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Re: On Rereading HELL'S GATE | |
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by PeterZ » Tue Dec 22, 2015 8:51 pm | |
PeterZ
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Howard,
I agreed that Sharona was stupid for not having a first contact protocol. I believe that any protocol Sharona created would not put such an emphasis on securing those encountered as the Arcanan Protocol required. Sharona has had much more experience in dealing with very different peoples to help in creating protocols that would ensure a peaceful encounter. Not sure what I was to have agreed with here. |
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Re: On Rereading HELL'S GATE | |
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by n7axw » Tue Dec 22, 2015 10:09 pm | |
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As I look at both the Sharonan and the Arcanan approach to the possibility of first contact, I find myself thinking that the Arcanans were probably a bit more realistic in their planning than the Sharonans were.
Never mind that Jacek had that junior officer who was an idiot, disobeyed orders and turned the situation into a blood bath at Fallen Timbers. Or Thalmyr (sp), another idiot who lost his unit at Hell's Gate by poor planning and then having the lack of judgement as to fire on the Sharonian who was approaching him. These unfortunate encounters were not the result of poor planning but incompetence of execution. In short, the wrong people were in the critical places for any prior planning to be successfully implemented. Then there is our friendly mul who does his best to throw sand in the gears for political reasons domestic to Arcana. Again prior planning is not implemented due to a wrong person being in a key position and acting contrary to the spirit of what was really intended. Had the Arcanans successfully taken the survey team into custody peacefully long enough to get a feel for their intentions and establish their credentials, the result of the contact could have turned out productively. But, well, as we all know, that's not what happened. The Sharonians, on the other hand, apparently had no expectation of a first contact and had no plan b should one occur and not turn out well. So you wind up with a bunch of civilians prepared to deal with occasional bandits or the local wildlife with no concern at all about security otherwise. So when the unthinkable happened, about all they could do was run. The survey team should have had a military component to deal with the unexpected. That would have established the Sharonians ability to parley on a bit more equal basis rather than submitting to custody. I agree with other comments that it was pretty dumb not to make provision for the possibility of what happened. The universe is not nessarily a benign place. Don - When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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Re: On Rereading HELL'S GATE | |
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by Howard T. Map-addict » Wed Dec 23, 2015 12:19 pm | |
Howard T. Map-addict
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" 'Yea, though I walk through the Valley of the Shadow of
Death, I will fear no evil' ... for I (deem myself) the nastiest S.O.B. in the Valley!" Parody of a Bible quote. It occurs to me that the average Sharonan might be so very good at improvising, that a group of them don't need a pre-arranged Plan for any Situation that will be unique. Unique situations don't fit into rigid Plans. Why should they have a Plan for something that had not happened in all the eighty years they'd been attached to the Multiverse? Eighty years ago was 1935. Much has happened since then! If we had made a Plan in 1935, and then not had occasion to use it since then, at all, would we still remember that Plan? Better to improvise, say I!! The Military Components were at the Portals. Voices kept them in contact. The bad application by Arcanans of their Plan is blatant. The Plan itself is presumed good by all the characters who think about it. We readers begin by taking it for granted. Only later have we questioned whether that Plan was really a good plan, or was it a bad plan. New thought: Only now am I wondering whether any Plan at all is likely to be too rigid to be worth having. Howard T. Map-addict
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Re: On Rereading HELL'S GATE | |
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by PeterZ » Wed Dec 23, 2015 12:56 pm | |
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Furthermore, Howard, the true risk is not knowing about the first encounter, especially when the encountered has suspect motives. Sharona will never face that risk, because their Voices will be in constant or near constant contact with their military outpost. They don't need to further plan on how to ensure that a message is sent informing Sharona about the encounter. The Voice network ensures that communication WILL be sent. Everything else is subject to improvising to adjust for whatever weirdness is encountered.
That's why Sharona didn't make a plan. It is still stupid not to have clear protocols for the simple reason that such a protocol gives a guideline to avoid panic reactions by the explorers. That and protocols would limit the ability of folks like that naturalist on Shaylar's team to insist on doing wasteful and or risky activities like burying Falsan. I would agree with Howard that setting clear priorities would be sufficient. Establishing clear and detailed plans would be silly given the Voice network.
