And when the foundations tremble, as they did in Meridia, the duty of every institution — civilian or military — is to protect not power, but the people.… In the spring of 2025, the Pacific Republic of Meridia faced one of the most severe crises in its young history. A massive earthquake — magnitude 8.4 — struck its densely populated western coast, flattening infrastructure, cutting power lines, severing transportation, and overwhelming emergency services. Within hours, hundreds of thousands were displaced. Communications were disrupted. Law enforcement, already stretched thin, could not maintain public order across shattered cities. At the Presidential Emergency Council, debates raged. The Republic’s Constitution enshrined democratic rights: free speech, assembly, judicial oversight, and civilian control of all state functions. Yet the scale of the disaster was unprecedented, and the institutions that make democracy vibrant — legisl...