(Lyka relates on if
she had seen third dimensional worlds like ours
during her tours saying she had seen far worse.
That brings up the core of the Sirian Defense
Force, the importance of an oath. Her whole life
is centered around the oath she took with no
others allowed from there until it is fulfilled.
She talks about the maths involved in her
ballistics training and her studies of generals in
earth’s history such as Custer. )
Lyka: hi.
Skip: hi
sweetie.
Lyka: hey,
how’s it going?
Russ: good.
Skip: good, how
about you?
Lyka: I’m doing
good, much better than last
week, much better than last
week.
Russ: well
yeah, you sound a little less
dragging.
Lyka: uh-huh,
I'm more lucid and aware of my
faculties, I will make myself
available to discuss.
Skip: okay, can
I you ask you a question?
Lyka: yeah
sure.
Skip: in your
few years….
Lyka: uh-huh.
Skip: have you
seen the disintegration of a
society like is happening in
our 3-D world?
Lyka: I’ve seen
far worse, I’ve seen far, far
worse.
Skip: no what
I’m trying to get at is, I
believe in my own mind that
ours is just starting.
Lyka: I would
say from what I have been able
to see and from what I’ve
heard and what I have been
having access to, I would say
yes you are just starting,
I’ve seen far, far worse.
Skip: well,
that comes with being a
soldier.
Lyka: uh-huh,
we have a job to do, we took
an oath, we took an oath.
Skip: you’ve
got a job to perform, no
matter which side you’re on,
you still have a job to do.
Lyka: yes.
Skip: when you
swear an allegiance or take an
oath…..
Lyka: uh-huh.
Skip: but that
would be a UN force would be
Oath Keepers.
Russ: uh-huh.
Lyka: in
essence yes we are like your
United Nations. I’m not that
familiar with it so I’m not
going to say what I think I
know about it but it’s
probably totally inaccurate
but our purpose is to go in
and make sure that the world
survives. We took an oath
thousands of years ago as a
group of people from Sirius to
defend the sister worlds, to
protect them from any harm
that may befall them. When we
join and we finish our
training, we take that exact
same oath and part of the oath
is that if by losing our lives
we can save or protect or aid
in the advancement of the
sister worlds, then we die
with immunity, we cease to be
for the fulfillment of our
oaths.
Skip: uh-hum,
okay.
Lyka: you see
oaths are very important
regardless of what dimension
you are on. If you give your
oath, your word, your honor,
nothing else matters.
Skip: see
that’s something that's fallen
by the wayside in this world.
Lyka: if I
stand up and say, “I promise,
I swear I will do it”, I have
to do it regardless of what it
is, even if it means my
destruction, even if it means
that I cease to be in this
physical form, even if it
affects the life of my child,
I have to fulfill that oath. I
promise, I swear, I oblige
myself, my freedom is now
gone, I have willingly given
up that freedom to fulfill an
oath. It's not for everybody,
it’s definitely not for
everybody. I can think of
numerous people that the mere
concept of losing their
freedom would be more horrific
than losing an arm or a leg
but it is something that is
very, very important. Oaths
are something that are
necessary to be fulfilled.
Russ: it seems
like that’s one of those
things that would help you
through the sixth dimension
though.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Russ:
especially the commitment that
you’re making as far as
dedicating your life to
protecting people you don’t
know.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Skip: uh-huh.
Russ: it’s a
concept as Skip said that’s
fallen by the wayside down
here.
Skip: yes it
has.
Lyka: it’s a
very important one, to have
that…..
Skip: in fact a
person’s word in this time and
era on this planet has got to
the point of where it’s almost
nonexistent.
Lyka: it means
nothing.
Skip: you have
to have it in writing…..
Lyka: uh-huh.
Skip: or it’s
no good.
Lyka: uh-huh
but with us it is who you are.
If you give an oath, even
those people that are very
much opposed to giving a
promise or an oath, they will
fulfill it. They have to
promise they will fulfill that
promise and that obligation
even to the point of if it
costs them dearly and it is
something that is very, very
important. An oath is more
important than anything else.
