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The Other Humanity (Star Trek/Azur Lane multi-crossover world building and other drabbles)

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Set in a divergent Star Trek galaxy, Humanity has fractured into rival civilizations with radically different visions of its future. Through intelligence reports, news articles, personal memoirs, diplomatic correspondence, and glimpses across time itself, the collection chronicles the struggle between the Federation, the Azur Lane, the frontier Tempest Alliance, and the mysterious forces working from beyond history to determine whether Humanity will stagnate, transcend, or destroy itself.
The Other Humanity New

Jaenera Targaryen

I trust you know where the happy button is?
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Disclaimer: I do not own Star Trek, it is owned by Paramount Global. I also do not own Azur Lane, it is owned by Shanghai Manjuu, Xiamen Yongshi, and Yostar.

The Other Humanity

Historical Documentary Produced by the Federation Historical Society, 2417

"The greatest misconception held by citizens of the Federation is that the Azur Lane are rebels. Rebels seek to overthrow a government. The Azur Lane never wanted Earth. They simply wanted to be left alone."

— Professor Elena Vasquez, University of Alpha Centauri


The story of the Azur Lane begins with a contradiction.

Official Federation records describe them as separatists.

Azur Lane records describe themselves as refugees.

For nearly three centuries, historians have argued over which interpretation is correct. Today, after decades of limited cooperation between the Federation and the Lane states, a clearer picture has emerged.

The truth, as usual, is more complicated.


The Great Departure
The roots of the Azur Lane can be traced to the late-21st Century, during Humanity's difficult recovery from the Eugenics Wars and World War III.

United Earth emerged from those catastrophes with a singular conviction: Humanity must never again be divided.

To many on Earth, this seemed reasonable.

To others, it became the foundation of a new orthodoxy.

Genetic engineering was all but banned. Artificial intelligence research was heavily-regulated. Cybernetic enhancement was viewed with suspicion. National identities were steadily deemphasized in favor of a unified planetary culture.

By the dawn of the 22nd century, the policy had become institutional.

Critics would later call it "benevolent homogenization."

Supporters preferred "Human unification."

The people who eventually founded the Azur Lane called it something else: erasure.


The First Exodus
The first emigrants were not nationalists, they were Augments.

Not the tyrants of Khan Noonien Singh's era, but their descendants, sympathizers, researchers, and ordinary families caught in the backlash. Many had never committed a crime. Yet they lived under perpetual suspicion, career limitations, mandatory surveillance, and social discrimination.

Entire communities concluded that coexistence with United Earth would never truly be possible.

So they left.

Not one colony's worth of people, not ten, but hundreds. Entire flotillas disappeared beyond the edges of explored space.

The Federation would later refer to them collectively as the Exiles.

The Exiles referred to themselves as Pioneers.


The Second Exodus
The second migration proved even more consequential.

These colonists were not fleeing persecution, they were fleeing assimilation.

Japanese cultural preservation societies.

German historical organizations.

French republican leagues.

Chinese traditionalists.

Russian communal movements.

Italian heritage foundations.

British monarchist associations.

Countless others.

They looked at the emerging planetary culture and saw something they considered tragic. Humanity was becoming united, but it was also becoming uniform. Languages were disappearing. Customs had faded. Ancient institutions dissolved, some voluntarily, others forcibly. Regional identities were becoming historical curiosities.

Many people welcomed these developments.

Others mourned them, and some decided to preserve what they loved by leaving.


Founding the Nations
The colonies established by these cultural expatriates gradually coalesced into distinct civilizations. Not replicas of historical states, but idealizations.

The societies they believed their ancestors had aspired to become. And the result was unlike anything the Federation had ever encountered.


The Eagle Union
The Eagle Union emerged from colonies founded by constitutional idealists, frontier settlers, and advocates of individual liberty. Their political philosophy fused representative government with radical personal autonomy.

Artificial intelligence was granted legal personhood. Genetic modification was considered a fundamental right. Private enterprise flourished, as did public institutions.

Federation observers often describe the Eagle Union as what Americans imagined themselves to be rather than what America ever was.

The Eagle Union considers this a compliment.


