Revolutions - 11.14-The Mutual Blockade
Episode Date: February 10, 2025When both kids take their balls and go home. Patreon: patreon.com/revolutions Merch: cottonbureau.com/mikeduncan...
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Hello and welcome to revolutions.
Episode 11.14, the Mutual Blockade.
Less than a week after the standoff and Stockade 7 began,
the order of the solar system was completely upended.
On July 26, 2247, Earth and Mars exchanged final defiant transmissions.
Mars had a list of demands and swore they would send no more phosphide back to Earth until those demands were met,
and Earth refused to even discuss those demands until the Martians handed back control of Mars.
Neither side had any intention of backing down, and so after a week of rapid fire events,
the trajectory of the Martian Revolution ground to a sudden screeching halt.
They transitioned from chaos and confusion to a permanent state of anticipatory stasis.
Surely the other side was about to see reason and break down.
Will today be that day?
No?
okay, well, let's keep sweating them. Surely they will crack tomorrow. But then tomorrow would
become today, and neither side would back down. And then another tomorrow would become another
today, and so on, and so on, and so on. And they crawled through this series of tomorrow's
becoming todays with nobody breaking for eight long months. The breakdown of negotiations,
or should I say the non-commencement of negotiations, led first to what we call the sorting of ships.
When all this broke out in July 2247, there were spaceships in orbit around Mars,
spaceships in orbit around Earth, and spaceships traversing the space in between.
As Omnicor swore no more deliveries would ever reach Mars until the Martians capitulated,
Timothy Werner issued a blanket order for all spaceships to return to Earth,
and forbade any ship around Earth from departing from Mars.
This order was heated by most of the Phosphive container ships and a good number of the civilian cargo shippers.
Now those cargo shippers were far more inclined to side with Mars,
but those in the environs of Earth were now hemmed in by the security service ships
patrolling the lunar orbit line,
and those who had chosen to travel in container fleet convoys
risked being attacked by the security escorts if they broke for Mars.
So most of them who were en route to Mars reluctantly stuck with their convoys and returned to Earth.
But plenty of others were not traveling in those convoys and just kept going to Mars
or turned around and headed back to Mars,
and some committed souls who were a part of convoys
used old tricks of the smuggling trade to mask their transponders.
They broke formation, set course for Mars,
and were out of range before the security escorts even knew they were gone.
In this way, ships accumulated either around Mars or around Earth,
and then they stayed put.
Hence, we call this the sorting of ships.
The only ships Werner explicitly ordered not to return to Earth,
Earth, were the ships still loyal to Omnicor around Mars.
The senior officer of this group of vessels was Commander Lee Wei, who had the support of
54 container ships, as well as about 150 civilian cargo shippers who did not heed Commander
Cartwright's call to rebellion.
Now, just for the record, none of these ships were equipped with like nuclear weapons
of any kind.
And even if they did have nuclear weapons, it would have been inconceivable at this point for
Earth to order some kind of bombardment of the Martian colonies.
The physical infrastructure of the FOS-5 operations was simply too precious to risk.
If it was destroyed and needed to be rebuilt,
well, that was even more threatening to the Foss 5 supply than losing control of it to the Martians.
But that did not mean Werner would not attempt to use force to bring the mutinous ships back into line.
When negotiations between Earth and Mars reached a terminal impasse and broke off on July 26th,
Werner issued an order to Commander Way to take Cartwright's ships back.
Now, Wei and Cartwright had known each other for a long time, and Way opened a channel to Cartwright
saying you are ordered to stand down and place your ships under the control of Omnicore headquarters.
Cartwright simply said, no thank you.
So then Wei signaled back to Earth to say, he's refusing to comply, and there's very little I can do.
And that's when Warner sent an order saying, you have security ships, don't you?
We'll go take Cartwright's ships back by force.
Way said that she did not think that was a good idea,
and Werner said that is a direct order.
Go take those ships back right now.
The thing to understand here is that the container fleet officers
were not like ancient warriors of old ready to die for their king,
bound by oaths and sacred honor.
