runsforcelery wrote:There's actually a sort of fundamental question here. Is the Alignment wrong about its objectives while Beowulf is correct to fear those objectives? Or is the Alignment only wrong about it's tactics, while Beowulf is wrong to fear the MA's final objective but right about its own tactics and morality?
The Alignment's stated objectives are, IMHO, entirely correct, right, and proper.
The Alignment's actions in "pursuit" of those objectives are as stupid as it is possible for one to be.
The whole "Manpower" / "genetic slaves" idea seems strongly calculated to keep everybody
opposed to gene engineering humans ("after all, everyone knows that genies are natural slaves"). Creating this situation, while claiming to be pursuing a policy of wanting to gene engineer everybody to their maximum potential, implies either gross stupidity, or else a desire to push as many people to the opposite side as possible (so that you can be "justified" in enslaving them all once you've won).
If the founders of the Alignment had actually just wanted "gene engineering for all", they would never have created Manpower. And once they started genetically enhancing people's life spans, they would have bragged about it to the galaxy. It would have cost less than prolong, and been just about irresistible to anyone who did not have a firm religious prohibition on gen engineering. So long bans on gene engineering. So long Beowulf's preeminence.