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The Guardians of Freedom - Part 2 (standard:other, 9519 words) [2/7] show all parts | |||
Author: Dan Tana | Added: Oct 29 2010 | Views/Reads: 2449/1687 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Teddy and its friends save a parallel Earth from the tyranny of corrupt Guardians. | |||
Hi there. This is Teddy, the living toy from the dimension of the Goo. It has been several months since I introduced myself to you and told you about the Guardians of Freedom. A lot has happened since then, starting with the decision of Shannon's uncle, Brian, to join the Guardians. He was there with us, talking quietly with Jakinda, while I made my first broadband transmission to the people of this world. In the course of their conversation she asked him why he had not decided to be a Guardian when his niece and her friend did. He answered by saying that he could not be a hero like them because he did not have their special powers. Jakinda gave this statement a bit of serious consideration, and then announced that Brian was just being silly, because even if he could not be a hero with superhuman powers he could still be an ordinary human hero, which was actually a pretty super thing to be. This declaration initially left him speechless, with a look of surprised bemusement frozen on his face for several seconds. Then he cracked a wide smile, shook his head in amazement, and announced that he was officially a Guardian of Freedom. A few days later Brian was lying in a hammock, enjoying a cool, quiet, and very pleasant morning, when he heard someone yelling next-door. He went to see what was going on and found a large woman clutching a small boy by the upper arm, dragging him toward the house where they lived. The boy cried out to be let go of, and tried to wrench himself from the unyielding grip of that much stronger person, which prompted the woman to slap him with her free hand and tell him to stop being so difficult. As he watched that scene unfold Brian wrestled with his conscience, his reluctance to get involved in such an unpleasant situation fighting fiercely to restrain his desire to rescue that child. He quickly resolved this conflict by deciding that he would honor his promise to be a Guardian for all vulnerable people. He walked over to his struggling neighbors and calmly asked them what the trouble was. Instead of answering this simple question the woman began to yell at him about minding his own business. For almost three whole minutes she spat a torrent of angry words at him, hardly pausing to breathe. Eventually she exhausted herself, and Brian got the opportunity to respond. He told her that protecting defenseless people from abuse was the business of all Guardians. Then the woman began to scream that nobody was getting abused, because it was her right as a parent to discipline her child as she saw fit. While he tried to calm the irrationally irate woman, without much success, Brian discretely activated his communicator wristband to summon some other Guardians to assist him. Avian and I answered the call, arriving at the scene to find the larger neighbor threatening to do some incredibly uncomfortable things to Brian if he did not go away immediately. I scanned the recent memories of everyone present in order to figure out what was going on. I watched all of the events that I have just relayed to you, and also saw the trouble begin when the boy was playing outside and the woman told him that he had to come into the house to pick up the toys that he had left on the floor in the room where he sleeps. The boy was unwilling to interrupt what he was doing, so the woman tried to force him inside. Then I told the woman that she had no right to treat another person in such a way. But she insisted that as the legal guardian of this child she did have the right to decide when he could play outside and when he had to come inside to clean up, and that she had the right to make him comply with whatever she had decided for him. Quite to my surprise, she then asked me if I hadn't said as much during that previous transmission in which I introduced myself to the people of this planet. In her thoughts I saw how she misinterpreted my previous statement that it is not a criminal act of oppression for one person to make decisions on behalf of someone else who is mentally incapable of making its own decisions if the happiness of that incapable person is the primary concern of the decision maker. She thought that her actions did not Click here to read the rest of this story (886 more lines)
This is part 2 of a total of 7 parts. | ||
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