Revolutions - 11.15-The Agreement of 2248
Episode Date: February 17, 2025Isn't it great when everyone is in agreement? Patreon: patreon.com/revolutions Merch: cottonbureau.com/mikeduncan...
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Hello and welcome to revolutions.
Episode 11.15, the agreement of 2248.
In March 2248, the Omnicore Board of Directors finally voted to negotiate terms with the Martians and the spaceshipers.
After an eight-month-long staring contest, the Earthlings finally blinked and announced their willingness to try to attempt to reach some sort of agreement.
And that's not just me doing an overly qualified sentence.
that line was in the official statement.
Not reach an agreement, not attempt to reach an agreement, but try to attempt to reach an agreement.
Try to attempt.
Really committing themselves to a lot there.
But after Lomorick's leak in February 2248, they were going to have to do something.
Global pressure on Omnacore to yield became too much to bear.
There was now open talk of revisiting the contract that granted Omnicor monopoly rights to everything beyond the line
lunar orbit. Phosphi was the concern of the whole world, and if Omnacore could not be trusted to
deliver, then they didn't deserve to keep their monopoly. Now, just to remind ourselves, there are
four other major corporations on Earth besides Omnacore. In order of relative size, they are Bicor,
Cal Corps, Mazcor, and T-Corps. Omnichore was the biggest by far, double the size of Bicor,
which was its next largest corporate rival. But just for the record, while we,
we focus on the five major corporations that dominated Earth in the 23rd century, there were smaller
corporations and independent free cities and leftover rump states existing in between and around them.
But in the main, the five major corporate powers dominated Earth.
The major powers existed as broadly siloed off and vertically integrated companies.
Inside their global corporate structures, each of the great powers owned, controlled and distributed,
goods, services, resources, personnel, energy, and consumers,
such that they were mostly self-sufficient.
Mostly.
All of them were tied together in a larger global system
that accounted for resource imbalance
and particular sectors of manufacturing or services
being done better by one corporation than the others,
or, say, one company had exclusive claim to something the others needed,
like how Omnacore controlled the FOS-5
and had contracts with the others to supply them.
Now, those contracts were not totally,
totally one-sided. In exchange for their monopoly over space, Omnacore had shared flex-cell
designs with the other corporations so that they could all manufacture their own. They also agreed
to joint ventures that allowed the other four companies to reap further benefits in exchange
for giving Omnacore rights to everything beyond the lunar line. T-Corps and Mazcore, for example,
were both cut into the spacecraft manufacturing programs. The contract they all signed gave
Omnacor rights to everything beyond the line of the lunar orbit. But inside that line,
anyone was free to do anything they wanted. So all five of the major corporations eventually
put up satellites and orbital platforms around Earth and bases on or above the moon.
Cal Corps and Mazcore's presence on the moon was pretty minimal, but T-Corps and Bicor both had
significant lunar operations. T-Corps had joined the construction of the original container
ships and that had wound up producing a robust space division inside their own corporate structure.
Bicor, meanwhile, recognized they'd made a huge mistake thinking they were setting up
Omnicor to fail by giving them carte blanche over the rest of the solar system.
After Mascore went rogue and tried to break their contractual agreement and plant a colony on Mars
in 2154, which ended with the colonial convoy getting blasted out of the sky in the quote-unquote
battle of the line, Bicor swooped in to take over Mazcour's half of their astronautical
joint ventures with Omnicor. When Omnicor slipped into its geriatric phase at the beginning of the
23rd century, the other corporations took advantage of the corruption, sloth, and inattention
seeping through Omnacore. T-Corps, for example, had slowly taken over effective control of many of the
joint ventures with Omnacore. All at cost was a series of modest bribes. Every corporation fed goods
and parts and equipment into the smuggling pipeline to Mars, most especially Bicor and T-Corps, who, like I said,
had major orbital platform facilities and colonies on the moon.
Their lunar colonies were ostensibly therefore mineral extraction and scientific research,
but mostly they provided a great cover story for building and maintaining space divisions.
