The Senetha Warrior Class II

Not all Senetha of the warrior class believed they were privileged; many didn’t care for those in the tribal council. The warriors believed in being upright, practicing what they said in words and believed. Some chief warriors not part of the council never practiced or believed in nepotism. The committee favored whoever had the intelligence and what they could do to benefit the board. This was on the ideals of a warrior. Warrior was educated and kept their emotions in balance. The constant clash with emotions was considered a battle; some thought it a daily battle. To keep the feelings in equilibrium, the Senetha warrior used a hand-bladed weapon for physical and mental discipline.

Nothing unique about this was projectile ones, flying vehicle weapons, and large projectile weapons. Bladed weapons were somewhat obsolete because other weapons had been developed; they were only used as devices for disciplining the body and mind. Not all the hand weapons had moving parts that could anticipate the warrior’s move on the attack; in fact, the gun did all the aggressive actions. In the modern age for the Senetha, weapons big and small, even large military divisions, were not needed. The Senetha had become administrators, scholars, and artists, in the council. The warrior opposed one another, yet they had political parties, the warriors that were officers opposed those that were administrators and scholars. The officers were purely military; not all scholars were of the warrior class. Traditional weapons controlled by a warrior gave way to auto-weapons, weapons that were living beings. These weapons were incorporeal, with nothing physical about them, although they seemed to appear physically resembling a combination of transparent light and metal. These things or weapons defended the land by making invaders feel ill, disillusioned with negative emotions or illusions, or in other ways killing people by affecting their organs, destroying the heart, liver, or other vital organs. They could send things that resembled winds to attack hostile intruders. Generally, if the attack had the effect of an annoyance, then if necessary, they could kill. There were all kinds of guardians along with the border areas.

If the warrior attempted to take over the council, such a move would never work, there were too many people of the warrior class who opposed this, and there was no bloodshed. In contemporary times the council had been flooded with non-warriors. The concern has been with the development of life and the land. After the time of the Orbs, construction had become an underground priority because the destruction of the land had been the result of the Orbs. Things were going according to the council’s concerns, which meant artesian engineers’ work was of greater priority. The warriors had turned their skills towards rebuilding and defense measures if the Orbs should come back again. This never happened.

Robert J. Matsunaga