Kiran Banerjee

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Commissioner Kiran Banerjee is one of leaders of The Protectorate.

Appearance

Kiran.jpg

Background

Born: Thiruvananthapuram (also known as Trivandrum), Kerala, India

BA in Political Science, University of Chennai, 1975, where he was a member of the DMK Student Wing.
Shot by police during anti-forced sterilization unrest in Muzaffanagar, Uttar Pradesh, in 1976.
Resided in Vancouver, Canada, 1976-1980.
Worked as civilian monitor and ombudsman for UN Peacekeeping operations in various locations, including Lebanon, Rwanda and Kosovo, 1980-2000.
Master of Laws with a focus on international human rights law, Concordia University, 1984.
Testified at war crimes tribunals as well as during prosecutions of peacekeepers who committed serious offenses during missions.
Since 2000, he has served as an adviser to various human rights and peace organizations.

Personality

Kiran Banerjee have been a dedicated human rights defender for most of his life, and his quotes and record suggest high degree of compassion, discipline, integrity and wisdom. However, when hydras invade the Earth, he gets under influence of one of alien agents and his personality starts turning around. Throughout the campaign Kiran becomes more stubborn and cynical, up to complete psychopathy.

Quotes

  • We cannot fight a war that will result in our extinction. Our only hope is to understan what the aliens want us and determine how to satisfy them without losing our independence. - faction blurb

Research

  • "Just imagine, Ifechi, how this world would change if we could mass-manufacture building materials in an instant. Homes built for mere pennies! Irrigation for every village! A brighter, fairer future for all..." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Excerpt from a letter to his partner while on assignment in Lagos
  • "No matter what we do, no matter what we say, no matter how many appear to listen to us, mutual obliteration remains humanity's only end-game." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, In his letter resigning from the U.N. Department of Peace Operations
  • "Choose a card. Now blow on it. Perfect! Then tap my hand three times. Wonderful!
    And just like that… the card… floats away." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Home video of his daughter's third birthday
  • "One dollar. That's what Paul Tibbets' mother paid for him to look inside an airplane at a local fair. Decades later, he flew the plane that killed 70,000 in Hiroshima. He named it Enola Gay, after his mother. All because of that one dollar." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, From his second book, "Blood Money."
  • "All the old boundaries, the stratified lines of power, have been exposed as a fragile fiction by the aliens. Rights and authorities are awash. But we cannot forget that a person's daily struggles are only compounding; in this dangerous time, they still need food, medical care, and assurance that their labors will be meaningfully rewarded." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Addressing the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
  • "If some ancient race of brilliant, gentle snake-men suddenly crawled from the desert, they would have no rights, no protections! Any idiot with a rifle could turn a miracle into a pair of boots!" — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, During a charged BBC Newsnight discussion about the refugee crisis
  • "We destroy everything we touch, yet we cannot stop ourselves from touching more. We are so lost, Ifechi. So very lost." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, From an email to his partner, location unknown
  • "Our technology could be used to end hunger, poverty, and disease. Yet, rather than raising up our entire species, it is widening the chasm between those with access and those without." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Conclusion of his speech to the U.N. Global Summit on Responsible Technology Proliferation
  • "Some say swords to plowshares is mere sentiment. But here we are, using our nuclear bombs to explore the far reaches of space, rather than doom our own home." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Advocating for global nuclear disarmament on CNN
  • "If we are to contemplate founding human society on another world, it is imperative that we learn from our past mistakes. It is a chance to start afresh, with fairness and equality the very bedrock of how we live." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Speech at the International Peace Conference
  • "Yes, it's true that this technology could be a godsend, but from Nobel to Oppenheimer, history teaches us that unchecked human instinct will cause even the most well-intended concept to go disastrously awry." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Oral argument at the U.N. Ethical Proliferation of Technology summit
  • "One would think that the master most despised is the one who stands over us, whip in hand. But no, it is the unseen and distant master, issuing his uncaring edicts from afar, whom we most yearn to overthrow." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Arguing for the independence of Hong Kong on CNN
  • "Empathy is not a muscle. You either possess it or you do not. It is those who do not who most limit human potential. If only there were some way to make them care, truly care, then everything would change in an instant." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Keynote at sensitivity training seminar for undisclosed social media corporation
  • "Only when we can look our enemy in the eye can we understand why he is not so different from ourselves. Then, only then, can we hope for peace, Ifechi." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, From a letter to his partner while stationed in Rwanda
  • "Our advances in science and technology can be the key to the gates of heaven, but also to the gates of hell. We must choose wisely every time, or we may never choose again." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Speech at the U.N. Science Summit
  • "There is nothing, nothing we humans will not turn into a weapon if we can. Each fresh discovery we make only speeds us closer to destruction." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, "Blood Money."
  • "Home is wherever you lay your head, it is said. If only this were true. Home, as far too many of us know, is only where no one is trying to destroy all that you hold dear." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Comments made during a BBC World Service interview, during civil wars in the Balkans
  • "I am impressed. That does not happen often. But tell me, what new weapons does this allow for, and when will they be ready? Anything else is of little consequence." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Memo attached to blueprints for a proposed reactor design
  • "Now as then, territorial disputes boil down to one group of people gazing upon a new land and calculating who would need to die so they could own it. Thousands of years of purported civilization have done so little to curtail our most basic reptilian impulses." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, During the U.N. Interstellar Resources Apportionment debate
  • "Every time we build walls instead of bridges, we move further away from peaceful co-existence." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Speech in front of the U.N. General Assembly
  • "The less we burn, the longer we will survive. And the less we depend upon burning our natural resources, the fewer territorial conflicts we will suffer. It is forever bewildering to me how few of us can accept this simple concept." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Guest lecture at the Beyond Fossil Fuels conference
  • "Forgive me, Ifechi. I can happily talk to anyone for hours about how to improve society, yet sometimes replying to a simple email feels like the hardest thing in the world." — Comissioner Kiran Banerjee, Note attached to a flower delivery sent to his partner, 2008