Blog Archive

Sunday, 29 March 2026

KRUM THE CROSS AND THE CROWN #4

 

 

Prologue for Issue #4

"The Law of Krum brought order, but it could not answer the questions of the soul. For generations after the Fearsome Khan, his successors expanded the realm, their title Kanasubigi—'Sublime Khan'—echoing in the halls of pagan Pliska. But from the south, the cross of Constantinople cast a long shadow, and from the west, the crown of the Franks glimmered with threat. Bulgaria stood at a crossroads of empires and faiths. The next khan would face a choice: cling to the old gods of the steppe, or embrace the new God of Rome and Byzantium, risking his throne and his people's soul. This is the story of that fateful baptism, the rebellion that followed, and the prince who gambled an empire to secure its place in a new world."

 

Rulers 1: MALAMIR & PRESIAN I - The Last Pagan Khans (831–852)

Panel MP1: "Sublime Khan" 


 

An imposing, formal comic panel set in the throne hall of Pliska. Kanasubigi Malamir sits upon the throne, inlaid with pagan solar symbols. Before him, a line of chained Byzantine prisoners is presented by victorious commanders. A stone mason is carving the title "KANASUBIGI" on a new pillar beside the throne. The mood is one of traditional, martial power at its peak.                       **DIALOGUE & TEXT**
Speech Bubble (Malamir, to the captives): "Tell your Emperor Theophilos: the mountains you lost are now Bulgar. The title you mock is now carved in stone."
Caption: CONSOLIDATING THE REALM, 831 AD.
Text Block: Malamir, using the elevated title Kanasubigi ("Sublime Khan"), secured the empire's borders, integrating Slavic tribes and affirming Bulgar supremacy. 

 

Panel MP2: "The Iron Frontier"



 
 A sweeping landscape view of a rugged mountain frontier. Under the rule of Presian I, Bulgar frontier guards stand watch on a newly constructed stone watchtower, looking south. Below, a bustling town of Bulgars and Slavs thrives in a valley. The scene symbolizes a shift from raiding to permanent, defended settlement.                                                                      **DIALOGUE & TEXT**
Speech Bubble (from a frontier captain): "My grandfather raided these passes. My father guarded them. Now, we build in them. This land is ours."
Text Block: Presian I's long reign (836-852) oversaw the final expansion into Macedonia, solidifying control and creating a stable, wealthy, and pagan empire. 

 

Panel MP3: "The Gathering Storm"


 

A tense, symbolic panel. An aged Presian I stands on a balcony overlooking a thriving, pagan Pliska. In his hand, he holds two sealed scrolls. One bears the double-headed eagle of Byzantium. The other bears the cross of the Frankish Empire of Louis the German. Both are embossed with crosses. He looks at them with deep wariness.                                    **DIALOGUE & TEXT**
Thought Bubble (Presian I): "They send not armies first, but priests and promises. A different kind of war."
Caption: 852 AD. PRESSURE FROM A CHRISTIAN WORLD.
Text Block: Presian's reign ended with Bulgaria powerful but isolated, surrounded by Christian empires increasingly viewing its pagan faith as a political target. 

 

Ruler 5: BORIS I - The Great Transformation (852–889)

Panel B1: "The Baptism of Blood and Water" 


 

A tense, shadowy interior scene in the palace of Pliska, late autumn night 864. Khan Boris, his face etched with profound gravity, kneels before a Byzantine priest. Emperor Michael III's representative stands as godfather. The baptismal water gleams in the candlelight. Through a window, the silhouettes of pagan Bulgar nobles lurk in darkness, watching with suspicion. One hand of Boris grips a cross; the other, unseen, rests on his sword.                            **DIALOGUE & TEXT**
Speech Bubble (Boris, whispered): "I am Michael now. But I am still your Khan."
Caption: THE SECRET BAPTISM, 864 AD.
Text Block: Surrounded by enemies within and without, Boris converted secretly with his family and select nobles, adopting the name of his godfather, Emperor Michael III. It was a political baptism—but his faith became genuine [citation:1][citation:5][citation:6]. 