Way herself was fed up with how they had been treated
and frankly agreed with Cartwright's demands.
She just didn't think outright rebellion and mutiny
was the best strategy for addressing their collective grievances.
But now she was faced with a direct order from the CEO of Omnicor to attack Cartwright's ships.
That would mean death and destruction.
And that was not something Commander Way wanted anything to do with.
There hadn't been a space battle in a hundred years.
And even then, it was just the one.
In this case, everyone had friends, acquaintances, and former shipmates on the other vessels.
They collectively had far more in common with each other than any of them did with the earthlings demanding that they fight each other.
So Commander Way took the temperature of the other container ship captains,
and none of them showed any interest in actually attacking Cartwright's ships.
So Wei sent a signal back to Earth.
We are not going to attack them.
We are not going to spill blood over this.
Werner, in his infinite wisdom, sent a transmission,
relieving Commander Way of her command.
So Way sent back a transmission saying,
okay, well, in that case, we are all joining my friend and colleague,
Commander Cartwright.
Please meet our demands, or Earth will never get another.
shipment of Foss 5 again, I hope you're happy. And that is how the burgeoning Martian Navy
more than doubled in size overnight, and how Cartwright and Way both embarked on their
paths to becoming the first admirals of the fleet. Commander Way's defection was the biggest shift
during the sorting of ships. But when the sorting ended, and every spaceship was either
clustered around Earth or Mars, traffic between them ceased. For the first time in like 150 years,
all that lay between the red and blue planets was vast empty space.
With both sides denying the other any exports,
we have come to call this the mutual blockade.
Initially, of course, this was meant to be a temporary situation,
a brief staring contest that would surely see the other side blink first.
But the non-negotiator majority on the Omnacore Board of Directors
were committed to not setting the precedent that they would capitulate to terrorist demands.
The Martians and spaceshippers, meanwhile, believed Earth needed what they had more than they needed what Earth had,
that they could just wait them out.
And so, like I said, instead of resolving quickly, the mutual blockade would last for eight months.
While they waited for Earth to yield, the Martians now had to sit down and figure out how they were going to run themselves
now that they had severed themselves from Omnicor's direct control.
They were now untethered completely from the only life and system they had ever known.
How were they going to function? What were they going to do? Who was in charge? Do we still have to go to work? Do we still get paid? There were lots of miserable jobs that nobody wanted to do. If I'm doing one of those crappy jobs, can the revolution please mean I don't have to do it anymore? To answer these questions, Marcus Leopold and the Mons Cafe group had been hard at work spreading the gospel of this thing called the Martian Assembly they had declared on the third day of red. The idea for the assembly had come from discussions amongst themselves,
about alternative forms of human governance
before the corporate structure had sunk in.
There had been times in places
when people, as people, had been able to govern themselves.
Vestigal parts of this idea existed in the form of shareholder votes.
But what did shareholder votes mean to the Martians?
They had been ignored for their entire history,
suffering through decades of exploitive neglect
that was only replaced by a system of abusive micromanagement.
The Martians themselves had never counted at all
in any of this. But now they would count. All of them. Because every Martian counted. Every Martian was
vital to the functioning of Mars. They were all in this together, right down to the lowest third-class
technicians servicing dispenser 172 in Corridor 159. The Monce Cafe group wanted a future where no
Martian's voice was ever ignored again. At first, there are proclamations about the formation of the
Martian Assembly in its subsequent declaration of independence made little headway in the
confused comm channels during and after the three days of red. It wasn't clear to anyone who was in
charge or what to believe. There were lots of contradictory reports and announcements and declarations
floating around out there. The only thing that seemed to break through all that noise were the
addresses of Mabel Doer. So Leopold and Darby and Zhao and the other founders of the Martian Assembly
knew they needed to get Doar on board with the idea of the Martian Assembly.
And this would not be a hard sell.
As I mentioned last week, Mabel Doer was into the idea.
She too wanted all Martians to have a voice.