It would keep them well positioned if, one day, Omnicor truly faltered,
and they could tear up the Lunar Line contract.
Because though Omnicor's monopoly had been in place for a long time,
nothing lasts forever.
But as long as the FOS 5 was coming down, there was little hope of challenging Omnicor supremacy directly.
Enter Timothy Warner and the New Protocols.
The unrest on Mars, triggered by Timothy Warner's arrival in 2248, had the other corporations on Earth positively licking their lips.
Every rival corporation had paid spies, agents and moles inside all the other companies,
and they all had such agents on Mars.
There's a great book about this called,
Open Secrets, Corporate Espionage in the 23rd Century by Altoon Boyland, if you're interested in learning more.
The various spies and agents on Mars either formed contacts with members of the Society of Martians
or were members of the Society of Martians in good standing themselves.
When the idea of independence started getting seriously floated in 2246,
it was a well-understood part of the debate that other corporations would probably be happy to support the
Martians in such a gambit. What would those corporations want in return? Well, we would turn our
phosphi production in their direction. At least some of it. Maybe we allow them to plant their own
colonies and extraction sites on Mars. Maybe the existing colonies could simply be acquired by another
corporation, basically keep everything the same, but have a different corporate logo. Then along came
everything that happened on Mars in 2247, from bloody sunrise to the three days of red. Martian society
was coming apart at the seams, which was both exciting and alarming to the other major corporations,
but as long as Omnicor patrolled that line of lunar orbit, there really wasn't a way for the
other corporations to directly intervene in what was happening on Mars. Omnicor always rattled
the space savers over anyone even thinking about crossing that line. But then, even in the face of
wild declarations from Mabel Dorr and some character called Commander Cartwright, Omnicor
defiantly refused to negotiate and insisted to the rest of the world that this was purely an internal
matter. They said there was no threat to the FOS-5 Reserve. Everything on Mars is under control.
The other corporations knew this was not true and leaned on Omnacore to settle, pointing out the various
ways they could hurt Omnacore if they wanted to. But Omnacore resisted that pressure for eight months,
and the other corporations didn't necessarily want to upset the balance of the world order.
Then came the Lumeric leak in February 2248, and with it proof that Omnicor had way less in their
phosphive reserves than they claimed.
That is what forced Omnicor to the table in March of 2248, because if they didn't come to some
sort of agreement with the Martians, the other companies would come for them.
So most of what follows I'm getting from a book by Yelange Frulow called False Summit,
the making and unmaking of the agreement of 2248, which, yeah,
have spoilers in the title, but you had to have known that was coming.
The board of directors named a team of representatives led by Jin Wong,
who had successfully led the negotiator faction of the board to final victory.
After losing that vote, Werner tried to take the lead in the negotiations,
but since getting rid of Timothy Warner was at the top of the list of Martian demands,
Werner's skeptics finally outnumbered his true believers.
Omnicor needed to make a deal, and his presence would disrupt that.
Working out of conference rooms in Omnicor's headquarters in New New York,
Jin Wong and her team prepared to hold on to as much as they could,
knowing full well they were going to have to give away a lot to get the FOS 5 moving again.
Mabel Doar led the negotiations for the Martians from the Prime Dome,
aided by a committee established by the Martian Assembly that included Ivana Darby.
They were going to have to figure out how far they were willing to push,
how much they were ready to demand.
The question of reintegration, autonomy, or independence
was a hot topic among the Martian negotiators.
Everyone wanted the resumption of the shipments and equipment from Earth,
and everyone wanted the resignation of Timothy Warner.
Beyond that, some would have settled for a few reforms,
the right of Mars to nominate its own leaders,
and have a few checks on Earth's arbitrary authority,
but otherwise let's just reintegrate.
Mabel Dorr wanted full autonomy for Mars division, but still struggled with the idea of full independence for both practical and strategic reasons.
Ivana Darby, meanwhile, wanted full independence and free trade with all the other corporations.
She and her friends had used intermediaries to talk to the other corporations, and they believed a deal could be done with one or all of them that would allow Mars to break free of Earth and become its own thing.
They would be no one's corporate subsidiary anymore.
