Chapter Two (a): First ContactChapter Two (b): Election FeverRegarding the Raltek Star ConsciousnessThe homeworld of the Raltek Star Consciousness is Dattan Bir, the second moon of the gas giant Dantariga in the Raltess system. Dattan Bir is an arid planet, warmer than Caliban but with similar amounts of accessible water. The Ralteks, primary inhabitants of Dattan Bir, are a leonine species of xenos well-adapted to the climate with respiratory apparatus that is nested amongst several folds of skin, designed to trap moisture and prevent dehydration. An individual Raltek is the size of many hundreds of Kammarians, equivalent in body mass to an Earth Bengal Tiger. Whilst their large size has been proof against the dehydration of their world and a keen advantage in hunting, high metabolic requirements meant large prey populations were needed to support individual Ralteks, resulting in wide-ranging territories. This has left the Ralteks with a deep-seated need for space and solitude, and agoraphobia is common amongst the species. At the same time, Ralteks can live comfortably to over a hundred years, remaining fertile for the majority of their lifetimes, so Raltek families are often complex (and mildly inbred) affairs. Perhaps selected for its avoidance of infanticide (common in such predator species with wide territories), Ralteks naturally form stable heirarchies, with most instinctively adhering to the established social norm and a tendency to obey elders and those in positions of authority with little question.
It is perhaps this natural bent towards conformism that explains that Raltek Star Consciousness' form of government; a despotic government in which individuals are assigned jobs, homes and lives based on rigid, standardised tests and regulations, and which the ethics of government are defined by a strict calculus of pragmatism. Whilst the Kammarians generally support the Raltek use of advanced technology, the technical approach to the design of their entire civilisation will no doubt result in friction in the years to come. It is perhaps fortunte that the Kammarians staunchly believe in non-violent solutions to their problems, no doubt because of their lethal social past.
Regarding Great Caliban's GovernmentDespite the ratification of decisions required by direct democratic votes from the public, Great Caliban still requires an extensive legislative and administrative body to run the planet's local and global government. On the day-to-day level of government, an entrenched class of un-elected civil servants and bureaucrats ensure that the machine of government continues to run smoothly, implementing the proposals ratified by general assent. Above these, local councillors are elected on the city and province level, with governors managing the regions of former nation-states, each of which are re-appointed on five-year cycles by constitutent voting. It is to these elected councillors that the unelected bureaucracy must answer. Each state has a representative in Council, elected separately from the state governors. With the expansion of Great Caliban to other worlds, it is possible that a chamber may be erected for planetary representatives, but state Representatives serve well enough to represent the interests of their people in Council - for the purpose of the Council is not to pass laws but to draft them for ratification by general assent. No change to law may be made without the honoured tradition of 'general assent', but existing laws may be implemented freely by governors until the law is changed or if it contravenes another, superceding law (for instance, anti-corruption laws). Finally, the Chancellor herself is appointed directly by general assent every five years, leaving her at least theoretically detached from party politics.
In theory, any citizen of Great Caliban may stand for any position of government, even the Chancery. In practice, the chief barrier to election to any government post, whether a local councillor or the Chancery, is simply that of voters knowing your name. On a local level, a well-respected member of a community with some fame can achieve government, but the higher echelons of government require advanced propaganda and media instruments to make one's name known; both the Chancellor and her immediate opponents are all well-publicised, and even reviled Representatives get re-elected over more competent but unknown candidates simply because voters have heard of them. It is for this reason that celebrity figures (such as Heghanon, first Kammarian to cross the void of interstellar space) can seriously threaten the Chancery, even if they have little to no prior governing experience.
In fairness, if Caliban and Prospero are in the same system in WH40k, it would make sense. Caliban, after all, is Prospero's unwilling slave.