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Re: On Rereading HELL'S GATE | |
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by n7axw » Wed Dec 23, 2015 5:11 pm | |
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I would point out that the Arcanans had a plan (or protocol--I care not what you call it) and they have been in the Multiverse far longer than the Sharonians. Never mind that through a combination of incompetence and political hash making, they screwed up the execution. The point is, they at least had thought through how they wanted to react and had they managed to do that, the result would have been far different. I'm not suggesting a detailed straitjacket...just an overall statement of what you want to accomplish in a first contact situation and reasonable security to avoid being hung out to dry the way the survey crew was. Don - When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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Re: On Rereading HELL'S GATE | |
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by Howard T. Map-addict » Wed Dec 23, 2015 6:55 pm | |
Howard T. Map-addict
Posts: 1392
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Don, my point is that 200 year old plans
are vulnerable to being partly forgotten, misunderstood, insufficiently rehearsed, and not quite applicable to a new situation. The older a plan, the more likely a screw up, I say! This Arcanan plan does not consider that the Others might resent the way the situation was controlled in the first place, or on further consideration might conclude that it was a harmful plan, worse than no plan at all. And what if an attempt to control the situation, had **failed?** The blowback from a failed attempt would hurt Arcana. In this case, had the Arcanan platoon kept the Sharonans surrounded without moving in, then in a few hours about twenty Sharonan cavalrymen would have arrived and changed matters. If Sharonan explorers had kept soldiers with them, then they would have spent money on them for seventy- nine years and eleven months with no benefit. Now I wonder how Arcana can afford to use whole platoons and sometimes companies of expensive soldiers to explore. How can they afford the money and the time to slog through forests and other conditions? And why-oh-why would they use foot soldiers, when they have dragons to search from on high at 100 mph? Obviously I must suspend my disbelief for the sake of the story. Fiction seldom bears analysis, unless Jane Austen or Lois Bujold writes it. HTM
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Re: On Rereading HELL'S GATE-Road to Hell Spoiler | |
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by brnicholas » Wed Dec 23, 2015 7:21 pm | |
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I don't think I agree that Sharonan experience with non-human societies has made them more open to differences then the Arcanans. The first two books left me with the impression that the Simians and Cetaceans were not really Sharonans equals, but protected inferiors. That may be wrong but at this time my impression is that the Simians and Cetaceans are in much the same position as Native Americans in the USA. Their control over their reservations is secure as long as the US Government is willing to grant it to them. If the US Government decides to take the reservation away or let whites take the reservation away they are out of luck. Sharonans experience with compromising with someone different may be very limited. Terenthia became so obviously superior to the rest of Sharona 3000 or more years ago that everyone started imitating it and by now in all things that truly matter, everyone agrees with Terenthia. When Sharona acquires enough knowledge to realize they are dealing with three groups that are actually capable of threatening them and one believes war is the most noble human activity (Andara), one believes people without gifts are not entitled to humane treatment (Mythal), and one believes hereditary monarchies are against the will of God (Ransar) I don't expect the reaction to be good. We will see. Nicholas PS - I'm aware I may be off on the generalizations but I needed something pointed for this post, the key point is Arcanans are not like Sharonans in a lot more then just having magic instead of talents. |
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Re: On Rereading HELL'S GATE | |
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by PeterZ » Wed Dec 23, 2015 7:46 pm | |
PeterZ
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Nicholas,
Not more unthinkingly open, no. They are more used to evaluating differences between sentients. I have no problem believing Sharonans will hold on to a considered opinion with much greater conviction than Arcana. I just believe they will be more open to considering different ideas and social beliefs. |
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Re: On Rereading HELL'S GATE | |
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by n7axw » Wed Dec 23, 2015 7:52 pm | |
n7axw
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Yes, there could be resentment. That would be a bearable price. It was not Arcana's survey crew that got caught pants down. That's my point. The universe is not necessarily a benign place. Arcana's plan was apparently pretty simple rather than detailed and probably would have worked fine if properly implemented. As for "how they could afford it," gimme a break. What Arcana did and what I proposed would have cost a drop in the bucket compared to the wealth gained from the new universes they were discovering and exploiting. Don _ When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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Re: On Rereading HELL'S GATE | |
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by n7axw » Wed Dec 23, 2015 7:58 pm | |
n7axw
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More open than whom? Mythalans? Andarans? Ransarians? Three pretty dramatically different groups of people there... The same would be true on the Sharonian side. Ternathians would be more open than Chava's bunch. <shrug> It would be wise not to too broadly stereoptype. Don _ When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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