Finally, Commander Cartwright stood for the space shippers from his cabin on container ship 55 of Convoy Group 9.
The shippers demanded the full resumption of all their former pay and benefits for the FOS 5 container crews,
as well as a doubling of the table of rates for the cargo shippers.
Also, you may recall, they wanted a gratitude bonus that would be represented by a share of the value of the FOS 5 they transported.
The exact percentage could be negotiated, but the shippers just wanted to feel like their value
was at least tied in some way to the enormous amount of wealth they were being trusted with.
In mid-April 2248, the three sides began negotiations over signal transmission.
They quickly established that shipping would resume.
Mabel Dor said the Martian position was,
We expect to ship Phosphi back to Earth like always.
And the Earthling position was,
great, we want to resume sending all the goods, equipment, and people that Mars needs.
They also agreed that anyone who wanted to leave Mars would be,
able to leave safely. The Martians were happy for anyone who wasn't on board with the revolution
to voluntarily leave. Conversely, Martian visitors, residents and agents on Earth or the Moon would
be similarly allowed to return to Mars unhindered. Things got sticky when it came to how Mars would
reintegrate with Earth. Mabel Dorr said that henceforth Mars division would be fully autonomous. No more
S-class Earthling administrators appointed by you to govern us here. We will determine all our own
pay, hours, jobs, schedules, and corporate codes. We also demand a tenfold increase in our budget to
at least minimally recognize the value of what we produce to you. Doer personally had visions of
massively improving Martian society with the increased resources she planned to secure.
Jen Wong had to take these demands in measured stride. She couldn't let the Marstores
Martians just throw off Omnicore control entirely.
So she counter-offered a plan to let the Martians name head administrators
and the deportation policies and restore all of the annulled.
Wong also proposed forming a commission of Martians
to propose possible changes to how Mars was administered.
What to keep from Warner's tenure, what to roll back, what to abandon.
Of course, Earth would need to reconnect to the Martian servers in order to
no, no, no, no.
From the Martian side, that was a hard and immediate no.
Even the most timid among the Martians
was more afraid of reprisals from Earth
if Earth got back into the Martian computer systems
than they were of the abstract and unknown long-term consequences
of keeping them out.
The Martians simply could not allow Earth
to slip a knife under their throats with nothing but a promise
that they wouldn't use it.
Mabelor assured Jin Wang that accessing the Martian
executive mainframes was a dead end. It was a deal breaker. While the Martians and Earthlings
haggled over autonomy for Mars, the spaceshipers had a much easier time of it because their demands
were much easier to meet. The spaceshippers just want to get paid, right? Okay, let's pay them. Restore
all their previous pay and benefits, double the table of rates, great, fine, whatever. The only sticking
point was Cartwright's gratitude bonus, which was meant to be an annual percentage of the total
amount of phosphive they hauled. Wong said, absolutely not. We are not doing that. The mutinous
shippers may represent a portion of the fleet, but a majority of the phosphive containers had not
followed Cartwright's lead, so maybe don't get too far out over your space skis. The rest of it,
we can do, and would have to do, because even the shippers who had not mutinied fully expected at
this point that most of the mutinor demands would be met. One thing everyone agreed on was the
fact that Timothy Werner must go. Both Dorr and Cartwright were adamant about that. Wong pretended
to hem and haw about it to try to get the Martians to drop a few things if they agreed to fire Warner.
But it seems very implausible that Warner would ever survive this. He'd been CEO for just about
three years. And we step back from the buzz and the hype and the misinformation and the dogged
insistence that it would all work out in the end. He had created a massive shitstorm. Mars was in
revolt. Omnicor's global supremacy was under direct threat. Jin Wong saw no reason for Omnicor
to continue dying on the hill of Timothy Werner. She herself had been a skeptical critic of him for
years. Werner was toast before the negotiations even began. Meanwhile, inside the Martian negotiating team,
Ivana Darby continued to push for more than just autonomy.
She wanted Earth to recognize Martian independence.
And outside the negotiations,
the Mons Cafe group seated public discourse with questions about independence.
