Well no - other than the common sense charitable assumption that the Alignment isn't making fundamental, obvious, stupid mistakes that aren't noticed or corrected over hundreds of years, that cannot even be attributed to ideological blinders. There isn't either an explicit notification that their every hair follicle, skin flake, or blood sample confesses "Made on Mesa" to casual, routine forensic checks.JohnRoth wrote:JeffEngel wrote:
It does assume that Mesa - who've been orchestrating a 600 year old conspiracy over thousands of worlds with a fair degree of success - puts out sleeper families who (1) have no claimed or plausible genetic slave ancestry, but also do (2) have identifiable Mesan star line genetic markers.
The Alignment can certainly make mistakes, but that one seems too basic and unnecessary. They've got lines specifically to be indistinguishable from slaves - making sure the sleeper lines are ones that have no distinguishing markers is both doable and basic tradecraft. It does mean that the sleeper lines are outside the rest of the uplift program, to a degree, but everything so far is early days compared to the eventual uplift program when they can pull the curtain back.Torch of Freedom, Chapter 50 wrote:
All three of his subordinates understood. Although Hasselberg was the only other person present who knew the identity of the actual individual behind that decision, all of them represented star-line genomes. Star-lines were a minority in the MSDF's officer corps as a whole, of course, but they were heavily concentrated in the more senior ranks, and for duties as sensitive as their own current assignment there'd been some judicious personnel shuffling. As a result of which, Task Force Four's command structure was undeniably top-heavy in alpha-lines, beta-lines, and gamma-lines.
Which meant that, unlike the majority of their fellow officers, they knew the Mannerheim System-Defense Force was actually an adjunct of the Mesan Alignment Navy no one else knew even existed. So the term "higher up" had a very different meaning for them than it would have had for any of those non-Mesan officers.
There's no suggestion here that they're any different from any other star line.
If something forces us to acknowledge that yes, Mesa either could not or did not conceal the tell-tale genetic markers among their sleeper families, so they're just waiting to be exposed and bring the whole thing down, so be it. But I'd expect a high standard to swallow that kind of gaffe.
JeffEngel wrote:
For that matter, it's avoidable in another way: a background including genetic slavery sets someone up, immediately, as having sterling anti-Mesa bona fides. You're pretty nearly above suspicion that way. Beowulf and Manticore both welcome and integrate with open arms liberated slaves - if I were the Alignment, I'd make that my go-to method of infiltrating either. You wouldn't want to do it exclusively, because if they get a hint and it keeps coming up, it's going to turn above suspicion as a class quickly into under suspicion.
Last, Mesa's lost a lot of sleeper families over time. It's figured in. That also means that whatever markers they may bear, they've spread into the general population since then. Looking just for those markers will get you a lot of false positives of that sort: people whose ancestors were Mesan plants but who've been innocent for generations.
I'm going to have to go meta for a minute here. The basic background for the series was created in the early 90s. The human genome project was still in the future. The ability to get a full genome (Not just the SNPs) for approximately $1,000 has only just come online. We know a whole lot more about how it works, and especially how you look for various signatures in someone's genome than we did even ten years ago.
The model of genetics presented in the Honorverse is so far out of date it's unusable. In another 2000 years of steady progress on Beowulf, there won't be any difficulty in creating a signature and looking for it. How RFC wants to spin it is his business, but as far as I'm concerned, anything having to do with genetics is part of the arm-wave background rather than related to current science.
Could be. I don't know much of anything about genetic forensics, so I'm entirely open to finding out that the series is hopelessly compromised that way if not for the introduction of previously unmentioned technologies to compensate.
Two points though:
Science marches on, but it doesn't always leave plot requirements in ruins. Sometimes they evade it accidentally, or sometimes they can be reconstructed on the basis of new discoveries without trouble. Is it in fact even the case that Mesan sleeper families should be, according to what we know now, barring something we cannot now forecast, subject to being caught out with trivial ease?
And on the meta side: It would be a colossal anticlimax and wretchedly disappointing writing if Mesa's plot were undone by advances in real-world forensics that the author leaves unnoticed by geneticists and plotters 2000+ years in the future with 600+ years to work out details. So we can pretty well count on something frustrating that fool's mate.