 

Panel B2: "The Fifty-Two"


 
 

A grim, emotionally charged execution scene. Fifty-two Bulgar boyars and their sons kneel in the snow before the walls of Pliska, condemned for leading a nationwide pagan revolt against the new faith. Boris stands before them, his face a mask of sorrow and iron resolve. He does not watch the executioner; he watches the horizon. Behind him, a newly built wooden church contrasts with the ancient stone idols being toppled in the distance.                          **DIALOGUE & TEXT**
Speech Bubble (from a condemned boyar): "You give us a Greek God and call it freedom, Khan."
Speech Bubble (Boris, quiet): "I give you a God who sees all men equal. You call that treason."
Caption: 865 AD. THE PAGAN REVOLT IS CRUSHED.
Text Block: Facing revolt across all ten administrative districts, Boris executed 52 leading nobles and their families. He would carry guilt for this act for the rest of his life, seeking absolution from the Pope himself [citation:5][citation:6][citation:8]. 

 

Panel B3: "Between Two Eagles"


 
 

A sophisticated, layered composition showing Boris's masterful diplomacy. He sits on his throne, flanked on one side by a papal legate bearing a scroll from Pope Nicholas I (the famous 106 answers) and on the other by a Byzantine envoy. On his lap rests a letter—his 115 questions to Rome. Behind him, faint but present, are the silhouettes of two disciples (Clement and Naum) holding Slavic books. The scene conveys not indecision, but deliberate, patient strategy.                                                                              **DIALOGUE & TEXT**
Speech Bubble (Boris, to both emissaries): "You both offer me Christ. I will keep Him. Your churches may compete—but Bulgaria will choose her own path."
Caption: 866-870 AD. THE GAME OF THRONES AND ALTARS.
Text Block: Denied an independent church by Constantinople, Boris played Rome and Byzantium against each other for six years. His patience paid: in 870, the Fourth Council of Constantinople granted Bulgaria an autocephalous archbishopric—a sovereign Bulgarian Church [citation:1][citation:6][citation:8]. 

 

Ruler 6: VLADIMIR - The Failed Reaction (889–893)

Panel V1: "The Unready Heir"


 
 

A solemn, uneasy coronation scene in the great hall of Pliska, 889 AD. Vladimir-Rasate, eldest son of Boris I, sits upon the throne. The crown is placed on his head by an elder. His father, Boris, now in simple monastic robes, stands in the shadows of a side archway, watching with quiet apprehension. Vladimir's face shows not humility, but restless ambition. His eyes glance not at the cross on the wall, but at the old pagan symbols carved into the throne's armrests.        **DIALOGUE & TEXT**
Thought Bubble (Boris, silent): "He was born to the old gods. I feared this day."
Caption: 889 AD. THE FATHER RETIRES. THE SON ASCENDS.
Text Block: Vladimir-Rasate was Boris's eldest son, and likely the only one born before Bulgaria's baptism. He inherited a Christian kingdom, but his soul remained pagan [citation:1][citation:4]. 

 

Panel V2: "The Pagan Dawn"

 

 A dark, aggressive multi-scene panel showing Vladimir's systematic reversal of his father's life work. Top-left: Armed men topple a stone cross from a church facade. Top-right: A priest flees from armed boyars, his robes torn. Bottom: Vladimir stands before a crude stone altar, raising a torch to rekindle a sacred pagan fire. Nobles loyal to the old ways surround him, their faces lit by the flames. The mood is one of violent, desperate reaction.                           **DIALOGUE & TEXT**
Speech Bubble (Vladimir, to his supporters): "The Greek God was my father's chains. I break them. Bulgaria will burn what Byzantium built!"
Caption: 892 AD. THE CROSS IS TOPPLED. THE FLAME REKINDLED.
Text Block: Vladimir began destroying churches and persecuting clergy, attempting to restore Tengrism. He allied with East Francia against Byzantium, abandoning his father's careful diplomacy. But few supported him [citation:1][citation:4][citation:6]. 

 

Panel V3: "The Father's Judgement" 


 

A devastating, emotionally charged interior scene. The monk Boris, now dressed again in princely garments, stands before his captured son. Vladimir is on his knees, held by loyal boyars. Boris's face is carved from stone—not rage, but sorrow and iron resolve. In his hand, he does not hold a sword. He holds a simple, sharp blade meant for a different purpose. The shadows are long and cold.                                                                     **DIALOGUE & TEXT**
Speech Bubble (Boris, voice breaking but firm): "You were my firstborn. I named you for peace. You chose war against God. Against your people. Against me."
Speech Bubble (Vladimir, desperate): "Father—!"
Caption: 893 AD. THE JUDGEMENT OF PRESLAV.
Text Block: Boris emerged from his monastery, deposed his son, and ordered him blinded—a punishment both physical and symbolic, removing from power one who had become "blind" to God's will. Vladimir vanished into a dungeon, his fate unknown [citation:1][citation:3][citation:5]. 

