Lens of History (62): Lend-Lease & the Abyssal War

STEC Archives, Print Document Division
Curator signature: Jer
Format: Speech Transcript & Exhibit Materials
Object: Transcribed speech, [classified] Collection
Location (if known): STEC Archives

Astute readers and news aficionados have no doubt often heard terms like “lend-lease” and “Modern Arsenal of Democracy” raised in the context of the United States. This comparison, while appropriate to an extent, ought to be clarified in light of the war’s conclusion. 

Particularly, in light of recent national survey data, it seems that most of us (9/10 Americans surveyed) appear to have some critical misunderstanding of the specifics involved.

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Lens of History (61): Long-term Investment

STEC Archives, Print Document Division
Curator signature: Jer
Format:  Print Media – DECLASSIFIED under [REDACTED], [REDACTED]
Special Documents Division – [REDACTED]
Prepared for Exhibit no. 92 (“Towards the End: Strategic Implementation of Anti-Abyssal Warfare”)
Time (if known): [Classified – Pre-War]

Editor’s Note: Imagine yourself one of STEC’s leadership in this organization’s earliest days. The budding program is yielding considerable fruit. Shipgirls are appearing consistently, arms are slowly stockpiled, old international rivalries are being healed, there is something of a dedicated R&D program going, and most importantly – the individual Abyssal attacks appear to be kept in check. 

Eyewitness recollections and your own research, however, indicate that the worst is yet to come. The Abyssal main force is not yet here, or else the Abyssals haven’t made a commitment to complete their attack yet.

What is your strategic vision going forward? Enclosed in this exhibit are a smattering of materials, plans, and suggestions. Some you are no doubt already familiar with, but others, perhaps less so.

We invite you to contemplate the choices faced by STEC leadership in its early days, as we begin an exploratory journey towards understanding the groundwork that was laid in preparation for the Abyssal War.

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Lens of History (60): Popular Expectation

STEC Archives, Print Document Division
Curator signature: Jer
Format:  Print Media – DECLASSIFIED under [REDACTED], [REDACTED]
Special Documents Division – [REDACTED]
Time (if known): [Classified]

Editor’s Note: Congress and STEC has had a long history of fruitful, bipartisan coordination, and so sometimes the greatest impetus to STEC deployment comes from popular rather than political ones. In this exhibit, we’ll take a look at one such episode: the deployment of Naval Base Eden.

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Happy 2022, Year of the … Catgirls (lol?)

Zero’s idea, really. Picture featured – Zero holding his latest creation (lol)

Looking back on 2021 – or, really, these two years, it’s been a remarkable time. So many things have changed – in terms of how we live life, how we make things, what sort of things we play. It’s always a little early to say if these changes are good or bad, but it’s been tremendously interesting for me to see how things change over time.

No joke, right now, in doujinshi, there’s a bit of a mixed feeling here. Traditional venues, events, methods, are slowly dying out. For instance, for Zero, the convention in his home town – the one where it got him into all this as a whole – is really struggling. Yet there’s plenty of opportunity too – subscription based models, art-turning-idolru (in the Japanese fashion), NFTs, you name it. While great artists on say, Pixiv or artstation have hundreds of followers, easy accessibility to digital art-making tools coupled with modern technology like Discord enables hundreds of private communities and fandoms to crop up. I feel that even reddit is slowly being displaced – to say nothing of forums or imageboards.

Like I said, interesting times, isn’t it? On one end you have tiktok, vtubers, and augmented reality/virtual reality, on the other end you have something like us.

For me, I think it’s been a marvelous experience watching how Pacific blossomed over the years. For us here, I think by now, I’ve been witness to the rise and fall of many, many, many KanColle derivatives. Even Azur Lane is coming and going – to be replaced by other gacha games. No doubt these franchises’ll stay as long as their creators intend – and that goes for us here at Pacific as well. 

Looking back, again, I think it’s interesting to me personally how we turned out. Unlike the universe we depict, we’ve really only got one “reality” here in our real life world. While it’s interesting to ponder in terms of what could have been, in the end, the biggest factor to what sort of storytelling Pacific ultimately took (is taking, or will take) ended up largely self-determined. By that, I mean it’s a mixture of things that we can’t control (for instance, my health issues) and things we know for sure that we want to control (we’re all history geeks).

So, it took a while for us to settle on this specific form of “storytelling” – but it ended up being perhaps the best way for us to share with you the things we’re interested in: depicting events in a world recognizable by us, people living in the modern era, albeit with shipgirls. It also happens to have become what to us still the most sensible method, since our circle – at least this section – treat it as a hobby. In a way, there’s little reason, motive, or pressure for us to do the usual #hashtag like rate subscribe leave a review sort of thing. The team’s often used the analogy of us being the local hole-in-the-wall place pub. We welcome anyone who want to try our stuff out – but we certainly aren’t interested in having us appear on national television (or youtube, I guess, given this is the 2020s). 

That’s exactly it. We’ll be here if you want to look for us. 

If this stuff looks familiar, remember – I’m habitually repetitive (laughs). We’ll still be here sharing our little tidbits in our usual fashion. I don’t anticipate there being much changes, honestly – Pacific, after all, is a product of our times – we’re about as old as say, F/GO or Granblue Fantasy (think about that for a moment…), and we’re as much of a witness to the shifting landscape of the world as you are.

Honestly, it’s been a great trip. Some of you regulars have been writing in for years, while others I know – based on my back-end – but haven’t interacted at all. Thanks for being a part of this journey – let’s see what lies ahead next year!