ThinksMarkedly wrote:penny wrote:1. Why entities in the HV will not commit EE violations.
Because that brings EVERYONE down on you. What's the point of winning against your enemy if you're not there afterwards to benefit from it?
2. Why people don't simply turn down challenges to duel. Come on! Who should give a shit about what somebody thinks of them for not choosing to draw on Clint Eastwood. Even if you are a gunslinger yourself. But if you are not, why throw your life away simply because people will “talk.” So???
I am not asking for a rehash of that idiotic hard to swallow huge pill of an explanation. Spare me! Because nobody is going to get me to swallow a pill claiming that someone who is as afraid as Pavel Young is of dying, or even Reginald Houseman, would give a ratsass about what will be written in the faxes.
Please read
Toll of Honor. There are sections that explain both Paul Tankersley and Pavel Young's viewpoints on why they both thought they had to go through with the challenge once accepted. Since it's a spoiler (or not, since this was really already described in FoD), I won't discuss it here.
It doesn't matter what you'd do in their condition. You and I are not in their shoes. It only matters what
they thought the consequences would be for them and, in Paul's case, other people he cared about.
Regardless, in Houseman's case, none of it should even come close to applying because he is working in an official capacity for the government. He is a civilian working in an official capacity for the government. Of anyone, he should have the official protection of the government. Civilians work for the government in official capacities all of the time. It is a common occurrence. Can you imagine the top engineer at Lockheed Martin being backhanded by the biggest, toughest Admiral in the Navy while on an important trip to South Korea?*
The fact that he's working for the government does not absolve him from having done stupid and illegal things. He did try to emit an illegal order.
Yes, he could have sued Honor for assault, but then she gets to present her case to explain her frame of mind at the time, and his career dies with it. I don't think it's worth it.
Moreover, his allies wouldn't let him
because they knew he had overstepped his bounds. He was far more useful for him as a victim than disgraced.
It is wrong guys. Plain old wrong. Not to mention, illegal.
The principle of civilian control of the military places ultimate authority over U.S. armed services in the hands of civilian leadership, with civilian responsibility and control of the military balanced between the executive and legislative branches of the government. —
internetIf a member of any branch of the military is allowed to assault a civilian, then what we have is total anarchy. What's worse is that Houseman is a politician! A society can ill afford to have its military busting civilian heads. Or politician’s heads. And certainly not politicians who are temporarily civilian-turned diplomats! If Houseman was out of order because he broke a direct order given by the Queen, then he should have been arrested. Not assaulted. At any rate, Houseman should not have to worry about having to challenge Harrington to a duel to get justice. The court system should provide that. This case IS NOT a personal matter. As it was with Young and Paul.
Who says any member of the military is allowed to assault a civilian? No one is arguing Honor had the right to do what she did. She was reprimanded for it.