But there was the matter of independence.
Door was absolutely committed to autonomy for Mars Division,
but still inside the Omnicore corporate umbrella.
She believed this would garner far more realistic support
both among the spaceshipers and the Earthlings.
It was a comprehensible outcome that would give us what we want, autonomy, without terminally alienating possible supporters.
We need people on Earth pushing Timothy Werner and the board to negotiate,
and we'll need people on Earth to accept any settlement we sign once it's agreed to.
By keeping Mars Division inside Omnacore, we allow them to save face.
We give cover to many potential allies who might otherwise hold the line against us.
Leopold and the others in the Monscafay group didn't.
necessarily agree with this, but they did understand that Doar's support was crucial to getting
the new assembly off the ground. So they agreed to a deal. Mabel Doer would join the Martian Assembly
herself, as long as any formal declaration of independence was kept off the agenda. They said fine,
but amongst themselves agreed independence was not off the agenda for good, just for now.
In preparation for Doar's visit to the Martian Assembly, which would raise its profile and attendance considerably,
they left the commissary at headquarters behind as a symbolic place of birth,
and moved to an open-air park in the center of the Prime Dome called the Fields of Earth.
Then, Doar delivered another colony-wide address,
saying that as they waited for Earth to yield to their demands,
it was up to the Martians to govern themselves.
And as long as she had anything to say about it, they would not simply go back to the
back to arbitrary corporate structures. And that is why we have formed a Martian assembly where
all Martians will be able to participate. Tomorrow, I will go there myself, and I invite all of you
to join me. So on August 1st, 2247, the Martian assembly convened on the fields of Mars to an
overflowing crowd. And even this overflowing crowd was just a small fraction of the overall audience,
as most Martians tuned in via their screens. What they watched unfold was a series of speeches and
videos that stirred and celebrated their revolutionary victory.
The best of them was by Ivana Darby,
who exhorted the Martians to remember that they were tougher, stronger,
and more committed to each other than the earthlings were,
that they may face hardships and sacrifices,
but it would all be worth it when they won what they deserved.
Mabel Doer later said she became nervous when Darby really got going
because it kind of seemed like Darby was gearing up to call for independence,
but she stuck to the agreement and finished merely with the agreed to,
upon formulation that was already on the verge of becoming a revolutionary cliche,
Mars for the Martians. As they had also agreed in advance, when this set of speeches wrapped up,
Marcus Leopold went up to the rostrum and said, we need leadership in this new era.
Leadership all Martians can trust, and there is no one on Mars that we trust more than Mabel Dor.
I nominate her to serve as the new director of Mars Division.
They were still making this up as they went, and it wasn't entirely clear how anybody was supposed to vote on anything,
but the crowd's response supporting Doar was thunderous and essentially unanimous, so it stuck.
Then Door came out on stage after the noise died down and said,
I accept this trust you have placed in me.
I will lead you with the respect and compassion I have always shown my fellow Martians.
This assembly will be your voice, and I will be your humble servant.
Then she went on to say,
I have a list of qualified Martians that I recommend to lead all the principal departments of Mars Division,
because we do still need those departments to function.
And she produced a slate of names and departments that flashed up on people's screens.
Clarice Bow is head of finance, Kinder James, head of personnel, Omar Ali, head of security.
All of them were A-class executives, and most of them had served on the Martian Advisory Council, with one notable exception.
Doors' list included B-class advocate Marcus Leopold as the head of the legal division.
She could think of no one better suited for the job.
And since the Martians out there could, in general, think of no one better suited for any of these jobs
because they had never thought about it at all, the crowd thundersely endorsed Mabel Doors' list by acclamation.
Newly empowered by the Martian Assembly, Mabelor and her executive colleagues took over their various departments
and tried to puzzle out what the new order was going to look like in practice.
Meanwhile, the Martian Assembly met nearly every day,
and their broadcasts became a source of collective entertainment
as Martians watched Martians rise to voice different complaints and ideas and opinions,
some serious, some incredibly silly.