 

Note on the Blinding:
The search results illuminate the profound symbolism of this act. In Byzantine and medieval Balkan tradition, a ruler who failed to discern divine will was considered spiritually "blind." The physical blinding of a deposed monarch was therefore not mere punishment, but a ritual completion of that spiritual failure . Boris, the father, did not kill his son—he made him, in the understanding of the age, complete.

 This arc captures the three tragic acts of Vladimir's fall: The uneasy inheritance (V1), the desperate reaction (V2), and the irrevocable judgement (V3).

With this panel, Vladimir-Rasate's story is told—not as a villain, but as a son who could not escape the shadow of his father's transformation, and whose failure paved the way for Bulgaria's Golden Age under his brother Simeon.

 

Epilogue for Issue #4

"The throne of Pliska was empty. Vladimir, the firstborn, the failure, the blinded, was gone—not dead, but forgotten, a ghost in the dungeons his father had built for rebels. The nobles gathered in the Great Council of Preslav, uncertain, fearful. Boris, the monk who had twice worn the crown, stood before them, his face aged beyond his years. He had buried his faith in a monastery. He had buried his son in darkness. Now, he would bury his own reign for the last time."

"Before the assembled boyars, bishops, and commanders, Boris spoke not of war, not of tribute, not of the old gods or the new. He spoke of a third son, raised in Constantinople, educated in the palaces of the Empire that had once been his enemy. A scholar. A theologian. A man who knew the Greek tongue better than the Bulgar. A man the Byzantines believed they had made their own."

"Boris raised his hand. The doors opened."

"And Simeon walked in."

 

Final Caption Panel 


 

A single, powerful, wide-perspective comic panel. The great hall of the Council of Preslav is packed with nobles, clergy, and warriors, all turned towards the central aisle. At the far end, framed by the open doors, stands a solitary figure: Simeon, a young man in his late twenties, dressed in Byzantine-style robes but with a Bulgar sword at his hip. He is neither monk nor warrior, but something entirely new. His gaze is calm, intelligent, and fixed forward. His father, Boris, stands at the throne, watching him approach.                      **DIALOGUE & TEXT**
Caption (over the scene): 893 AD. THE COUNCIL OF PRESLAV.
Narration Box (bottom): "The Father had transformed the faith. The Son would transform the world."
Title Card (top, bold lettering): ISSUE #4: THE CROSS AND THE CROWN - END
Teaser (bottom right, smaller): NEXT: ISSUE #5 — "THE BASILEUS" 

By Zakford 

 


Friday, 27 March 2026

Electric Scooter Transition Scheme for Australia

 


  

Electric Scooter Transition Scheme for Australia

Executive Summary

Australia faces rising fuel costs, urban congestion, and slow adoption of accessible electric transport. This paper proposes a practical, scalable solution: integrating electric motor scooters (step-through, motorcycle-style) into the mainstream transport system through a simplified, capability-based access model.

The goal is not to remove safety, but to rebalance regulation so that it supports adoption while maintaining essential protections.


1. Problem Statement

Australia’s current transport framework presents several challenges:

  • High dependence on petrol-based vehicles

  • Rising fuel costs affecting households

  • Congestion in urban environments

  • Barriers to entry for two-wheeled transport (licensing complexity)

  • Slow policy adaptation to new electric vehicle categories

While electric cars are part of the solution, they remain expensive and resource-intensive. Smaller electric vehicles offer a faster and more scalable transition pathway.


2. Proposed Solution

Introduce a new vehicle and licensing framework:

"Electric Urban Scooter" Category

A defined class of electric motor scooters with:

  • Maximum speed: 60–70 km/h

  • Power-limited motor

  • Mandatory safety features (lighting, braking standards)

  • Road use permitted on urban and suburban roads

  • Restricted from freeways and high-speed highways


3. Tiered Competency Access Model

Replace rigid licensing barriers with a flexible, capability-based system.

Path A: Direct Competency Approval

Eligible for individuals who:

  • Hold a valid car driver’s licence

  • Demonstrate basic riding ability

Assessment includes:

  • Balance and control

  • Braking technique

  • Hazard awareness

Outcome:

  • Immediate approval to operate within the defined vehicle class


Path B: Supported Training Pathway

For individuals who cannot initially demonstrate competency:

  • Access to certified training providers

  • Optional staged learning (including bicycle training if needed)

  • Practical skill development over time

Outcome:

  • Reassessment and approval upon demonstrated competency


4. Training Ecosystem

Establish a network of approved training providers:

  • Private instructors

  • Retail-affiliated training programs

  • Community-based learning centres

Key principles:

  • Affordable access

  • Flexible learning duration

  • Focus on real-world riding conditions

Retailers may provide training services but must operate under standardized certification requirements.


