Projekt STURM: Difference between revisions

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The STURM incident had a wide variety of consequences across Hendalarskara society alike. The Seventeenth Directorate was entirely shut down, with all scientists and medical professionals who took part in the project struck off, while other military and civilian personnel who failed to investigate the project earlier were formally reprimanded and reassigned to other Directorates. The outcry over the maltreatment of test subjects sparked a wide-ranging review of Hendalarskara medical and scientific ethics, with a new Medical Code compiled and published in 1951 that largely governs medico-scientific conduct across the Hendalarskara world (including the Pentapolis) to this day. The government of Jendaburg was forced to pay compensation to dozens of victims' families, almost bankrupting the city, and was suspended by the other Pentapolitan cities from all governmental bodies of the Pentapolis for a period of five years (1948-53). In total, around 250 people are thought to have died across the seven years of the project's operation, with the vast majority of deaths occurring in the early SAMAA era, although due to the precarious status of those targeted for "assessment" a full tally of victims may never be known.
The STURM incident had a wide variety of consequences across Hendalarskara society alike. The Seventeenth Directorate was entirely shut down, with all scientists and medical professionals who took part in the project struck off, while other military and civilian personnel who failed to investigate the project earlier were formally reprimanded and reassigned to other Directorates. The outcry over the maltreatment of test subjects sparked a wide-ranging review of Hendalarskara medical and scientific ethics, with a new Medical Code compiled and published in 1951 that largely governs medico-scientific conduct across the Hendalarskara world (including the Pentapolis) to this day. The government of Jendaburg was forced to pay compensation to dozens of victims' families, almost bankrupting the city, and was suspended by the other Pentapolitan cities from all governmental bodies of the Pentapolis for a period of five years (1948-53). In total, around 250 people are thought to have died across the seven years of the project's operation, with the vast majority of deaths occurring in the early SAMAA era, although due to the precarious status of those targeted for "assessment" a full tally of victims may never be known.


Adelfons and Schauermann's subsequent activities are central to many conspiracy theories regarding the project. Skeptics of official narratives have frequently wondered why the architect and inspiration of such an egregious violation of human rights were simply allowed to go free abroad, with many theorising that their work had been sponsored by one or more parties to the Second Great War - with the acquiescence of the Jendaburger and possibly even Hendalarskara authorities - and that Adelfons and Schauermann were therefore subject to some level of diplomatic protection despite their crimes. Various trackers claim to have unearthed evidence of Adelfons and Schauermann's post-1948 whereabouts in locales as diverse as [[Caphiria]], [[Battganuur]] and even [[Corumm]], with theories generally arguing that the doctors, wherever they ended up, were retained for their hard-won expertise in hallucinogenic interrogation, particularly given its value in extracting confessions from political dissidents. If evidence of such diplomatic connections exists, it is at present firmly sealed in various state archives across the world and may not be available for public scrutiny for many decades yet to come.
Adelfons and Schauermann's subsequent activities are central to many conspiracy theories regarding the project. Skeptics of official narratives have frequently wondered why the architect and inspiration of such an egregious violation of human rights were simply allowed to go free abroad, with many theorising that their work had been sponsored by one or more parties to the Second Great War - with the acquiescence of the Jendaburger and possibly even Hendalarskara authorities - and that Adelfons and Schauermann were therefore subject to some level of diplomatic protection despite their crimes. Various trackers claim to have unearthed evidence of Adelfons and Schauermann's post-1948 whereabouts in locales as diverse as [[Caphiria]], [[Battganuur]] and even [[Daxia]], with theories generally arguing that the doctors, wherever they ended up, were retained for their hard-won expertise in hallucinogenic interrogation, particularly given its value in extracting confessions from political dissidents. If evidence of such diplomatic connections exists, it is at present firmly sealed in various state archives across the world and may not be available for public scrutiny for many decades yet to come.


==Notes==
==Notes==