Ok, this is an extension of the conversation from the "How Strong is your Faction Loyalty" thread. As a former lawyer who did a lot of corporate work for a massive Fortune 50 company, and saw a lot of corporate life, the Caldari always intrigue/horrify me.
I'd really like to know how this whole bit about the Caldari being silent at one sporting event in TBL is prima facie evidence that the whole culture is "quiet". Every other source of PF we have about the Caldari - that I am aware of - portrays them as rambunctious, unruly, competitive, rebellious, and expressive.
I disagree with the characterization of the Caldari being rambunctious, unruly, rebellious and expressive (at least in the way most Westerners would conceive of such things). Given the description of their culture, I dont think they could be and still be a part of Caldari society.
Looking at the basic Caldari description, you get
Caldari society is steeped in military tradition. "Military tradition" means, well, based on the military. And any veteran from the military will tell you, the military isnt about being a rebel, rambunctious, unruly or expressive. Aggressive and competitive sure, but anyone who makes the mistake of sticking out will likely be hammered back into place. Individualism, rambunctiousness and non-conformity are the antithesis of what it is to live according to a military tradition.
Further on down you read
As long as you keep in line, do your job, uphold the laws and so forth, life can be fairly pleasant and productive. But for those who are not cut out for this strict, disciplined regime life quickly becomes intolerable. They lose their respect, family, status, everything, and the only options left to them are suicide or exile.Basically, as long as you "stay in line", you have a place in the State. This seems the exact opposite of being unruly, rebellious, individualistic, or expressive. You hue the party line or else.
Anyone who cant put up with this life is cast out, and I mean fully cast out. Not just from the State or from his job, but from his friends and family. Everyone turns their back on you.
The idea that, if you say the wrong thing or are seen as stepping "out of line" you could lose
everything, your family, your friends, your place in society, your employment, would undoubtedly have a chilling effect on any kind of rebellious or overly individualistic actions.
Keep in mind, Caldari culture is highly competitive, which means constant jockeying for positions and status. Why give John down the hall the chance to appear more "Caldari" or respectable than you by eschewing the corporate dress code while he's wearing the boss's favorite suit? That kind of competition goes on in todays corporate halls, I'm sure it would only be magnified in the State.
PF states that the State is strict and disciplined, and that numerous people end up failing to meet its standards and being forced to give up their entire lives (often literally, through suicide). Its literally the corporate grind on crack, which weeds out the weak-minded, the rebellious and the undisciplined.
(Interesting thought, this could be part of the Caldari "antibodies" to Gallente cultural indoctrination, those Caldari who would have the personality traits find the Gallente individualism/consumerism/liberalism attractive would have already been cast out of Caldari society and institutions because of those very same personality traits.)
In short, Caldari society embodies the line in Rush's Subdivisions, "conform or be cast out". Not just from work, but from your whole life. This isnt the place for the rebellious, the unruly or the misfits.
However, this also explains why Caldari can be quiet involved and extreme in their past times. Just like in the military, when we finally hit a port or had leave time, intense and frenzied debauchery commenced. It was our one outlet, the one time we had permission to cut loose and be free for awhile.
I could see this in the State. When Caldari are given the relatively infrequent chance to cut loose a bit without social/economic repercussions , they go all out.