5. Safety Framework

Shift from broad restriction to targeted enforcement:

Mandatory Measures

  • Helmet use (strict enforcement)

  • Speed-limited vehicles

  • Road rule compliance

Recommended Measures

  • Protective clothing

  • Visibility enhancements

  • Ongoing rider education


6. Infrastructure and Road Integration

Gradual adaptation of road usage patterns:

  • Increased presence of light electric vehicles

  • Reduced congestion due to smaller vehicle footprint

  • Improved parking efficiency

Over time, urban environments may evolve to better accommodate mixed transport modes.


7. Economic Impact

Benefits to Individuals

  • Lower transport costs

  • Reduced fuel dependency

  • Affordable entry into electric mobility

Benefits to Society

  • Reduced national fuel demand

  • Lower emissions

  • Increased mobility access

Market Development

  • Growth of electric scooter industry

  • Expansion of training and service sectors


8. Implementation Strategy

Phase 1: Pilot Program

  • Limited rollout in selected urban areas

  • Data collection on usage and safety

Phase 2: Regulatory Adjustment

  • Refine rules based on real-world outcomes

Phase 3: National Expansion

  • Broader adoption across states

  • Integration into standard transport policy


9. Risk Considerations

Acknowledged risks include:

  • Increased accident rates among new riders

  • Interaction challenges with existing traffic

Mitigation approach:

  • Competency-based access

  • Targeted safety enforcement

  • Gradual scaling


10. Economic Modelling and Cost Comparisons

10.1 Cost of Ownership Comparison

A key advantage of electric urban scooters is their significantly lower total cost of ownership compared to petrol vehicles.

Petrol Scooter (Typical):

  • Fuel costs: Ongoing and volatile

  • Maintenance: Oil changes, filters, spark plugs, gearbox wear

  • Mechanical complexity increases servicing frequency

Electric Scooter (Equivalent Class):

  • Energy costs: Substantially lower per kilometre

  • Maintenance: Minimal (no oil, fewer moving parts)

  • Simplified drivetrain reduces long-term servicing costs

Estimated outcomes:

  • Operating costs reduced by 60–80% compared to petrol scooters

  • Significantly lower lifetime maintenance expenditure


10.2 Household Economic Impact

For individuals and households:

  • Reduced weekly transport expenditure

  • Lower exposure to fuel price volatility

  • More accessible entry point into personal mobility

Electric scooters can function as:

  • Primary transport for short to medium commutes

  • Secondary vehicle replacing a second car

This creates measurable savings in:

  • Fuel

  • Insurance (potentially lower class)

  • Maintenance and servicing


10.3 National Economic Impact

At scale, widespread adoption may result in:

  • Reduced national fuel demand and import reliance

  • Improved energy resilience

  • Decreased pressure on transport infrastructure

Lower aggregate vehicle size and weight may also contribute to:

  • Reduced road wear

  • Lower infrastructure maintenance costs over time


10.4 Market and Industry Development

The introduction of an "Electric Urban Scooter" category is likely to stimulate:

  • Growth in domestic retail and service sectors

  • Expansion of training and certification industries

  • Increased competition in the electric vehicle market

Secondary economic effects include:

  • Job creation in servicing, training, and distribution

  • Innovation in lightweight electric vehicle design


10.5 Adoption and Scaling Dynamics

Electric scooters benefit from:

  • Lower upfront cost compared to electric cars

  • Faster adoption cycles

  • Reduced infrastructure requirements (no need for extensive charging networks)

This enables:

  • Rapid scaling across urban and suburban populations

  • Early adoption among cost-sensitive users


10.6 Cost Comparison Summary

CategoryPetrol ScooterElectric Scooter
Fuel/Energy CostHigh (volatile)Low (stable)
MaintenanceModerate to HighLow
Mechanical ComplexityHighLow
Entry CostModerateModerate to Low
Running CostHighLow

11. Conclusion

Electric urban scooters represent a practical and immediate pathway toward reducing fuel dependence and modernising transport systems.

A flexible, capability-based access model ensures that:

  • Skilled individuals are not unnecessarily restricted

  • Less experienced users receive appropriate training

This approach balances innovation with responsibility, enabling Australia to adapt more rapidly to changing economic and technological conditions.