They had promised Doer to not put it on the agenda of the Martian Assembly,
but they could not help it if everyday Martians brought up the topic themselves.
How can you say that every Martian has a voice except you can't talk about this one subject?
And so, talk of independence was broached in the Martian Assembly.
and calls for it got louder and louder.
But there was also on Mars Omnicore loyalists,
those whose principal interest was undoing everything
that had gone on since July 2247.
And just as Omnicor's corporate rivals
were in active communication with loyal agents on Mars
trying to steer events in the direction of their corporate patrons,
people loyal to Omnacore were in active communication,
both with Earth and each other,
to restore Omnacore's supremacy.
Not everyone was happy with the revolution.
C-class supervisors, bitter members of the security services,
plenty of senior executives, all begrudged the revolution,
and would be eager to overthrow it and restore the old order.
From his position on the Omnacor Board of Directors,
Kamal Singh, in particular, freelance the coordination of a loose network
of would-be counter-revolutionaries on Mars.
But despite his hopes of organizing something real,
as the mutual blockade continued,
It turns out that they were swimming against the tide.
The debate on Mars was mostly between autonomy and independence, not, hey, who wants to go back to how things were.
The Martian Guard was also regularly tipped off about seditious activity, and they successfully disrupted counter-revolutionary networks as they formed.
These networks were not eliminated, obviously, but they were disrupted enough that the board of directors could not count on some counter-revolutionary uprising on Mars, bailing them out.
So of the three sides sitting at the negotiating table,
Jin Wang was under the most pressure to settle.
Omnicor needed to announce that deliveries of Phosphi would be resuming and soon,
or they would face potentially devastating attacks from the other corporate powers.
Plus, Mabel Doer was successfully pushing the line that if Omnicor did not take what was on offer right now,
Mars Division Autonomy, but still within Omnicor's corporate umbrella,
the alternative would not be a restoration of the old,
order. It would be the Martians declaring independence. At one point she said to Wong point
blank, you know, you have contacts on Mars. We know you have contacts on Mars. So don't take my word for
it. Go ask them. Which way are the winds blowing on Mars? Grant Mars Division autonomy. Give us a
bigger budget. And in exchange, your entire corporate operation will not disintegrate. By early May,
the pressure on Omnicor to bring the crisis to an end became too much. On May the 6th, 2248,
Jin Wang laid out terms she believed she could convince the board to accept.
And if the Martians and shippers rejected this deal, then fine, I guess we all just die together.
Because there are people inside Omnacore who would frankly rather nuke a colony from orbit
than let Mars become independent or become a subsidiary of another corporation.
So think about that too.
The deal was this.
Omnicor will restructure.
Timothy Warner will resign.
Mars Division will be granted autonomy over its operations as long as it hit certain FOS 5 quotas.
Mars Division's budget would be increased, but not tenfold, and Martian leaders would be self-selected
and allowed to allocate those funds as they saw fit. Basically, congratulations, you win.
As for the spaceshippers, their pay privileges and benefits would be restored. The table of rates would be doubled.
members of mutinous ships would be retained and not retaliated against, and finally, an additional
annual bonus would be awarded, though, at a fixed and much smaller amount than the profit-sharing
version Cartwright had proposed. In exchange, the Martians and the shippers would begin
immediately sending Foss 5 back to Earth. Door and Cartwright conferred with their teams and
each other, and agreed to these terms. It sure seemed like an unambiguous win, and this became the basis
of what history calls the agreement of 2248.
So Jin Wong brought all this back to the Omnicor Board of Directors for them to approve.
Obviously, Werner and his closest allies railed against the demand that he resign as a part of all this.
What about the principle?
Mars can just pick and choose who it wants to be our CEO?
But the thing is, I can only say his closest allies were helping Werner make this case,
because everyone else had concluded that whatever precedent was being set,
Werner was himself the cause of the Martians demanding he resign a CEO.
Just because the Martians did that to Warner didn't mean they would do it to everybody,
and just because the board of directors were willing to let Warner go in this instance,
that didn't mean they wouldn't stand up for the next CEO.