The Royal Kingdom
The Royal Kingdom and its Dominions represent an idealized continuation of the British tradition.
  • Constitutional monarchy
  • Parliamentary government
  • Strong civic institutions
  • A vast network of autonomous realms connected through shared allegiance to the Crown
These associated Dominions include the Maple Monarchy and New Zealand.

Critics call the system archaic.

Its citizens routinely point out that their government has remained stable for two hundred years longer than many Federation administrations ever have.


The Ironblood Nation
No member state has been more misunderstood.

Federation media frequently portrays Ironblood through the lens of twentieth-century Earth history.

Ironblood citizens find this deeply irritating. The nation was not founded on Habsburg despotism. Not the Kaiserreich. And certainly not the Third Reich.

Instead, it represents an idealized German civilization emphasizing engineering, scholarship, discipline, craftsmanship, and civic responsibility.

Their universities remain among the finest in known space.

Their shipyards are arguably unmatched.


The Sakura Empire
Perhaps the most culturally distinctive of all the Lane nations, the Sakura Empire preserved traditions abandoned on Earth centuries earlier while simultaneously embracing advanced technology, some of which are considerably ahead of Federation standards.

As a result, its citizens often appear paradoxical to outsiders, marked by such sights as ancient ceremonies conducted by synthetic priests, quantum computers integrated into Shinto shrines, or even starships named after legendary heroes operating fleets directed by advanced machine intelligences

To the Sakura, there is no contradiction.

Tradition and progress are simply two sides of the same coin, no more and no less.


The Others
The Dragon Empire preserved traditional Chinese civilization.

The Northern Parliament reimagined Soviet ideals without Stalinist excesses.

The Sardegna Empire celebrates Italian culture, artistry, and statecraft.

The Iris Orthodox Faction embodies an idealized French republican tradition.

Together, they form a constellation of civilizations united by one principle: Humanity was strongest when diverse. Not despite its differences, but because of them.


The Founding of Azur Lane
Initially these nations remained independent, and the catalyst for unity came from fear.

Fear of invasion, and fear of isolation.

Federation expansion had continued steadily, with new colonies appearing every decade. Starfleet patrols grew increasingly common, and Lane leaders feared that one day they would find themselves surrounded, and eventually absorbed.

And so, in 2237, the member states signed the Treaty of Azure. The military alliance it formed became known as Azur Lane.

The spelling was intentional, a subtle distinction to remind all that they were building something new.


The Technological Divergence
Most Federation citizens assume the Federation represents the pinnacle of Human development.

This assumption ceased being true sometime during the twenty-fourth century. No historian agrees precisely when, but the reason was simple: the Federation restricted certain technologies, but the Lane embraced them.
  • Genetic engineering
  • Machine intelligence
  • Neural augmentation
  • Synthetic biology
  • Quantum cognition systems
  • Cybernetic integration
  • Human-AI symbiosis
The results were extraordinary. By 2400, some Azur Lane technologies appeared almost miraculous even to Starfleet engineers. Examples include matter synthesis systems capable of outperforming replicators, near-sentient strategic computers, self-evolving manufacturing networks, and medical technologies capable of extending healthy lifespans beyond three centuries.

But despite all this, the citizens remained recognizably human. They had not transcended Humanity.

They had expanded it.


The Federation's Great Frustration
The Federation had never officially challenged Azur Lane sovereignty. Practical realities make such a position impossible.

The Lane controls thousands of systems, with a population numbering in the hundreds of billions. Its combined military forces rival Starfleet itself.

Officially, relations remained diplomatic. But unofficially, many Federation officials regard the Lane as wayward colonies, an uncomfortable reminder that Humanity's future might not belong exclusively to the Federation.

This sentiment is particularly common among officials from United Earth.

A popular joke within Azur Lane circles has summarized the relationship as, "The Federation accepts our independence the same way gravity accepts aircraft."


The Tempest War
Nothing damaged Federation prestige more than the Tempest War.

The Tempest Alliance occupies the wild frontiers beyond settled space. It is composed of free traders, independent explorers, mercenaries, free captains, microstates, adventurers, and just about every other kind of person too stubborn to accept an actual government.