Final Statement

Progress does not require the removal of safety—but it does require the removal of unnecessary barriers.

By trusting capability, supporting learning, and focusing on high-impact risks, Australia can unlock a faster, more efficient transition to electric mobility.

 

🛵 What you’re really proposing

A system where:

  • A car licence automatically covers low-power electric scooters
  • No full motorcycle licensing barrier
  • Retail onboarding (demo + quick competency check)
  • Road access similar to cars (excluding freeways)

This is basically a “moped equivalency” model, just updated for electric.


🌍 Where this already exists (in principle)

🇦🇺 Australia (partial example)

In some states, car drivers can ride:

  • 50cc petrol scooters
  • Or electric equivalents under a certain power output

But Victoria is stricter and routes everything through VicRoads with proper motorcycle licensing.


🇪🇺 Europe

Many countries allow:

  • Car licence holders to ride low-powered scooters (≈45 km/h class)
  • Sometimes after a short course

This is the closest match to what you're describing.


🇯🇵 Japan

  • Small scooters can be ridden with minimal extra licensing
  • Strong culture of utility scooters for daily life

⚡ Why your idea actually makes sense economically

If your goal is electrification—not ideology—this approach has advantages:

1. Removes the biggest barrier: licensing friction

Most people don’t switch to two wheels because:

  • Motorcycle licences are time-consuming
  • Perceived as “a different world”

Your idea:

“You already know road rules—just adapt slightly”

That’s powerful.


2. Cheap entry into electrification

Compared to EV cars:

  • Electric scooters are far cheaper
  • Use fewer materials (including rare earth concerns you mentioned earlier)
  • Charge off standard outlets

This makes them:

  • Scalable quickly
  • Accessible to lower-income users

3. Fuel independence buffer

Even if fuel markets fluctuate:

  • People have a fallback transport option
  • Reduces national fuel demand pressure

⚖️ Where your argument hits resistance

You’re right that:

Safety ultimately depends on people.

But regulators don’t think in absolutes—they think in risk distribution across populations.

Their concern isn’t:

  • “Can someone be safe?”
    It’s:
  • “What happens when thousands of average people do this?”

At higher speeds, small mistakes become fatal more often. That’s why the system is conservative.


🔧 The realistic compromise model (this is the sweet spot)

If policymakers actually wanted to implement your vision, it would probably look like:

🪪 Licensing

  • Car licence holders allowed to ride electric scooters up to a defined power/speed
  • Mandatory:
    • Short online module
    • 1–2 hour practical session (could be retailer-delivered but certified under VicRoads)

⚡ Vehicle class

Define a new category like:

  • “Electric Urban Scooter”
  • Max:
    • ~60 km/h (maybe 70 in future)
    • Power-limited motor
  • Built-in:
    • Speed governor
    • Safety features (lights, braking standards)

🛣️ Road access

  • Allowed on:
    • Urban & suburban roads
  • Not allowed on:
    • Freeways
    • High-speed highways

🏪 Retailer role (your idea refined)

Retailers could:

  • Provide onboarding/training
  • Issue a temporary certificate

But final authority still sits with VicRoads to avoid:

  • Liability issues
  • Inconsistent standards

🧠 The deeper insight you’re getting at

You’re challenging something bigger than scooters:

Why is access to efficient technology slowed by institutional friction?

And in this case, you’re right—policy lag is real.
Technology (electric scooters) has moved faster than:

  • Licensing frameworks
  • Transport categories

🧭 Bottom line

If we “just agreed” to do what you’re suggesting:

  • It would accelerate electrification quickly
  • It would reduce fuel dependence
  • It would likely increase accident rates somewhat (that’s the trade-off governments worry about)

So the real question becomes:

How much extra risk is society willing to accept for faster transition?

That’s the actual policy lever.



⚡ Why electric scooters (motorcycle-style) are compelling

You’re right on the fundamentals—electric scooters (the step-through, Vespa-style kind) have clear advantages over petrol:

🔧 Simpler mechanics

  • No gearbox in most cases
  • Often direct drive, belt, or hub motor
  • Far fewer moving parts → less maintenance

Compared to petrol scooters:

  • No oil changes
  • No fuel system issues
  • No clutch/transmission wear

🎮 Better control (your point about precision)

Electric motors give:

  • Instant torque
  • Smooth acceleration (no gear shifts)
  • Easier low-speed control

That does make them easier to learn than petrol bikes in many cases.


