@TotallyAbsurd I totally agree, because clearly, the best way to write a compelling generational power struggle is to have every character act with the efficiency of a corporate boardroom and the emotional detachment of a robot. How dare the story reflect the messy, frustrating reality of political families who prioritize appearances, alliances, and their own egos over making the most logical decision?
Vieze should have been kicked out? Sure. But acting like that would have just happened without resistance, complications, or consequences is peak "armchair strategist" energy. The dude wasn’t just some random loser—he had the title, the status, and enough family weight to make cutting him off a risk, especially with the Angenas lurking around like vultures. Power structures don’t just shift because we want them to; they shift when the right leverage exists.
But yeah, keep calling it “cheap drama” because things aren’t happening as quickly or neatly as you’d like. Heaven forbid a story take its time showing how deeply power and corruption rot a family from the inside instead of just snapping its fingers and making problems disappear.


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