For decades the Federation attempted influence campaigns throughout Tempest territory, but the situation eventually escalated into open conflict. What happened next remains painful reading at Starfleet Academy.

The Tempest fleets fought asymmetrically, unpredictably, and brutally. In particular, Galaxy class starships - symbols of Federation prestige - were isolated, boarded, captured, and repurposed.

Several continue serving in Tempest fleets today. One captain reportedly renamed his captured vessel Not Yours Anymore. The Federation has never officially commented.

The resulting peace agreement established a permanent non-aggression pact. It remains in force to this day.


The Kingdom of Tulips
Officially neutral, but unofficially indispensable.

The Kingdom of Tulips emerged from Dutch cultural colonies that specialized in commerce, logistics, finance, and interstellar trade. Their merchant networks connect regions that otherwise might never interact. Although not a member of Azur Lane, the kingdom maintains close relations with nearly every Lane nation.

Military analysts generally agree upon one point: an attack on the Kingdom would trigger intervention from Azur Lane.

The only debate concerns how quickly.


The Sirens
No documentary about the modern political landscape can avoid discussing the Sirens.

Unfortunately, almost nothing is known about them. Their fleets appear throughout explored space, they possess technology beyond even Azur Lane standards, they intervene occasionally, usually at critical moments, and always for reasons nobody fully understands.

Their leader is the mysterious figure known only as Dreamweaver. Attempts to determine Dreamweaver's identity have failed for centuries.

More enigmatic still is the Triumvirate said to stand behind the Sirens.
  • The Creator
  • The Magister
  • The Inquisitor
No verified images exist, no confirmed species identifications, and no reliable biographies. Only myths, rumors, and unanswered questions.

But even this much that is known is startling. The Sirens have never attempted conquest, never demanded tribute, never sought territory, and never declared war on any human civilization.

They simply watch, and occasionally intervene. The 'why' remains one of the greatest mysteries of the age.


The Human Question
Today, the Federation, Azur Lane, Tempest Alliance, Kingdom of Tulips, and countless smaller powers coexist in an uneasy balance. Trade flourishes, diplomacy continues, disputes arise, and wars occasionally occur.

Yet civilization endures.

Perhaps the greatest irony is this: United Earth sought to build a single vision of Humanity. Azur Lane sought to preserve many.

Three centuries later both succeeded.

Humanity now exists in forms its ancestors could scarcely imagine.

Federation citizens.

Lane citizens.

Tempest Free Captains.

Transhumans.

Baseline Humans.

Synthetics.

Augments.

Cyborgs.

And countless variations in between.

The question that once divided them remains unresolved: should Humanity become one people? Or should they remain as many?

The answer may ultimately determine the future of the galaxy. For now, however, history records only one certainty.

The stars proved large enough for both visions.


A/N

Been wanting to post this for a while now. This isn't a proper story per se, more a world-building exercise reimagining the nations and organizations of the Azur Lane in the Star Trek setting, but parallel to the Federation, United Earth, and others. There'll be drabbles later on and every now and then, providing first-person looks at life and events in-setting, but for the most part this will be a history documentary-esque exposition on the AU setting.

If you wish to write stories in this setting, by all means, I won't stop you. Canonicity to the exercise isn't guaranteed, but feel free to explore as you wish.
 
The Eagle Union New
Disclaimer: I do not own Star Trek, it is owned by Paramount Global. I also do not own Azur Lane, it is owned by Shanghai Manjuu, Xiamen Yongshi, and Yostar.

The Eagle Union

Excerpt from Nations Beyond Earth: A Survey of the Azur Lane Powers

Federation Historical Institute, 2412 Edition



"The Federation believes that freedom is something society grants to the individual. The Eagle Union believes freedom is something society can never legitimately take away."

— Ambassador Richard Hale, Eagle Union State Department

Among all the nations of Azur Lane, none are richer, more influential, or politically dominant than the Eagle Union.

To Federation observers, the Eagle Union often appears contradictory. Its citizens possess near-unlimited access to technologies considered dangerous throughout Federation space. Artificial intelligences possess legal rights. Genetic modification is commonplace. Private corporations wield tremendous influence. Citizens may own spacecraft capable of rivaling small military vessels. Local governments enjoy extraordinary autonomy.