Even the life of yourself, my
unborn child, my bond mate, my
friends, my comrades, it’s
more important than that.
Skip: yeah it
is because your word is you.
Lyka: uh-huh,
it’s who I am and as the Oath
Keeper, I cannot say I promise
to do something, I cannot say
I swear I’ll do something
because I’m already taken.
Skip: uh-huh.
Lyka: I’ve
given my solemn word, I have
taken an oath and that has
precedent above all else. I
cannot give another oath, I
cannot give another promise
until my oath is expired and I
took an oath for no less than
300 cycles, 300 years. I have
the opportunity to renew at
the end of the time but 300
years is a long time.
Skip: yes it
is.
Lyka: and the
sad thing is that not many
Oath Keepers see that, we have
a very high rate of Oath
Keepers that fulfill their
oaths prematurely.
Russ: hmmm.
Lyka: and
there’s also a lot of Oath
Keepers that continue after
the 300 years, they renew,
re-up their oath for another
100 years or 200 years or 300
years.
Russ: does it
make it any easier to keep
fulfilling these oaths when
you do see what you do see
with the worlds you to go to?
Lyka: sometimes
it’s very, very hard.
Russ: isn’t
there also besides the Oath Keepers,
is there a diplomatic side?
Lyka: no, they
have to work out that
themselves.
Russ: now what
about planets that actually
have a belief in Ashtar
Command and an understanding
of them, of other races….
Lyka: very few
do.
Russ: oh.
Lyka: besides,
we’re not part of Ashtar
Command.
Russ: oh you’re
not?
Lyka: no.
Russ: you're
part of Sirius.
Lyka: correct.
So it’s irrelevant whether or
not they have a belief in
Ashtar Command, those worlds
that do aren’t a problem
though.
Skip: okay
darling.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Skip: oh golly.
Russ: so how is
it with your limited, lighter
duties now?
Lyka: my duties
aren’t that lighter, the only
thing that I’m not allowed to
do is to go on exercise or to
participate in combative
sports.
Russ: hmm.
Lyka: and I
really don’t feel like running
so that pretty much means
all’s I do is walk and sit
behind my desk, make my
inspections and study. In fact
not being able to exercise or
participate in combative
sports is leaving me to catch
up with some interesting
studies that I’ve always had
difficulty with.
Russ:
ballistics.
Lyka: yes.
Russ: good.
Lyka: uh-huh,
working very hard on that and
my maths is improving.
Russ:
excellent, glad to hear it.
Lyka: I didn’t
know that you could, if you’re
launching a long-range
ballistic missile, use the
rotation of the planet to give
it that extra kick.
Skip: uh-huh.
Lyka: I didn’t
know that.
Russ: that
makes two of us.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Skip: yeah,
they’ve always done that.
Lyka: it
depends also on the location
that you’re firing from.
Skip: yeah.
Russ: hmm.
Lyka: for
example, if the planet is
spinning this way and you
launch your missile right? As
it spins away it means that
you use less fuel to launch it
because the planet is turning
away from it as it’s already
entering its trajectory which
means that you use less fuel
and you can make it travel
further if you take have the
exact same amount of fuel and
you can get to the target
quicker.
Skip: it’s what
they talk about……have you ever
heard them about windows?
Russ: uh-huh.
Skip: that’s
what they’re talking about.
Russ: oh.
Lyka: isn’t
there some kind of computer
system?
Skip: no, no,
no, yeah, yeah it is now but I
mean I’m talking about flight
control windows.
Lyka: oh.
Skip: they can
go through windows, you don’t
have as much friction on
account of the rotation of the
planet and if you hit the
window correctly, it gives you
that extra boost.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Russ: hmm.
Skip: same
thing coming back in.
Lyka: I’m
actually studying at the
moment the long-range
projectile interplanetary. For
example, attacking a planet
that is quite some way away,
getting into the real heavy
maths.
Skip: we
haven't quite progressed that
far yet.
Kiri: uh-huh.
