Just hours ago, I learned of the death of pilot Daisha Voluptia. Although the circumstances of her death were not disclosed to me, I am not grieved by her passing, because she is with God now. And by God, I mean the Red God, because just under a month ago, I secretly initiated Daisha into the Faith at her request. On that day, she sacrificed three Minmatar upon the Altar of God, one Brutor, one Sebiestor, and one Vherokior, tasting their wounds and filling the Golden Vial of the Sani Sabik with their blood.
Proof of this event was posted to the Intergalactic Summit channel to the satisfaction of all reasonable persons, although I am not sure whether the rules of this forum permit reposting it here.
The Red God is not a God without humor, for he allowed SFRIM to perform a funeral for Daisha, they believing her to be a member of the watered down, liberal orthodox rite. It must have been amusing for Daisha to look down from Paradise to see the so-called Amarr Loyalists perform their pathetic, wayward, liberal rites with no spiritual power over her remains. Needless to say, SFRIM’s weak funeral rites have no power to draw the saved in Paradise away from the True Faith.
Even so, may the Blood Age come quickly. Amen. Amarr Victor.
Oh, and one more thing: because Pilot Voluptia was one of the True Faith, I requested she be exhumed and returned to us for a proper burial and that I may be provided with enough details of her death to complete her record in the Sani Sabik Book of the Dead.
The whole chain of events that lead to this was downright spectacular! The look on everyone’s faces when Mister Nauplius pulled those logs. I had chicken bumps!
Do you not listen to any sort of reason? Are you that stupid?
Whether it be true or not, give the people a chance to grieve her in their own way instead of slamming down your throat. I thought you had more class then that, I guess I was wrong.
As a former member of SFRIM I can say it is a place of the faithful and not as some paint it a den of heretics. There have been regrettable moments and members, but no organisation is without sin and SFRIM has a good, working, internal discipline process in place to deal with such matters.