One guy presented a plan to terraform all of Mars in six months,
the feasibility of which would be passed along to the appropriate department for further study,
after which it was never heard from again.
Mabel Dorr used the assembly to keep Martians updated about what she was doing and why.
And in the early days, the first thing she needed to impress upon everyone was that, at this moment,
we need everyone to return to their jobs.
We cannot let this place slide into neglectful disrepair.
This is our home, and we should take care of it, not for them, but for us.
And it became patriotic to be willing to work and endure
the hardships to come. But things were now different. Obviously, if they weren't shipping
Phosphi, extraction operations were going to be suspended. That entire part of the workforce,
all those D-class techs and their C-class supervisors, were now completely idle. But that was only
like 30% of the actual workforce. Most other Martians were doing service, support, and logistical jobs.
Most of which would need to be done whether FOS-5 was being extracted or not. Lift shafts still
needed to be maintained no matter what. Food still needed to be served. Water recycling and air scrubbers
needed to be maintained. At first, it was largely assumed the extractors would get to go on a permanent
holiday while everyone else continued to work, which the extractor team quite like the sound of.
But then they wondered, if we're not working, how do we get paid? Will we get paid? Meanwhile,
other Martians would start to be like, hey, why do they get to loaf around while we continue
to work seven days a week.
And the question of pay was handled by Clarice Boe, who was now head of the finance department.
She basically created a Martian fiat currency by announcing in the Martian Assembly that
credits would be duly deposited every payday, just like always.
And for the moment, most people did not question this.
Credits would appear in the amount that they were used to every month. Great.
But Boe knew that just as Omnicor had sent money into money,
Martian accounts. They immediately vacuumed it all back up, in the form of housing fees and water
fees and air fees. Then all the commissaries and food bars and drink holes and arcades. All of the
credits spent there went back to Omnicor. Well, everything except what was siphoned off into the
black market, but you get my point. Claricebo was really hoping no one would ask too many questions
about what it would mean for Mars Division to now be generating these credits instead of Omnicor
headquarters, or what it would mean if Omnicor was no longer vacuuming the credits out of the system as
fast as they were put in. And luckily no one did. They were satisfied with this simple idea that they
would get paid on payday just like always. If you're keen to dive deeper into this and get answers
to some of those questions Clarice Boe was hoping no one would ask, I suggest turning to Jorge Delahente
Arnaldo Perkins, who wrote The Definitive Works on Martian Economics. His first volume,
money, explains all this stuff about currency and finance. And if you're really a masochist,
you can turn to the other two volumes, tomes, really, which are called red labor and red trade,
respectively. Check them out if you want to learn more, or if you are simply having trouble
getting to sleep. The question of what jobs people still had to do was handled by Kinder James,
who was now head of personnel. With the extraction work suspended, 30% of the Martian workforce was
now totally idle, which was fine with them as long as they got paid. But there were concerns about
what would happen with this now suddenly idle population who had nothing to do, and concerns about
the other parts of the workforce who still had to keep working, which like I just said led to
gripes. Why do they get to do nothing while we have to keep working? And this gripe touched on
one of the most grueling parts of life on Mars. There were no days off. Everyone worked every day.
just part of the day. You slept, you work, you had some wreck time. That's what it was, every
single day. And now, some Martians got to work zero days, while others had to keep working seven
days. Was that fair? Complaints like this were soon being voiced in the Martian assembly.
Meanwhile, Omar Ali had taken over security, which made him the head of the new Martian guard.
Now, the Martians had been responsive to the call to reconsolidate weapons and create volunteer units to keep general order.
Something like 80 to 85% of the weapons that had been seized during the three days of red were accounted for by the beginning of August 2247.
As Ali took up the job of organizing the volunteers into formal units, he created a basic uniform code that was topped with the revival of one of the original symbols of Martian Revolutionary Spirit.
the red berets worn by Jose de Petrov and his comrades.
Every member of the Martian Guard was to find a red head covering and wear it while on duty.
