AnotherDilbert said:
phavoc said:
You may want to go and look up vegan district. It's a client state, not part of the Imperium. So it would seem that's not true either.
No:
CT S10 Solomani Rim said:
Within the lmperium is the Vegan Autonomous District, an area inhabited (under lmperial sovereignty) by a non-human race.
Would you also try to argue that Capital/Core (Sylean Worlds) is not a part of the Imperium?
So you are switching citations, eh? Ok. From the Wiki:
After the pyrrhic victory over the Solomani at Terra in 1002, the Imperium found that it could not completely conquer and absorb the Solomani Sphere.
The Imperial high command decided to create the Vegan Autonomous District to act as a counterweight to the remnants of the Solomani Confederation. The Vegans have complete internal control over their district, but free passage is guaranteed for Imperial citizens and goods. Although many factors have contributed to the present peace and stability along the Solomani Rim, it cannot be denied that the creation of the Vegan Autonomous District has achieved its original purpose.
So, by definition the VAD is NOT Imperial territory. Ergo using it as an example of Imperial law is akin to using Hiver's or K'Kree or Aslan within their own governmental borders. And this brings up a valid point - which version are you going to use as the defacto set? Your first cited the Wiki. Which I did, too. You then cited the original CT supplement, which states "under imperial sovereignty". So what does that mean exactly? Since we are arguing about contradictions you've just introduced another one.
Let's go further and find some more data, shall we?
Vegan Autonomous District
A region of space controlled by a single centralised government run by the Vegans, a roughly humanoid race originating on Muan Gwi ( Vega / Solomani Rim 1717).
After its pyrrhic victory in the Solomani Rim War, the Imperium found that it could not continue its advance into the Solomani Sphere, and declared an indefinite armistice. The Imperial high command created the Vegan Autonomous District to act as a counterweight to the remnants of the Solomani Confederation. The Vegans have complete internal control over their District, but free passage is guaranteed for Imperial citizens and goods.
Although many factors have contributed to the present peace and stability along the Solomani Rim, it cannot be denied that the creation of the District has achieved its original purpose.
The worlds of the District are under a single, centralised government. State power is contained in a civil service, chosen and promoted by competitive examinations. Within this common state, the Vegans are culturally diverse. Society is divided into hundreds of different tuhuir, which might be roughly translated as culture, philosophy, or tao. Each tuhuir has its own customs and traditions, and its own interpretation of the proper way to live. Tuhuir are not hereditary; a Vegan chooses to join one after a period of search. The civil service which governs the District is a tuhuir which oversees and mediates among all the other tuhuir.
(SUPP-10, 1108; SUPP-11: p30, 1107; MT-ENCYC: p45, 1120)
So here we have CT and MT information. So lets go to the supplements themselves:
Within the lmperium is the Vegan Autonomous District, an area inhabited (under lmperial sovereignty) by a non-human race. The rest of the sector is ruled by the Solomani Confederati6n. an interstellar state hostile to the Imperium. (CT-SUPP10-p4)
The Vegans received the jump drive about -6000, from Vilani-influenced traders, and colonized several nearby worlds before being absorbed by the First Imperium. They were severely restricted under Vilani rule, as were all races who resisted being
integrated into the rigid Vilani culture. Thus, they welcomed Terran victory in the Interstellar Wars and the advent of the Rule of Man. The Vegan Polity prospered in the Rule of Man and survived the Long Night largely intact, but was broken into
individual planetary states by the Third Imperium, which allowed no threats to its sovereignty. Under the Solomani, the Vegans were again restricted, and human governors were installed on all Vegan worlds. After the Solomani Rim War, the present Vegan Autonomous District was formed as a counterweight to the Solomani. (CT=SUPP10-p7)
Vegans were an independent entity. The Imperium was exhausted by the time Terra fell, which is why the Solmani Rim still exists. VAD was created by the Imperium, but it's self-governing. Imperial ships and subjects have the right to travel and trade, but the local laws still apply - not IMPERIAL laws, but VAD laws.
The emphasis in the paragraph above is also another example where the Imperium does not allow multi-star states, per the citation above "...broken into individual planetary states by the Third Imperium, which allowed no threats to its sovereignty". At both face and implied value this states that there are no multi-star states that are within the Imperium because it is not allowed.
However, to be fair, here is additional information that, once again, is apparently contradictory (in Traveller? golly-gee! Who would have thunk?).