But though the consensus of the board was that Warner's days were numbered,
the rest of the deal Wong came back with was hard to swallow.
Werner's little click of dead enders were going to oppose the deal obviously,
but another faction led by Kamal Singh couldn't believe how much of the store was being given away.
Granting Mars Division autonomy, that is a huge concession.
We are admitting we don't control our own Phosphive supply.
To which Wong had to say,
We don't, that's the thing.
We are not exactly negotiating from a position of strength here.
We may be huge, but we're bleeding and we're vulnerable.
By making this deal right now, we head off a declaration of Martian independence
and we keep the FOS-5 inside the Omnacore corporate umbrella.
But we need to get the FOS-5 moving again, or we are screwed.
If we accept this deal, we'll get the Foss-5 moving again.
We can figure the rest out later.
While the Omnacore Board debated the deal,
Babel-Dor took all this to the Martian Assembly
and delivered the terms with triumphant gusto.
They have given us what we want.
Mars Division will be autonomous.
Mars will be for the Martians.
We can choose our own leaders and live.
our own way. We're even getting a bigger budget. Our presentation was received with enthusiasm
by the Assembly, but it did trigger a debate. There was an aggressively vocal group saying,
This isn't enough. Door is selling us back to Omnicor. We won our freedom. We want independence.
Being folded back into Omnicor was not what we fought and died for. And they raised the little
revolutionary couplet that was now making the rounds. We did this thing, we did it together.
frack Omnicore, now, and forever.
But Mabel Dorr's voice was still the loudest voice of all.
And she said, look what we have to gain here.
What we can have right now today as our spoils of victory.
The assembly will remain in place.
I'm committed to that.
We will review the corporate code together.
We will overhaul working conditions to meet our needs.
They can't stop us.
We will be autonomous.
That's what they're agreeing to.
Who knows what the future will bring?
but if we reject this deal and try to hold out for something better,
everything might destabilize so much that we all get sucked into a void.
Together.
Commander Cartwright meanwhile had the easiest time of it.
He circulated the terms of the deal, not just among the mutinous crews,
but among those who had stayed loyal to Omnacore.
They all agreed it seemed great.
Yes, there were complaints.
Some wanted to extract more with the leverage they had.
A few of the more radical cargo shippers wanted full cancellation of all their debts,
There were some pushback even from among the officers of the Foss 5 container fleet
that promises of no retaliation were maybe not to be trusted.
There had been some light talk between shippers and some Martians
about bringing the space shippers under Mars divisions
coming autonomous authority to get them out from under Earth control.
But those voices were drowned out by the flood of,
Take the Deals, coming in from across the fleet.
On May the 18th Commander Cartwright reported that the shippers would accept the deal.
On Mars, three weeks of debate culminated on May the 30th, 2248, when the Martian Assembly convened to vote on whether to accept the deal.
And though the drive to reject the deal and declare full independence had been growing in force,
it was not enough to overcome Mabel Doors' endorsement of the deal, nor the actual terms looking, well, pretty good.
In the end, more people were willing to take the a lot that was on the table right now and available immediately,
over possible greater rewards in some indefinite future after enduring more hardships.
When the vote was called, the Martians went 70-30 in favor of taking the deal.
With both the Martians and the spaceshippers having endorsed the deal,
the Board of Directors faced a clear choice.
They could, right now, get the FOS 5 back up and running and end the crisis,
or not, and take their chances trying to stay on top without their most valuable resource.
The Board of Directors did not want to do that.
so on June 2nd, 2248, they voted to accept the deal.
With all three sides now in agreement, all that was left to do was implement it,
which wasn't exactly going to be easy, but we will get to that next week,
because before we get into all that, we must end today with the end of Timothy Werner.
When the board voted for the deal on June 2nd, they were voting for Warner to resign.
He was more than any other single person responsible for all of this.
He had probably survived far longer than he should have.
Warner managed to stall for about 24 hours before answering the demand that he resigned
as he scrambled for last-minute ways to stay in power.
But he was out of chances.
He was cooked, and everyone knew it.
