> >   When Kettering finally spoke, he was polite, but some how unconvinced. "Admiral 
> > Kitanya, you speak gracefully.  What you said moved me greatly.  Bringing 
> > Starfleet back to it's roots....  Worthy ideas, but we need more than just ideas.  
> > We need strong leadership.  Decissive leadership that will do what it takes to 
> > bring about meaningful change to Starfleet.  Do
you really see Samuel Lasiter as that man?  The same Samuel Lasiter that has been CinC 
for almost 9 months now, with little to nothing to show for it.  But I forget the 
police actions that continue to drain resources and eat at very fiber of Starfleet.  
The fact that we are in half of these actions hints of tyranny.  But he does nothing.  
He has had time to do many things, but does nothing.  Why should we now decide to give 
him more time,
when he has squandered what he has had up to now?"  Kettering asked, politely if 
mocking of the CinC.

"Nine months.  Yes, it has been nine months.  But the task before him is to fix a 
fleet that has been in disrrrepairr forrr *yearrrs*.  In that time, the weeds, the 
deadwood, the schemerrrs, the corrrupt...  They have a strrranglehold and have 
consolidated theirrr own powerrr into fiefdoms.  No one, not even someone who has 
absolute authorrrity would be able to clean
that mess up quickly.  And Admirrral Lasiterrr does not have absolute authorrrity.  He 
is trrrying to worrrk within the laws, laws set up durrring and forrr a Starrrfleet 
that was verrry differrrent than it has become."  She turned to the audience.  "On 
Terrrra, therrre is a legend.  Once, in the Brrritish Isles, therrre was a time much 
like this one. 
Petty kings and warrrlorrds consolidated powerrr into little kingdoms, and they fought 
overrr these constantly.  One man, howeverrr, had a vision.  He drrreamed of a united 
England, one wherrre these constant battles ended and the people of the nation could 
live in peace and justice instead of fighting and dying forrr men who carrred nothing 
forrr theirrr lives orrr
well-being.  Arrrthurr Pendrrragon achieved this, but it was not in a day, orrr a 
week, orrr even a yearrr.  It took yearrrs of fighting and negotiations to achieve 
consolidation and orrrganization.  Now, I am not comparrring Admirrral Lasiterrr to 
King Arrrthurr.  But Starrrfleet today is in a state of nearrr chaos.  And he *is* 
contrrrarry to popularrr belief, worrrking verrry harrrd to brrring orrrderr to that 
chaos.  Just
because he doesn't splash it acrrross the headlines doesn't mean it isn't happening.  
Half the fleet out therrre arrre prrractically enemies; they will fight us tooth and 
nail if we prrropose change which would affect theirrr little kingdoms they've 
crrreated forrr themselves.  The firrrst thing any commanderrr is taught is not to 
give away one's plans to the
enemy.  So no, he isn't doing interrrviews on GNN.  But that doesn't mean he orrr the 
rrrest of us at Starrrfleet Command arrren't worrrking."  She looked back to 
Kettering.  "Today, I have made sweeping changes to the infrrrastrrructurre of Special 
Operrrations.  Ineffective commanderrrs have been rrreplaced with experrienced 
operrratives, field posts arrre now
rrreturrned to SpecOps command frrrom the fleets that had usurrrped them and used them 
forrr theirrr own purrrposes.  Is that doing nothing Admirrral Ketterrring?  Spec Ops 
is the fleet's firrrst line of defense, and we arrre becoming strrrong once morrre.  
What have you done in yourrr command to make it strrrongerr, Admirrral?"  She phrased 
and toned that
last question very carefully.  It was not a challenge.  It was a sincere, curious 
question, and she made sure that it came across like that.  She did not want to fight 
Kettering.  He wore the same uniform as she did, and she wanted to avoid conflict as 
long as possible.  If he had made changes, if he was working hard to make things 
better, she wanted very much to know
that.  He was a strong, charismatic leader, and if she could convince him to give up 
this power quest and work with Starfleet Command rather than against them, he would be 
a powerful ally.  She really wanted him to come out and say what he was doing to make 
a difference in his own command, not just for her benefit, but for everyone's there to 
see it *could* be done, that it was not a futile effort.

"As a matter of fact I have.  I have excised the deadwood in Ninth Fleet.  Those that 
are in starship command positions are well trained, motivated, and enthuastic 
captains.  I have tightened my supply lines so that the amount of materials that are 
lost or misapproperiated is less than 10% the fleet allowed limit...." Kettering 
answered as he was cut off.

  "That's what you call it.  You just transfered your bad apples to others to deal 
with.  You fixed nothing, just made it other people's problem." yelled another officer 
that Kitanys recognized as the Adjudent for the Second Fleet.

   {response}

*****
Chris
GM- SPD & JSOC

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