Eventually, red berets for the guard would be fabricated according to a set design,
and they wore them whenever they were on patrol.
And that is how the Martian Guard became the new red caps.
One of the main early preoccupations of the Martian Guard
was defending against possible threats from stubborn Omnicore Loyal.
who hated all of this. There were still top Earthling executives who were opposed to everything
that was happening on Mars. Plus, a lot of the C-class supervisors were not on board with this revolution at all.
There was also the question of the disarmed security service personnel. Some of them had been
herded into the stockades that had once kept Martian detainees. Others had slipped away in the chaos
of the Three Days of Red after being disarmed and made their way back to their own housing allotments.
or they were simply unaccounted for at the moment.
In every level and every department,
there were people who thought this was all madness.
Most would just try to write it out miserably and bitterly, but safely,
while others would show themselves to be just as capable
of clandestine organization as the Society of Martians.
They would lay the foundations for a reactionary pro-Ommnacor fifth column inside of Mars.
The Redcaps would be the ones
trying to topple that column.
As the mutual blockade continued, and no immediate resolution was at hand,
Martians did start enduring hardship.
As I said a few episodes back, they had air and they had water.
They could make food from biomass units,
but none of it was particularly pleasant or appetizing.
It was simply enough.
All the other things they were used to getting from Earth
were now either in short supply or nowhere to be found.
The commissary shelves were increasingly bare.
The higher quality stems, fuels, and drags disappeared only to be replaced with home bruise
that were neither as satisfying nor as safe.
The same was true of medical supplies.
A lot of medicine could be synthesized on Mars, but not at the same standards as the manufacturing
plants on Earth.
As the months ticked by, real deprivation set in.
Meanwhile, complaints about the division of labor increased.
About three months into the blockade,
Kinder James presented a plan to address those complaints.
Rather than some people doing nothing and other people working around the clock,
D-class technicians from the extraction teams would be trained to do other jobs.
James sold this idea with the slogan,
Many Hands Make Light Work,
in direct reference to Timothy Warner's ridiculous maxim that fewer hands make light work.
According to James' plan,
once the extraction texts were brought into shift rotations to help do
the other jobs of the colony, it would no longer be the case that some Martians worked zero days a week
and other Martians worked seven days a week. Every Martian would now work five days a week.
So it had taken almost 200 years, but the Martians finally invented the weekend. Now though most
Martians were committed to doing their part to endure the blockade, and this whole concept of days off
was mighty appealing, that did not mean that morale did not have to be addressed.
Everyone could get by sure, but that doesn't mean we like eating biomass three squares and two triangles a day.
So the entertainment department introduced initiatives to keep the Martians occupied,
including a contest to develop the most appealing biomass recipe.
But they also sponsored video contests and musical showcases to give people something to do with their newfound free time.
Competitions were set up for all kinds of things, digital games as well as physical games.
Pickup Corridor Hockey had always been a thing in the Warrens, and now formal teams and leagues were established.
And by and large, these efforts were successful. It created a lot of camaraderie. It created a lot of shared memories.
Who can forget the time Flavin-Hop Maven's biomass recipe triggered quarantine procedures, or the Corridor Hockey Final, between Alpha and Omega?
It was also during these months the Martians developed a celebratory culture around themselves and the
Revolution. After pouring over security vid footage, Zhao Lin identified 27 Martians who participated
in all three of what he was now coming to conceive of as the big moments of the revolution,
the day of batteries, bloody sunrise, and the three days of red. He dubbed these 27 Martians
the trifectas. They had been there for all three, and he built them up as the first
heroes of the Martian Revolution. He tracked them down and interviewed them and broadcast their
stories. And it was while producing this series that Zhao landed on Alexandra Claire.
Who he was thrilled to discover was not just a trifecta, but she had been in Stockade
7. He could not ask for a better face of the revolution. When Zhao came looking for her,
Alexandra Claire was in the Martian Guard along with several comrades from Stockade 7.
Zhao came down with a crew to find her and film her. At first, she rebuffed his attempts to talk to her,
but eventually he convinced her that what she had done was special.
