Bamax wrote: ↑Thu May 01, 2025 2:39 pm
I was laughing at the current fate of a certain american nuisance streamer in south korea.
If, after the war, a human guy lpulled the kind of crap the american nuisamce streamer pulls in korea, how would the Loroi deal with him?
I was laughing in a video where people said he should try going to china... we would never see him again in America after pulling those same stunts.
Would they Loroi be inclined do the same (lock him up for years in prison for hard labor).
If a human visitor started making trouble on a Loroi world, he would probably be fairly quickly arrested and deported. Even if he broke laws, I don't think they would want him in-country for any longer than was strictly necessary for some kind of due process, and the Loroi criminal justice system really isn't set up do deal with alien non-residents. They don't use imprisonment as a long-term punishment as it is impractical in a society of psionic individuals, and punishments like fines or revocation of privilege are not very meaningful against foreign aliens. I doubt they would use capital punishment except in the most egregious examples, as they would probably want to avoid an international incident. Better to make him someone else's problem. If he had made enough of a nuisance of himself (such as trying to pick fights) it's possible that some warrior might have killed him on the spot, but the Loroi authorities would not have been pleased about that.
However, "streaming" from distant star systems really isn't a practical thing, as there isn't an interstellar internet without FTL communication. One could shoot videos, but there is no established infrastructure to publish them, so the content would probably never reach the intended audience, as the streamer's devices would have been confiscated when he was arrested. Even in a hypothetical scenario in which regular trade had been established between humanity and the Loroi, the best that could be achieved would be to send videos as mail dispatches via courier, which would take weeks to months to even reach its destination and which could be subject to potential seizure at any port they passed through.
[digression] Adam Warren's
Dirty Pair comics had a story that involved a journalist who used her own perceptions instead of an external recording device to create video reports (Warren's series rapidly morphed from space opera to cyberpunk); although they didn't go into detail about what kind of cybernetic implants she had, presumably she had some sort of
Ghost in the Shell-style "cyber-brain" that allowed her to digitize, store and transmit video based on her sight and hearing. This kind of setup would be much harder to intercept or confiscate... but I wonder how "watchable" video captured in this way would be. Human eyesight only has good resolution in a very small circle at the center of our field of view, which is why we are constantly moving our point of focus around -- and I think that constant eye movement (and blinking, etc.) would be really unpleasant for a viewer. [/digression]