The Open Current
For its first decade, the Open Current was dismissed as a paperwork nuisance. It grew out of dockside grievance circles that compared labor logs with temple residency decrees and found a pattern of favoritism. Early victories came through patient service, not defiance. They repaired floodgates, fed displaced workers, and earned enough trust to be heard. The movement survived because it spoke the language WaterWall respected: duty, water discipline, and public order. Its first setback came when a sympathetic judge was reassigned and three record-keepers vanished. The movement nearly collapsed into fear. The second watershed came during the Chapel Riot, when a dispute over ration priority turned into a violent street clash. The priestesses blamed surface dwellers and tightened residency controls. The Open Current responded by publishing proof that the priesthood had manipulated the audit lists. That revelation transformed them from a civic petition circle into a true reform movement. Now they are split between those who still believe the system can be convinced and those who believe it must be broken open from inside.
Reform movement, civic pressure network, labor coalition · Reformist, pragmatic, idealistic in public and increasingly radical under pressure
The Open Current
“If you keep the wall standing, you should have a place within it.”
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