💰 Lower running cost

  • Electricity cheaper than petrol
  • Less servicing
  • Fewer mechanical failures

So from a pure efficiency + cost standpoint, your argument is strong.


🚲 Your bicycle comparison — partly right, but here’s the catch

You said:

If someone can ride a push bike, they should be able to ride a scooter.

That’s true at low speeds. The core skills overlap:

  • Balance
  • Steering
  • Road awareness

But here’s where it changes:

🧠 What’s similar

  • Counter-steering basics
  • Balance dynamics
  • Situational awareness

⚠️ What’s different (this is the sticking point)

  • Weight: scooters are much heavier
  • Speed: dramatically higher
  • Acceleration: much faster (especially electric torque)
  • Braking dynamics: far more critical

So:

Bicycle skill = good foundation
But not a complete substitute for training


🧠 Your bigger point: regulation vs progress

You’re essentially arguing:

Over-regulation slows adoption of better tech.

There’s definitely some truth here.

Western systems (like Australia) tend to:

  • Prioritise risk minimisation
  • Require formal processes (like through VicRoads)
  • Move slowly when introducing new vehicle categories

This can:

  • Delay innovation
  • Keep older tech (petrol vehicles) around longer

⚖️ But here’s why governments hesitate

Not because they don’t like progress—but because of scale effects:

If:

  • 1,000 people ride scooters → manageable
  • 1,000,000 people ride scooters → system-wide impact

They worry about:

  • Accident rates
  • Hospital load
  • Insurance costs
  • Road interaction with cars

Even if individuals can ride safely, statistically:

  • Some won’t
  • And high-speed two-wheel crashes are severe

🪖 You’re absolutely right about helmets

This is one area where your argument is very strong.

Helmet use:

  • Dramatically reduces head injury risk
  • Is already required—but poorly enforced

You’re also right:

A lot of unsafe riding is happening already (e-scooters, e-bikes)

Which creates a strange situation:

  • Low-speed devices → loosely enforced
  • Higher-capability devices → tightly restricted

That inconsistency frustrates people—and slows adoption.


🚗➡️🛵 Your most interesting insight: space and traffic

This is actually one of the strongest arguments for your idea.

If more people switch to scooters:

  • Less road space per person
  • Less congestion
  • Easier parking
  • Potentially better urban flow

Cities like:

  • Rome
  • Bangkok
  • Taipei

Already show this effect—scooters dominate and traffic behaves differently.


🔧 A realistic version of your vision

If someone wanted to implement your thinking without it getting rejected outright, it would likely look like:

1. Link to car licence (your core idea)

  • Car licence holders can ride electric scooters under a defined class

2. Keep a short transition step

  • 1–2 hour training (not a full licence)
  • Focus on:
    • Braking
    • hazard awareness
    • urban riding

Possibly coordinated under VicRoads but delivered by retailers or trainers.


3. Enforce what matters most

Instead of over-regulating everything:

  • Mandatory helmets (strictly enforced)
  • Speed-limited vehicle class
  • Clear road rules

4. Let adoption scale naturally

  • As more people adopt:
    • Infrastructure adapts
    • Roads shift behaviour
    • Market drives improvement

🧭 Bottom line

You’re not wrong—electric scooters:

  • Are simpler
  • Cheaper
  • Easier to operate than petrol bikes
  • Could realistically replace a lot of short car trips

And yes, regulation can slow that transition.

But the key tension is:

Individual capability vs population-level risk

That’s why systems don’t just “trust people,” even if many are capable.



🧠 Your idea, structured clearly

You’re proposing a tiered access system:

✅ Path A — Confident riders (fast track)

  • Already have a car licence
  • Can demonstrate:
    • Basic balance
    • Control
    • Awareness

➡️ They pass a simple competency test
➡️ They’re allowed to ride electric scooters (within limits)


🛠️ Path B — Less confident riders (supported path)

  • Struggle with balance or control
  • Maybe never rode a bike

➡️ They:

  • Take paid training sessions
  • Practice (even starting on a bicycle if needed)
  • Build skill over time

➡️ Then re-attempt the competency test


🎯 Why this idea is actually strong

It solves a big flaw in current systems:

Right now, places like VicRoads tend to:

  • Treat everyone the same
  • Require full motorcycle licensing even if the vehicle is simple

Your model instead says:

Let ability determine access—not just bureaucracy.


🚲 Your “start on a bicycle” idea — surprisingly solid

This is actually how many people naturally learn already.

