Ooops, sorry about that! You mean how being objective in every situation works in our world? Or how the whole justice thing works in the Fey world? I wish I knew
The way I imagine it works is that Justice is more like Ma'at, but with a catch, because the Fey are not restricted in a physical world they way we are, so they can visit her if they need to. And she can visit them. But I'm curious what others have to say about this!
I guess this is where the distinction between human and divine justice comes in. Here is also where personal beliefs come in as well
I believe in justice and that you will get your dues here and now. Perhaps A will wrong B and B will never get back to A for it, but somehow A will pay the price. B will never know. But justice will be served. I'm not saying we should abandon human justice because all will be taken care of anyway, and I don't pretend to have all the answers. I'm just saying that I sometimes accept what I cannot change and believe that balance will be regained with some means unknown to me.
Perhaps you don't share my beliefs, this is fine, but I have actually seen it to work this way many times, in small and big things. You find a wallet and hand it in. The next week you find £40 on the street. You see a little old lady struggling to cross the street and you ignore her. The next day your car breaks down in the middle of nowhere, your phone is out of range and none of the cars passing by stop to help. The first example is a real one, the second made up, but they illustrate the point. Hope and Justice to me are things I have to actively maintain, both with my beliefs and my actions. Thank you for this wonderful discussion, the more I think about the Fey Justice the more I like it