There were many, many things that contributed to Ciadel's low opinion of the Hammer of Light and it started at a young age. The first incident I recall is when a Hammer murdered a greybie pixie NPC (Ciadel sees NPCs as people) for her things and told Ciadel it was okay because it was, "For the greater good." That could have been an isolated incident except he kept hearing that phrase used as justification for all sorts of things he considered morally abhorrent from slavery to genocide. As a principled character who "values life and freedom above all else," this was unconscionable. It made the Hammer little better than the darkness they said they were fighting.
I had a hard time picking out an alignment for him as I was looking for the NG option before settling on principled. Ultimately, I think it suited him.
help principled wrote:
Principled characters value life and freedom above all else. They will strive to protect all people, especially those who are not able to protect themselves. When possible they will try to stop those who commit evil acts by capturing and attempting to reform them. Principled characters try with all their might to follow and uphold the laws of the land. Those laws were created to protect those who need protection and were most likely placed there by others of the same alignment. Principled characters try to avoid killing, but do not necessarily shy away from lethal force in the face of unrepentent evil.
I've had a few people tell me that being principled means you're supposed to run around and smash every dark aura you see. That's not what I read in the help file.
Ciadel valued life above all else which is why he pursued peace. He was sick of seeing his people die in a pointless, never-ending war. What provoked him into deporting the Hammer was that he discovered that the Black Hand had offered everyone truces and the Hammer had refused. They would not even entertain the idea of peace when Ciadel approached them saying he already had a truce but it was dependent upon the Hammer not using Exile as a refuge after launching attacks on other nations. To Ciadel, this meant that the Hammer was acting in its best interests, not Taslamar's, and was disobeying the law. Therefore, it did not deserve the protection of Taslamar. If it was not going to let its pride (vows) overrule the good of the people (peace), they had no right to call Taslamar home. Hence, the deportation. There were other examples of their testing his authority that encouraged him to throw the book at them.
He thought you should try to reform evil and not simply mimic them by spilling more blood. He thought good people were supposed to be better than that. How is killing an innocent person or enslaving someone any less vile just because it is "for the greater good?"
He thought the laws of Taslamar were extremely fair and encouraged tolerance. It was his job to enforce them. He would instruct Hammer members to read the Book of Law to see if they would grasp this point but they refused and continued to harass people based on race or creed.
The core of it was that Ciadel thought that peace was better than war. The Hammer disagreed. Ciadel was willing to give people a chance to see whether or not they were unrepentant. The Hammer refused to look past the surface. There were a few times when people were saying "The fate of the world is at stake" and the Hammer refused to cooperate. This just made them look even more unreasonable to Ciadel.
It wouldn't have been such a problem if they were located anywhere but inside Taslamar. Then they would have just been another overly aggressive group of bigots. I'm not opposed to people playing lawful stupid holy rollers. It was the fact that they constantly returned to Taslamar, claimed Taslamar as their home, claimed to speak for Taslamar, and invariably compromised the Keepers' foreign policy which got more of his men killed than anyone else's that drove Ciadel to deal with them harshly. They never acted like they were part of Taslamar but constantly made a mess of it.