tlb wrote:cthia wrote:I agree no one was threatening to blow up Honor's statue. The disgruntled faction (who still exists) were too busy trying to blow her up. As whether my views have changed, let's just say I reserve final judgement until Honor takes the stand.
I have never claimed any subject I broach in the Honorverse will be addressed in the future.
I admit that I have a hard time understanding you sometimes, because the following passage seems to say that something will happen in the future; just as you seem to think that Honor will have to take the stand at some point. But if what you are saying now is that RFC will never address your problems in the stories, then I agree.
cthia wrote:I should also state that regardless of what UH holds, it will not change my mind that Beowulf has ordered up a big fat bowl of bad karma. Regardless of whether it was actually delivered in UH. Regardless of what happened in UH, Beowulf has it coming. That's what the Harrington Doctrine was trying to avoid. The Harrington Doctrine details the dangers of karma slowly festering and growing big and nasty and ready enough to stomp a mud hole in some targeted upturned asses. IOW, Beowulf's karma may be decades delayed.
This was on the following page:
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=9380&start=530
RFC certainly
could address them, if he wanted to. If he suffered a writer's block and needed some filler. But, as I said, sometimes it's better to let sleeping dogs lie.
Beowulf
did order up a big fat bowl of karma.
And, it seems that that karma was delivered in UH, instead of in the future. Technically, UH
was the future. Although, the future may hold yet even more SL vengeance against its former family of traitors. Again, it could be said that the Harrington Doctrine was meant to squash the germination of karma.
I never said that anything will
definitely happen in the future. But that the stage has been set for something
to happen. In the words of a meteorologist, conditions are ripe for a storm. Honor's secret may never get out in that capacity, other than amongst friends and those in the need to know. Keeping that secret has served her well, militarily. At any rate, I am saying that
if it were to make it to a court of her peers, Honor's input would be needed. She'd have to speak for herself on that one.
BTW, I yielded to my niece because she has a valid point. Unlike you, I consider that as a significant change in my stance. Whereas I saw no way out of the matter before, I now recognize that there is one. But it hinges on Honor's testimony, again,
if it ever came to pass.