hanuman wrote:Slavery is a sufficiently emotional issue that such a move could very well lead to the fall of the Grant ville government.
JohnRoth wrote:I disagree. Vehemently.
As I said toward the beginning of this thread, nothing with the slaves will be settled until Jeremy X arrives on scene. Anybody with two brain cells more than God gave a hexapuma understands that - including most of the population of Manticore, Haven and Beowulf.
What Gold Peak will do is:
1. Isolate Manpower's off-world operations by destroying all slave ships and taking other actions.
2. Immediately honor Victor Cachet's promises by eliminating second class citizenship (seccies) and bringing the crime bosses into the interim government.
3. Announce that, as an interim measure until Jeremy X and the Beowulf delegation arrives, the provisions in the Mesan constitution guaranteeing good treatment for genetic slaves will be enforced to the degree possible. The interim government will be charged with making it happen.
4. Once she discovers that there are about a million "Mesan Alignment" members who have nothing to do with the Onion or the Detweiller Plan, she's going to task them with spearheading the necessary long-term cultural changes. They're basically the only group of free citizens who think the genetic slaves are human and deserve whatever civil rights they can handle.
The thing that hasn't been discussed up front is that Mesa, as a society, is based on genetic inequality - different lines are capable of doing different things well. It's even worse than most Mesans think, because they don't know about the clandestine "uplift" program that resulted in the Mesan alpha, beta and gamma lines. Trying to impose a government and political ideology that doesn't take this into account is not going to go well. That's why she's going to wait until Jeremy X, the Ballroom and the Torch delegation arrives. They grew up with that as a background cultural assumption, they'll have a much better idea how to handle it than anyone who is essentially an outsider to Mesan society.
It's a mess, and the worst thing will be to let the ideologs handle it. That goes nowhere, at high velocity and extreme loudness.
hanuman wrote:What are you disagreeing with? Let me respond point by point.
1. Mesa might be the central node of the slave trade, but it is by far not the only place where slaves were bred or 'warehoused'. There is an entire network of 'breeding stations' and distribution points throughout the Verge and even in the Shell, which doesn't even take into account all the slavers who operate independently from the great Mesan corporations. It will take literally decades to shut down the network, and even then, the market will still exist, if on a much smaller scale, because demand will still be there for pleasure slaves and other varieties. The best Michelle could do right now is to shut down the entire operation in the Mesan system itself.
Textev for the "entire network" of breeding stations, etc. I've seen occasional references, but an entire network? The whole question of how it works has been arm-waved away. Maybe we'll see more in the next book.
hanuman wrote:2. Absolutely agreed. The Seccie bosses are the only representatives of the majority population that are in any way or manner capable of governing. What form such an interim government might take is difficult to say - maybe on a regional or municipal basis with regular meetings at higher levels to coordinate and resolve disputes? Anyways, one thing that won't happen is that the current Mesan government structures will be allowed to remain in place.
I absolutely disagree. Most of the lower level has to remain in place, otherwise there will be absolute chaos. What will be replaced is the top level: the Mesan Board will go, some of the security organizations will be disbanded, and a new interim governing structure will be put in place to replace the Board.
One thing it occurs to me is that we may have different ideas of how long an "interim government" would exist. I am only talking about what Admiral Henke imposes as when she arrives; I do not expect it to last more than a few weeks until the Haven, Beowulf and Torch delegations arrive.
hanuman wrote:3. I refer to my previous post. Politically impossible, morally distasteful and illegal to boot. Won't happen. What might happen is that Michelle and the interim government will declare that the Mesan Constitution's civil rights provisions for Mesan citizens will henceforth apply to Seccies and slaves as well, and that the institution of slavery will no longer exist.
I disagree.
hanuman wrote:4. Excuse me if I sound confused, but that's because I am. First, the entire Mesan population and sociopolitical and economic system forms the first layer of the Onion. Second, agreed that many active members of the MAllign's outer layers were left behind, but that they think the slaves are human? Really? Where do you get that notion? The entire MAllign enterprise is built upon the premise that its genetic lines are superior to normal, unimproved humans, and the belief that slaves are the lowest of the lowest is a deeply entrenched part of that belief system. There might be a handful of Jack McBrides among them, but all of them? Really?
Nope. What I said was that there was an outer layer of the Mesan Alignment, constituting about a million people. They aren't representative of the Mesan population in general. They've bought into the Detweiller Vision of genetic uplift for the
whole human race, and are very uncomfortable with the notion of genetic slavery. That's a million people in a population of three billion, or a million people in a population of approximately one billion first-class citizens.
There are a lot of places where you can see this if you care to open your eyes and look.
hanuman wrote:5. Jeremy, the Ballroom and the anti-slavery movement as a whole has NEVER accepted the Mesan notion of genetic superiority/inferiority. The movement's entire reason for existing is that slaves are human beings, deserving of the same rights, legal status and treatment as any other human being. No one in the movement will agree to give legal recognition to the MAllign's enterprise to divide the human species on the basis of genetic variation, and neither will anyone in the Grand Alliance. To do so will validate the MAllign's goals and will invalidate any targeted effort to undermine or resist those goals. This is one instance where ideology will uncompromisingly trump pragmatic 'reality'. Whatever political system arises in future, I can guarantee that - just like on Torch - it will in no way or manner contain any provisions to give legal recognition of genetic variation.
Who said anything about genetic inferiority or superiority? I certainly didn't. What I said is that they're comfortable with the idea that various people are better or worse at certain things because of their genetics, which were deliberately designed in.
Equality before the law does not presume either equality in fact or that everyone has the same abilities or needs.