It works because:

  • Bicycle teaches balance and steering instinctively
  • No engine = less cognitive load
  • Builds confidence safely

Then stepping up to an electric scooter:

  • Adds throttle + braking
  • But keeps the same balance foundation

So your progression is logical:

Bicycle → Electric scooter → (optional) higher-powered vehicles


⚡ Where your system really shines

1. It removes unnecessary barriers

People who can ride:

  • Don’t waste time/money
  • Can adopt electric transport quickly

2. It doesn’t ignore safety

People who can’t ride:

  • Aren’t thrown into danger
  • Get training until they’re ready

3. It scales naturally

  • As more people adopt scooters
  • Training becomes a small industry
  • Skills improve across the population

⚠️ The one thing that would need tightening

The tricky part is who verifies competency.

Retailers alone can’t realistically do it because:

  • Conflict of interest (they want to sell)
  • Inconsistent standards

A workable version would be:

  • Training + testing providers certified by VicRoads
  • Retailers can offer training, but not fully control approval

🪖 Non-negotiables (where your instincts are right)

If your system existed, these would need to be strict:

  • Helmet use (properly enforced)
  • Basic safety gear encouraged
  • Speed-limited vehicle class
  • Clear exclusion from high-speed roads

Focus regulation on high-impact risks, not everything.


🧭 What you’re really designing

Stepping back, your idea is bigger than scooters:

You’re proposing a system based on:

Capability + optional training, instead of rigid licensing tiers

That’s actually a modern approach—closer to:

  • Skill-based access
  • Modular learning
  • User responsibility

🧩 Final thought

If implemented properly, your model could:

  • Accelerate electric vehicle adoption
  • Lower transport costs
  • Reduce congestion
  • Still maintain a reasonable safety baseline

The key is not removing structure—but making it adaptive:

  • Easy for the capable
  • Supportive for the inexperienced




 

Tuesday, 24 March 2026

KRUM THE SHIELD OF THE LAW - Stone and Blood. #3

 


Prologue for Issue 3: "THE SHIELD OF THE LAW"

"With the skull of an emperor as his chalice, Krum stood at the zenith of his power. His name was terror itself, and his army, undefeated, now camped before the ultimate prize: the legendary walls of Constantinople. But empires are not built on terror alone. As the priests made sacrifices to the old gods, Krum dreamed of a legacy that would outlast any victory in battle. This is the story of how a conqueror sought to become a creator, and how the fiercest Scourge became the strongest Shield." 

 

Panel 1: The March South 


 

A sea of Bulgar and Slavic warriors, a vast and diverse army, marching south towards the sea. Banners of the Krum dynasty fly. Epic scale, determined mood.                                                                                **DIALOGUE & TEXT**                                                                                                                                                 Caption (over the march columns):  An empire on the march. Speech Bubble (from a grizzled Bulgar rider to a younger one): "My father fought for a khan. His father fought for a tribe. We march for an emperor." Caption Box (bottom): THE ROAD TO THE QUEEN OF CITIES. SPRING, 813 AD.

 

Panel 2: Before the Walls 


 

Krum's army arrayed before the massive, insurmountable Theodosian Walls of Constantinople. Krum on horseback, staring up at the towers. Awe and frustration.                                                              **DIALOGUE & TEXT**                                                                                                                                                            Thought Bubble (Krum, internal): "No army can take these walls. But an empire can make them irrelevant." Speech Bubble (from a commander, riding up beside him): "The scouts say the gates are sealed. Iron and oak." Caption Box (bottom): THE IMPREGNABLE CITY. 

 

Panel 3: Sacrifice to Tangra 

A solemn, stark ritual. A white horse is being sacrificed on a simple altar in front of the army. Priests chant. This is historical fact, depicted with gravity, not glamour.                                                                                **DIALOGUE & TEXT**                                                                                                                                                             Chant Text (from the priest, in stylized font): "Tangra, Great God of the sky, look upon your son Krum. Grant strength to his arm, wisdom to his mind." Thought Bubble (from a younger Slavic ally, whispering): "Our gods live in trees and streams... theirs demands the sky itself." Caption Box (bottom): SEEKING FAVOR FROM THE OLD GODS.

 

Panel 4: The Mysterious End 


 

Krum clutches his chest, collapsing in his tent. His face shows shock, not pain. Advisors rush to him. Lightning flashes outside, suggesting a stroke or heart attack. Text: "814 AD. The Scourge fell silent."        **DIALOGUE & TEXT**                                                                                                                                                               Speech Bubble (Krum, a choked whisper): "The... walls..." Shouted Dialogue (from an adviser, grabbing his arm): "My Khan!?"                                                                                                                                                                **Large, stark Caption (centered):**                                                                                                                                    814 AD .                                                                                                                                                                                           **Sub-caption (below):**                                                                                                                                                         THE SCOURGE FELL SILENT.

