In my observation, up until six or seven years ago, most people sent to the Fool's Sails never really believed they'd end up there.
Back then, Acolytes still tried to persuade those who had gone astray, reminding them they had a choice and could still change their ways. If only they knew their fate, they would surely alter it.
I believe that at the time, most Acolytes genuinely preached with compassion, even though they couldn't foresee the consequences.
After all, everything that needs to be foreseen is already laid out in the oracle of the Primus, isn't it? "Wait not to correct mistakes after they are made. Save the misguided before they act foolishly."
Without the revelation of the Enlightened One, this idea is undoubtedly a paradox: humans cannot decide the outcome before the cause-just as it is impossible for a child to be born before the mother. But this, in fact, is the very greatness of the Primus. This is the grace granted by our Sentinel!
I am simply filled with awe:
O how great you are, Fenrico, the Enlightened One! O how great Thou are, Sentinel Imperator!
The Fools who were sent to the ship are the peculiar outliers marked by Ragunna, unable to understand the principle of Unity upheld by the Order. As the line from that famous play says, "One is all, and all is one." To be "one" is the ideal of Ragunna, and those who cannot shape themselves into that singular ideal can never truly belong to the "all."
Notes: Send this heathen to the ship immediately! No delay! Such rebellious, sarcastic talk must be dealt with!
"Hey, what did you do to get banished here?"
"Me? I just repeated they were saying..."