Timothy Warner had taken over an Omnicor that had been neglected into a sorry state of malfunctioning disrepair.
Before he came along, Omnicor was coming apart at the seams.
Its divisions were separated and uncoordinated.
Graffed, corruption, and mismanagement were endemic.
If it had continued on that way, the other corporations would have come for Omnacore eventually.
And so, to his credit, Werner did at least recognize the issues that needed to be addressed.
Omnacor probably could use some centralization in their decision-making.
Their software systems were out of date.
Their hardware was past its prime.
and what's wrong with getting rid of poor-performing employees anyway?
In the hands of a more moderate soul, reforms addressing these very real problems
could have been successfully implemented and integrated with some care and attention to ensure,
well, to ensure that what happened on Mars didn't happen.
But Werner was not a moderate soul.
He was a man of decisive and dramatic action.
And though he successfully identified problems,
his solutions jerked way too hard and too fast in the other direction.
The new protocols was a rapid rollout of abrupt changes without careful review or planning.
He came in and started firing people without having a clear idea of what anyone did or why.
He completely overhauled computer systems without a clear idea of how it would impact the people impacted.
He just did it.
He also zoomed right past reestablished some centralized controls to I will micromanage everything.
Warner was not as much of a genius as his PR would lead you to believe.
But even if he was, the level of micromanagement he took on was too much for anyone.
In his zeal to make Omnicor more abstractly efficient,
he never stopped to wonder if what he was doing was going to bring the entire company to a screeching halt.
And how efficient is that?
On June the 3rd, 2248, Timothy Warner relented and announced his resignation as CEO of Omnacore.
He did this in fine self-serving fashion.
He said that he had attempted to make Omnicor better, and he believed he was succeeding.
But selfish radical malcontents ruined everything with the help of certain individuals who lack the vision to see things through to the end.
Werner made it very clear that he thought he was still right, he had simply been thwarted by lesser people.
Then Timothy Warner retired to a private life of unimaginable splendor and comfort,
thanks to the severance package he got that included payments that would make him one of the richest single individuals on Earth.
That was because this package was all designed by Vernon Bird back when he thought he might resign as CEO one day,
something he simply never got around to.
So for all the misery he caused, we can at least take some solace in the fact that Timothy Werner is now
living a life of unfathomable luxury without a care in the world.
The resignation of Timothy Werner was a cause for great celebration on Mars.
And to some degree, the Martian Revolution was now over?
If this agreement could stick, what had been building for years and then exploded so spectacularly in 2247,
now had a real tangible result that fundamentally altered the relationship for Earth and Mars,
and fundamentally changed the lives of Martians, for the better.
They had been pushed pretty far back, and were now leaping ahead of where they had started.
That's a pretty nifty result.
Revolutions. Sometimes they work.
So the Martians took some satisfaction in the very thing the earthlings were most afraid of,
that a precedent had been set.
The Martians had proved that they could take matters into their own hands any time they wanted.
After all, from now on, someone could always say, well, it worked before,
because it had.
With the deal going into effect in June 2248,
that meant the first shipments of FOS 5 going from Mars to Earth
and the first cargo ships going from Earth to Mars
would arrive in mid-July 2248,
right, as the first anniversary of the Three Days of Red approached.
Huge celebrations were planned on Mars.
When the first new shipments arrived from Earth on July 19th,
the welcome reception kicked off a week of non-stop.
partying. Zhao Lin and his team of videographers staged screenings of a film they'd made about
the revolution called We Did It Together. Memorial events and ceremonies and celebrations were
staged at different key places. Percession streamed through Stockade 7 and Expansion 13.
The Martian Assembly sat in near permanent session from July 21st to July 23rd as Martians
were invited to share their own stories for the record. Mabel Doer gave speeches all through this
week, as did the other famous Martians that had emerged from the revolution. Leopold and Darby both
had prominent spots, as did the trifectas and detainees from Stockade 7, and of course Alexandra
Claire, who was both. This week was the point at which the Martians were the most unified they
had ever been. Everything had worked. The future was bright, and they were all in this together.