Russ: well
we’ve landed on the moon and
we’re landing them on Mars so
we’re way progressed that far.
Lyka: well
you’re talking if you hit
within 20 miles of the target
you’re doing good, I’m talking
within one or two units over
such a great distance.
Skip: uh-huh.
Russ: tricky
stuff.
Lyka: oh it’s a
lot of fun too. I’m also
currently studying some
interesting battlefield
strategies from
the………nevermind, I can't go
into details as I was about to
start blabbing about Sirian
battle tactics but I can’t,
can’t discuss that.
Skip: yeah.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Skip: you might
study some of our ancient
generals too.
Lyka: I have,
Hadrian, Caesar, Ramses….
Skip: some of
them were pretty sharp.
Lyka: uh-huh,
Alexander, Napoleon, Rommel,
oh I can sit here and go on
naming generals. I can discuss
the Carthaginian wars which
I've studied, Macedonian wars,
I could talk about Philip the
Second of Macedonia. Do you
know who Philip of Macedonia
was?
Russ: uh-uh.
Lyka: do you
know who he was father of?
Skip: who he
was what?
Russ: Alexander
the Great.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Russ: hmm, I
did know that.
Lyka: uh-huh, I
can sit and pontificate all
day about battles. I can talk
about...…I can’t remember the
location but it is a
famous battle with
Ramses the Second and…..I
forget but it was something
like fourteen something
against think it was the
Hittites or somewhere in that
area where he got ahead of his
main force and he’s got a
small patrol with him……..well
not a small patrol but I think
it was like one third of his
army and he was attacked by
the Hittites, what he thought
was a small patrol turned out
to be their whole entire army
and his bravery and audacity
saved a possible massive
defeat and his own life,
turned it into what the
Egyptians claimed was a
victory. In actual fact it was
a stalemate.
Russ: hmm.
Skip: hmm.
Russ:
interesting.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Russ: well you
had a lot of fun.
Lyka: oh yeah,
studied that battle and
realized that a lot of it was
luck, a lot of it was luck.
Russ: a lot of
battles are luck.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Skip: uh-huh.
Russ: uh-huh,
rain or air cover or whatever.
Lyka: maybe on
your planet they're luck, we
have…..……but put it this way
as a student when I play a
wargame, I have to have at
least six possible strategies
for each possible scenario.
And in a wargame it won’t be
one scenario, they will have
as many as 12 different
scenarios that can phase in at
any time and I’ve got to have
them in writing plus
memorized.
Russ: wow.
Skip: wow.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Skip: that’s
heavy.
Lyka: oh it is
heavy, gives me headaches.
I’ve only actually ever won
one wargame and I've played a
lot. I’ve had quite a few
stalemates but I’ve only ever
won one so I’m not the best
student in the world in fact
actually in my class I’m
probably in the bottom 15, but
I try. But you have a famous
general that was actually I
think like the bottom of his
class that went on to become
quite famous but should never
have been famous, he was
foolish and stupid.
Russ: Patton?
Lyka: no
Custer.
Russ: oh
Custer.
Lyka: uh-huh.
In fact I was studying his
famous Battle of Little
Bighorn, do you know how lucky
he was not to lose his whole
entire force?
Russ: really?
Lyka: uh-huh.
Russ: I thought
he did lose his whole entire
force.
Lyka: no he
didn’t lose his whole entire
command.
Skip: he lost
one third of it.
Lyka: uh-huh.
Russ: oh.
(Skip laughs)
Skip: sorry, I
didn’t mean to jump in there.
Lyka: oh that’s
quite all right. Captain Reno
was wise in hunkering down but
also remiss in his duty and
his oath, he failed to fulfill
his oath and duties.
Russ: what,
back up his commanding
officer?
Lyka: uh-huh.
Russ: oh.
Lyka: that was
very foolish and remiss. Okay,
I’ve got to depart, I need to
take care of a few things and
Kiri’s going……oh she's going
bye, okay bye.
Skip: thank you
very much.
Lyka: okay.
Russ: take
care.
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