SWM wrote:OrlandoNative wrote:
Considering what they've already done, I don't think "legality" issues are something the League's "shadow government" really care about.
They've already admitted that much of what they've done in governing the League is illegal under the League's own constitution.
The Mandarins might not care about legality, but the
members of the League do, as I've said several times. The Mandarins will try to avoid doing things that will get the League members angry at them.
I went back to re-read the thread, and SWM's point here is very on-target. The Mandarins and OFS have always used the figleaf of popular consent and humanitarian assistance to the under-developed worlds to cloak their activities as far as the voters were concerned. But the voters mostly control their local governments; so long as the federal government can provide a smokescreen, mostly everyone just avoids bringing any daylight to bear on OFS or Transtellar activities in the Verge.
I also looked back at ART, and the numbers are horrible from the government's pov. There were somewhat better than 400 planetary systems who did
not support the Mandarins. Only 11 of those might be considered RF at this point, and CoG didn't do much to portray the "other Zunkers" (and Saltash) that would have made it into the League's awareness by the time of Beowulf's secession vote.
With that degree of disaproval, and a strong record of military incompetence, and outright recession settling in, how many more systems would decide it is in their best interest to cut loose from the Mandarins and start over?
The Mandarins have played perception games with public opinion about nearly every thing since Monica; Technodyne, Mesa, BF actions--they keep trying to spin out a lie to make whatever they do "reasonable" in the face of Manticoran "aggression."
We still haven't seen any indication that what the LT Askew worried over taking place--that the public will decide the "Fleet 2000" propaganda was an outright lie, and that public support for the federal government(hence, member system support) could suffer catastrophic damage when the public starts to look for "the truth."
O'Hanrahan will be in her muckraking equivalent of heaven, at that point. Maya's deciding to opt out won't make any difference at that point, so there may not be much military action there.
I would like to see Maya tasked (by Kingsford!) with responding to local insurrections in the name of OFS, though. Barregos might be able to double the size of the sector by "assisting" to quell insurrection (by demanding a local plebescite for local systems in revolt to practice their sacred right of "self-determination" and removing the previous, OFS-installed regimes . . . .
However, I expect the author to confound everyone, no matter what we think.
Rob