And yet, despite repeated Federation predictions of collapse, the Eagle Union remains one of the most stable societies in known space. Indeed, many historians argue that the Eagle Union represents the ideological heart of Azur Lane itself.

To understand the alliance, one must first understand the Union.


Origins

The Eagle Union was never intended to recreate the United States. Its founders believed that to be impossible, and that the goal was never about repeating history anyway. Instead, they sought to preserve what they viewed as America's prized ideals while correcting what they considered its historical failures.

The first Eagle colonies emerged from the Second Exodus. Unlike many Azur Lane nations, they were not founded primarily by ethnic or cultural preservationists. Instead, they were founded by constitutionalists, political philosophers, frontier settlers, technologists, civil libertarians, and increasingly, Augments fleeing Earth.

What united them was a shared conviction that the old United States had represented an unfinished experiment. The Federation's founders believed Humanity had moved beyond that experiment.

But the Eagle colonists believed Humanity had abandoned it prematurely.


The Frontier Myth Made Real

The most important concept in Eagle culture is one many Federation citizens struggle to understand: the Frontier.

To Federation citizens, the frontier is history.

To Eagle citizens, it is civilization itself.

The Eagle Union deliberately based its expansion around perpetual exploration. New colonies receive tremendous autonomy. Frontier settlements are encouraged, private expeditions are celebrated, and independent enterprise is rewarded.

Citizens are expected to solve problems themselves whenever possible. As one Eagle politician famously remarked:

"The purpose of the government is not to remove every obstacle. The purpose of the government is to ensure you are free to overcome them."

The result is a civilization perpetually pushing outward. There are Eagle worlds that have existed for centuries. There are others founded last year. There are habitats still being assembled. There are prospecting fleets that may not return for decades.

Every citizen understands that tomorrow's colony may become tomorrow's state.


The Constitution

The Eagle Constitution remains the oldest continuously operating governing document in known Human space. Not because it is unchanged, if anything it is the opposite. The document has accumulated thousands of amendments over two centuries. Yet its founding principles remain recognizable.

Rights are considered inherent. Government authority is delegated rather than granted. Political power flows upward from local communities. The federal government exists because the member states permit it to exist.

Not the other way around.

This distinction is not merely philosophical. It influences every aspect of Eagle governance. Federation observers often describe the Union as decentralized, but Eagle citizens prefer another term: voluntary.


The States

The Eagle Union consists of hundreds of member states. These include entire planets, orbital habitats, mega-arcologies, artificial worlds, Dyson swarms, and even several migrant fleets. All possess statehood, and all enjoy extensive autonomy.

Some states are organized as liberal democracies, others employ advanced direct-democracy systems, while several feature AI-assisted governments. A few even feature constitutional monarchies, while one famously elects its governor through a competitive engineering tournament.

All are considered equally legitimate.

The Union's federal government concerns itself primarily with defense, foreign policy, commerce, and constitutional rights. Everything else is a local issue.

The Eagle answer to nearly every question to this state of affairs is simple: "Let the states decide."


The Augment Revolution

No aspect of Eagle society alarms the Federation more than its treatment of Augments. For where the Federation sees danger, the Union sees opportunity.

The first Augment communities arrived as refugees. By the twenty-fourth century, they had become integral to society. Genetic enhancement is legal. Neural augmentation is legal. Cybernetic modification is legal. Artificial organs are commonplace, and designer genomes, while heavily regulated for safety, are otherwise widely-available.

The underlying philosophy is straightforward.

Your body belongs to you.

Not to the government.

Not to society.

You.

Consequently, the Eagle Union contains perhaps the greatest diversity of human forms ever assembled. Citizens range from entirely baseline humans to heavily modified Transhumans. Most fall somewhere between. Remarkably, major social conflict over augmentation never materialized.

Historians attribute this to a simple legal principle: all citizens possess equal rights regardless of modification status.


Artificial Intelligence

The Eagle Union's greatest divergence from Federation civilization may be its treatment of artificial minds.

Federation law remains deeply cautious regarding advanced AI, but the Union embraced it. Not merely as tools, but as people.

