Synopsis
From the industrial revolution onwards humanity has been unable to quench its growing thirst for advancement as a civilisation, at the cost of an ever increasing estrangement from the natural world. By shedding the traditional harmony with nature that allowed for this equilibrium, humanity has progressed further than we could have imagined, and yet all but neglected its roots. Created, or rather, maintained for the purpose of upholding the amicable relationship that the rest of humanity has so readily thrown to the gutter, the Seishingumi is the foremost protector of humankind, or as some may believe, an organisation that allows humanity's behaviour to go unpunished. Is the Seishingumi's work inherently wrong in it's condonement and facilitation of humanity's actions, or does pessimism cloud the judgments of those who make such claims? A fresh face in the Seishingumi is confronted with these opposing world views while slowly coming to realise that nothing in life is as simple as right or wrong, and whether the execution of Mother Nature's representatives lies closer to either side of the moral spectrum is as capricious as a teenage girl.