Howard T. Map-addict wrote:2 Sure, Don, I'll give you that break.
A company could certainly have financed guards from
the profits on the previous discovery that it found.
Now you give me two breaks:
2.1 A new company, with no previous discoveries to get
profits from, would have to pay through the nose in
interest rates for the money to finance guards.
After all, Sharona has no central control of the moneys
earned from Outworlds. Each company arranges its own
financing.
Such central control would require taxes on moneys
earned Outworlds by successful companies,
with the money used to subsidize new companies.
What old company would wamt to be taxed to
subsidize its competitors?
Only the Portal Authority was in a position to collect
such taxes. It would need more legal authority to do
that, and then a larger (resource-consuming) bureaucracy.
Would you advise Sharonans to do that?
2.2 No company financed and controlled by Humans
*ever* has enough money to content the people who
finance and control it. Those people would *always*
have other uses for whatever money they controlled,
no matter how much it was.
Eighty years have nine hundred sixty (960) months.
Do you expect human companies to pay insurance money
for 959 months, with no return, for the sake of a thing
that might happen in the 960th?
How many Humans have ever done that?
Beyond those points, it occurs to me that two or more
companies exploring the same the same world might bump
into each other. If they both had Guard Companies,
they might wage war against each other.
For the past eighty years, any such disputes have been
settled by the SPA, because they have all the soldiers.
With the new system, SPA would need enough soldiers to
overwhelm all of the Guard Companies, or else there
would be Anarchy And Chaos in the Outworlds!
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I almost forgot your paragraph #1.
I see you as being very, very upset that the Chalgyn
team was overwhelmed and destroyed.
Is it possible that you are reacting too strongly?
As you yourself said, Bad Things do happen.
What if the Chalgyns had had twenty guards, or forty,
and they'd run into two Arcanan platoons, or more?
OTOH, what if Arcana'd had a twelve-man squad?
I deem it Chance that determines which group is stronger.
Howard T. Map-addict
Were I in charge, the entire subject of security would be handled by the Port Authority with a small tax on profits from the consortiums.
You are right. There is going to be blowback...on Arcana over what happened to the survey team. But it's going to be much worse than if the execution of their protocols (plan) had been competently carried out.
Next I have never proposed a plan whose details could be forgotten over time. I am proposing a mission statement to be under constant review to be carried out by carefully trained personnel responsible for the security of the survey teams. The actual details could vary depending on the context of whatever was encountered. You want a plan, not a straitjacket.
Finally, there is no such thing as completely risk free. But risk can be minimized by prior thought and planning, rather than being caught completely out.
As for Arcana, I would imagine there will be some house cleaning and hopefully some review of their own protocols. The most troublesome part of that is the control the encounter bit. But I'm not sure how you deal with that. Before you invite someone into your parlor, you at least need to know they are not going to wreck the place. Given the amount of uncertainty that any first encounter would inevitably generate, how does one create the mutual assuance that everybody means well, especially given the language barrier?
I can't really say that I have an adequate substitute for the Arcanan protocol.
Don
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