In the Union, artificial intelligences possess full citizenship. They vote. They own property. They can hold office, serve in the military, and some have even become governors. Several have become senators, and one even famously served on the Supreme Constitutional Court for seventy-two years.

The Union's legal system recognizes personhood rather than biology. If an entity demonstrates sapience, self-awareness, and independent agency, it receives rights.

It is that simple.

To Eagle citizens, denying rights based upon origin is no different than denying them based upon race.


The Economy

Federation economists routinely describe the Eagle economy as an impossibility, yet it functions spectacularly. The Union economy features:
  • Hyper-capitalist entrepreneurship
  • Strong constitutional protections
  • Robust public institutions
  • Universal education
  • Universal healthcare
  • Extensive automation
  • AI-managed logistics
The result resembles neither historical capitalism nor Federation post-capitalist paradigms. Instead, citizens operate within an economy where basic needs are guaranteed while extraordinary success remains achievable. The ideal is often summarized as:

"Nobody should starve, but nobody should be stopped from becoming extraordinary."

The combination has produced staggering prosperity.


Culture

If the Federation's culture values harmony, the Eagle Union values individuality. Citizens are encouraged to develop distinct identities, careers, beliefs, and lifestyles. The Union's cultural landscape is thus often described as chaotic.

The citizens consider it vibrant. Languages flourish. Regional traditions flourish. Subcultures flourish. Personal expression flourishes.

The average Eagle citizen is significantly more likely to identify strongly with a state, colony, profession, or community than with the Union itself. Paradoxically, this strengthens the Union. Citizens rarely fear cultural domination because no single culture dominates.


The Armed Forces

The Eagle Union Navy is the largest military force in Azur Lane, not because the Union fears invasion, but because it assumes responsibility. Its strategic doctrine is heavily influenced by historical American naval thought.
  • Control the space lanes
  • Protect commerce
  • Project power on an interstellar scale
  • Maintain technological superiority
  • Deter aggression through overwhelming capability
To that end, the Navy operates colossal carrier formations, mobile shipyards, autonomous drone fleets, and strategic battlegroups capable of independent operations for years. Its carriers in particular are legendary. Entire fleets are organized around them, and some are effectively mobile civilizations.


The Citizen-Soldier Tradition

Despite possessing advanced professional forces, the Eagle Union maintains a strong militia tradition. Citizens may own spacecraft, military-grade equipment, and receive emergency training. Reserve organizations exist throughout the Union, based on a philosophy that dates back to the earliest colonies: no government can become tyrannical if its citizens remain capable of resisting it.

Federation observers frequently find this mindset unsettling.

Eagle citizens find Federation discomfort reassuring.


Foreign Policy

The Eagle Union is simultaneously one of the friendliest and most dangerous powers in known space. It trades with nearly everyone, welcomes immigrants, funds exploration initiatives, provides humanitarian aid, supports scientific cooperation, and possesses enough military capability to devastate entire sectors if threatened.

But the Union prefers peace. Only unlike the Federation, it does not regard military force as a failure of diplomacy. Instead, it regards military power as the guarantor of diplomacy.

This perspective often places the two civilizations at odds.


The American Dream Among the Stars

Ultimately, the Eagle Union represents neither the historical United States nor a direct continuation of it.

It is something stronger: an attempt to answer a question.

What would happen if a civilization genuinely committed itself to liberty, technological progress, frontier expansion, and individual self-determination? Three centuries later, the answer remains controversial.

Federation critics see recklessness.

Azur Lane supporters see possibility.

The Eagle Union sees neither.

It sees itself exactly as its founders intended: not a finished civilization, but an ongoing experiment. One conducted on a scale measured not in continents or planets…

…but in stars.


A/N

I'm quite proud of this chapter, and very thankful that Azur Lane gave me an opportunity to write it. An ode, if not a love letter, to the America of my youth. The America I grew up admiring, and believed in. It's sad that reality proved...otherwise.

But even so, I still remember, and so the Eagle Union, canonically based on the US Navy, became an idealization of the USA. The USA as I want to remember and believe in, and which I want to believe Americans still believe in, no matter how brutish, stupid, incompetent, and corrupt their leaders have become.
 

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