roseandheather wrote:
Her not voting for the death penalty had nothing to do with political pressure and everything to do with her own personal convictions. As someone who is against the death penalty - in any circumstances - I sympathise completely with her. She voted with her conscience, not to anyone's political pressure, be it White Haven's or North Hollow's. And that takes far more courage than simply switching sides. She knew very well that she'd be disliked by the pro-Honor faction for not voting for the death penalty, and disliked by the pro-Young faction for voting to have him cashiered. That's the kind of thing someone can only do when ruled by their conscience, not politics.
I tend to disagree with this. She voted the 'party line' of not guilty throughout the trial and my reading of it was that that was a political division.
I think her politics was the reason for the not guilty vote throughout but when it came down to it her personal convictions wouldn't allow her to let Young off the hook with no punishment.
That's how I read it anyway. She knew full well that Young was guilty on all counts including the capital charges, voted to save his life for political reasons but couldn't stomach allowing him to stay in her navy for personal/professional reasons.
And I doubt High Ridge supporters would hate on her for her call - she saved his life after all, plus there's no indication that I noticed that it hurt her career at all.
Edit: for one more quote and comment
Right. Because knowing someone is guilty and wanting them to be duly punished - as Sonja did - automatically has to equate to wanting them to suffer the death penalty.
What she wants should have absolutely no bearing on her decision. The punishment for the crime should have no bearing on her decision. She's supposed to have a simple yes/no answer on the question "Is Pavel Young guilty of desertion / cowardice?" because that's her job.