Her comrades told her that too.
And so she sat for the interview.
Zhao edited it, and it was broadcast across Mars.
All of these videos I should mention are available in the Martian archives,
and they really are remarkable.
They're very human.
Zhao did not flinch from having them tell stories about the death and trauma they had witnessed.
Claire speaks very movingly of the death of her friends.
overnight the trifectas became celebrities.
They were honored guests wherever they showed up.
Some of them embraced the theatrics of it all and hosted events and competitions,
and Alexandra Claire became the most famous of all,
because hers was the most remarkable story.
She didn't just fight in the three days of red,
she had been inside Stockade 7.
Whether she liked it or not,
Alexandra Claire was now a name and a face that every Martian knew.
Things went on like this, day after day, week after week, month after month.
Martian spirits actually remained pretty high as 2247 became 2248.
Life was different, and in many respects worse.
But in other respects, this is kind of fun.
The food sucks, but the days off are great.
People were also allowed to rotate up through different parts of the colony.
The D-classes were able to come up to the Prime D-Dome to enjoy what amenities had previously only been available
to the upper elite. Though obviously there were now many more people trying to access those amenities,
which necessitated working from waiting lists. They also arranged for the spaceshipers up on their ships
to rotate down to the surface if they wanted. Now they were pretty used to living on their ships for
prolonged periods, but still, it was nice to come down and hang out just for a change of scenery and
the change of pace. While the Martians were basically riding their hardships in decent shape,
Back on Earth, the natives were getting restless.
As the blockade stretched month after month,
pressure built both inside Omnacore and outside Omnacore
for the Board of Directors to negotiate a settlement.
Get the shipping lanes back up and running and start bringing Phosphi back to Earth.
To bring further pressure to bear,
Commander Cartwright and now Director of Mars Division Mabel Doer
dug up logs and records to disseminate outside Omnacore channels
to prove that FOS-5 production had been in decline for years.
When this evidence was waived by Omnicor's critics,
Omnacore spent months saying all that evidence is fake.
But then finally in late February 2248,
an increasingly alarmed engineer named Bianca Lomerick,
working at one of the FOS-5 reserve stations on Earth,
started leaking data about the real state of Earth's reserves.
There was supposed to be a 10-year supply of FOSF,
5 ready to go at all times. Omnicor had never publicly acknowledged anything less than seven years,
but Lommerix files showed that at present, the Foss 5 reserves would be exhausted in a little under
two years. This was a fact known only to the inner circle of S-class Omnicor executives.
They themselves had been fretting about it a lot, and pressure to reverse the vote on whether
to negotiate had been continuous since this all started and had only ever gotten louder.
But Lomirik's leak was spread to all the other corporations on Earth, and it alarmed everyone.
In fact, it started destabilizing the prevailing global order.
No amount of denials from Omnacor would satisfy them.
Omnicor's right to handle the FOS 5 business was now seriously in doubt.
Their position as the preeminent corporation on Earth was now seriously in doubt.
And so, on March the 12th, 2248, the Omniquor's
Corps Board of Directors held a meeting where they reopened the question of whether to negotiate.
This time, the abstract principle of precedent setting didn't matter at all. The board voted to
negotiate with the Martians and the shippers to get the Foss Five flowing again.
Mabel Dor received the transmission in her office at Mars Division headquarters within hours of the
vote. The Martian Assembly happened to be in session at that moment and she rushed over to the
fields of Earth to make the stunning announcement. My fellow Martians, we have done it. I have
just received word from Earth. They have blinked. We will begin negotiating immediately.
When we stick together, we can do anything. It was a triumphant moment of Martian unity,
and the partying went on for days. Amidst that partying, Dore and the other Martian leaders
prepared to commence the most perilous and consequential set of negotiations they had ever taken
pardon. And next week, we will unpack the details of that perilous and consequential
set of negotiations, which ended with Earth and Mars ending the mutual blockade, and signing
what became known as the Agreement of 2248.