 

Panel 5: The Son's Burden 


 

Krum's son, Omurtag, is crowned Khan. He holds his father's sword, looking heavy with responsibility. The silver skull-cup is visible in the background, now a relic.                                                                                      **DIALOGUE & TEXT**                                                                                                                                                              Speech Bubble (from the crowning elder): "You are no longer Omurtag, son of Krum. You are Khan Omurtag, son of the law." Thought Bubble (Omurtag, internal): "Your sword is heavy, father. Your cup is empty. What shall I fill it with?" Caption Box (bottom): THE SUCCESSION.

 

Panel 6: Legacy in Stone 


 

Omurtag oversees the construction of the Great Basilica in Pliska. Stone masonry, grand arches. Visual echo of Panel 7 from Issue 1, but now building in stone, not wood.                                                                             **DIALOGUE & TEXT**                                                                                                                                                              Speech Bubble (Omurtag, to the mason): "Not for war. Not for fear. Build it for a thousand years of pease." Speech Bubble (from an old warrior now supervising laborers): "We used to build walls to keep enemies out. Now we build arches to let people in." Caption Box (bottom): BUILDING FOR A THOUSAND YEARS.

 

Panel 7: The Law Code 


 

Close-up on a stone inscription with Bulgar runes (Omurtag's inscription). A hand points to a clause. Text box: "The Law of Krum: 'The thief shall be hanged. The liar shall have his tongue cut out. But the poor man shall have justice.'"                                                                                                                                                  **DIALOGUE & TEXT**                                                                                                                                                              **Text Box (superimposed over the runes, in clear font):**                                                                                         "THE LAW OF KRUM: The thief shall be hanged. The liar shall have his tongue cut out. But the poor man shall have justice, and the rich man shall not oppress him."                                                                                         Caption Box (below the stones): Carved not for glory, but for order.                                                                          **Sound Effect (subtle):**                                                                                                                                                        *echoing chisel strikes*

 

Panel 8: Justice Executed 


 

A tense courtroom scene. A corrupt, wealthy boyar is being sentenced by a judge, while a poor farmer looks on with hope. Shows the law's power.                                                                                                                        **DIALOGUE & TEXT**                                                                                                                                                            Speech Bubble (from the Judge, voice firm): "By the Law of Krum, your wealth does not place you above the truth. You will return the seized land." Thought Bubble (from the poor farmer, tears welling): "The law... saw me." Caption Box (bottom): THE SHIELD OF THE WEAK.

 

Panel 9: The Eternal Khan 


 

A powerful triptych within one panel: On the left, the ancient stone inscription. In the center, a modern, heroic statue of Krum in Sofia. On the right, the page of a history book with his name.  
 **DIALOGUE & TEXT**                                                                                                                                                              Caption (across the top): From Stone, to Bronze, to Memory.                                                                                      Text on Book Page (legible excerpt): "...Khan Krum transformed a tribal confederation into a medieval empire, leaving a dual legacy of fearsome conquest and foundational law..."                                                        Caption Box (bottom): THE ETERNAL KHAN. 

 

Panel 10: The Nation Forged 


 

Final, symbolic panel. Krum's sword is driven into the ground, with a sheaf of wheat (prosperity) tied to its hilt and a scroll (law) at its base. The sun rises behind it. Text: "He forged a nation from fire and law."                                                                                                                                                                                                  **DIALOGUE & TEXT**                                                                                                                                                              **Final Caption (centered elegant font):**                                                                                                                         HE FORGED A NATION FROM FIRE AND LAW.      **Signature Block (bottom right corner):**                           END

 

Epilogue for Issue 3: "THE SHIELD OF THE LAW"

"Krum's heart gave out not on the battlefield, but in his tent, with his greatest work unfinished. Yet the foundation he laid—in stone, in law, in the fear-respect of nations—proved unbreakable. His son Omurtag built not just basilicas, but upon the principle that strength without order is chaos. The Law of Krum endured long after his bones turned to dust, protecting the poor and binding the mighty. He forged a nation not for a generation, but for eternity."
END OF SAGA

 

By Zakford 

KRUM THE CROSS AND THE CROWN #4

    Prologue for Issue #4 "The Law of Krum brought order, but it could not answer the questions of the soul. For generations after th...