The Esperance subsector is not a governmental unit; its worlds are governed from other subsectors. Ludmilla and Esperance (the world) have large Vegan minorities. The nation of Waothan on Esperance, with a third of the planet's population,
is 95% Vegan. Attempts to integrate these two worlds into the Vegan District have long been a source of tension, and two recent events have intensified the problem: Waothan has applied to the Emperor for permission to join the Vegan District, and
a human supremacist party has recently come to power on Ludmilla. (CT-SUPP10-p18)
and
Most of this subsector (Vega) and the Esperance subsector compose the Vegan Autonomous District. Most worlds in the District are inhabited almost entirely by Vegans, except for Shulgiasu, Bellerophon, and Flanders. Vegans are unable to live on these high-gravity worlds, although humans find them habitable. Merganser, important for its resources, also has a human population; Sithuan Hsarr is a recent experimental colony, worked by Vegans living under artificial gravity. The entire Depot system is devoted to an Imperial naval depot, and its population consists entirely of naval personnel. In peacetime, a depot's main function is research; there the navy develops and tests new ship prototypes. In war, a depot is able to supply, maintain, and repair a large fraction of the Imperial fleet. (CT-SUPP10-p19)
and
Although scholars continue to debate the wisdom of invading Terra, some claiming that the battle was a marginal if not pyrrhic victory for the Imperium, the general consensus is that the war as a whole was a major victory for the Imperium. A
substantial amount of the Solomani Sphere was reabsorbed by the Imperium, and a vigorous Vegan Autonomous District was set up to oversee lmperial interests along the new border. While the Solomani Confederation continues to exist, the
central tenet of the Solomani Movement is largely discredited. In fact, with the strong lmperial presence along the border, the Solomani Confederation seems to have abandoned any plans to resume the conflict in the near future, concentrating instead on reviving its claims to certain worlds in the more loosely organized Aslan Hierate. (CT-SUPP11-p21)
In this case we find an Imperial naval depot in another polity. But VAD is a special case. It exists within Imperial borders, is not a client-state per se, but acts as both an independent state and part of the Imperium. So which one of us is "right"? I will profess that I believe the VAD is not a good example of a multi-system state that is considered Imperial. Why? Because it's very label - Vegan Autonomous District - implies it is a special case. Among the many thousands of other systems within the Imperium there are no further examples. So a single (or even two or three) examples does not make a standard. Ergo it's not allowed. Even the CT literature I cited above states the same thing.
Which brings us back to the original point - where do local laws begin and Imperial end? For that we should look further. Here is the general definition of Imperial space. Keep in mind it's meant to be a rather large and sweeping definition:
The lmperium is best considered to rule the space that separates the stars rather than the worlds themselves. Individual worlds are left to their own devices, providing they pay their taxes, acknowledge the power of the Imperium, and obey the
basic laws it promulgates. The lmperium wields power in space, protecting trade, encouraging travel and commerce, and controlling diplomatic relations. lmperial power is present on worlds in the form of consulates, bureaucratic offices, and
bases; occasionally larger enclaves of lmperial power are placed where they can enhance the empire's strength. )CT-SUPP11-p6)
Here we see that the Imperium takes on the yoke of running the imperium, but leaves the nuts and bolts and specifics up to the individual worlds. This is emphasized by the statement "Imperial power is present on worlds in the form of consulates..." By that statement alone it acknowledges that worlds are powers unto themselves and the Imperium must deal with them as it does a foreign power. Which, on the surface, is no different than how other governments work today (with the exception of not needing consulates). There are multiple levels of government, and the smaller jurisdictions are allowed to set their own laws and enforce said laws so long as they fall within the overarching laws. If you read up on the Psionic laws you'll see similar citations of local laws suppressing psionics even while there were Imperium-wide rules and orders being issued.
Going back to the original source, the first LBB, we find the first instance of the extra territorality rules being cited:
Starports are further described in the starport chart. In many cases, starports will be accompanied by naval or scout bases, and will have a wide range of facilities. In nearly all cases, a planet will consider that a starport is extraterritorial, and
not subject to local law, but will also enforce strict entrance and exit controls. (CT-LBB3, p1)
Note: Each law level includes all prohibitions and conditions of levels numbered lower than it. Thus, shotguns are prohibited at all law levels from 7 higher. In addition to weapons and arms controls, law levels indicate the general throw for police or enforcement harassment for violations. Thus, a person on a world of law level 4 would have a saving throw of 4 or more to avoid arrest when encountering an enforcement agent such as a policeman or customs agent. Law level does not apply to persons and ships at a starport, as local laws do not apply in such areas. )CT-LBB3, p7)
Finally, I found this gem.
At times, the referee (or the players) will find combinations of features which may seem contradictory or unreasonable. Common sense should rule in such cases; either the players or referee will generate a rationale which explains the situation, or
an alternative description should be made. (CT-LBB3-p8)
This. Just this. Common sense should rule when things seem contradictory or unreasonable. While this paragraph was listed in the world generation section, I think it works well being applied across all of Traveller. As cat thinks, "If i fits, I sits", so should players and referees think "that doesn't make sense. let's find a more reasonable way so we can have fun playing".
In my response to you I tried to cite the entire section. I find that cherry picking a single sentence is not the best method of discourse when it has gotten to this level. I abhor the religious zealots who cite a very specific passage, but if you take the entire section the quotation loses much, or all of it's point. And, for the record, I'm not accusing you of being either a zealot (or religious!) or anything else. As you can see in my response above that I also cited things that would weaken my argument. I haven't done this sort of research to respond to a board posting in, well, probably ever. While it's been interesting to delve back into the archives, ultimately I think the other readers are probably kind of tired of this. I don't see you or I changing our positions no matter how much material is cited. Therefore I think it's fair to say it's a draw. People can take what they want from the discussion and apply it how they want.
TL;DR - make your own choices. It's a game.