So basically they placed the future of humankind in hands of man, who they knew was unreliable.
You're saying they knew he was unreliable. I'm saying they didn't know.
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Re: Possible way to take out the OBS | |
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by Duckk » Thu Mar 10, 2016 10:39 am | |
Duckk
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You're not listening to me.
You're saying they knew he was unreliable. I'm saying they didn't know. -------------------------
Shields at 50%, taunting at 100%! - Tom Pope |
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Re: Possible way to take out the OBS | |
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by Dilandu » Thu Mar 10, 2016 10:47 am | |
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I.e. they knew, that he would most likely NOT FOLLOW. Logically, it should be enough to get him out of command position at once. P.S. Basically, all situation may be explained if the conspirators really did'n want the Ark project to sucseed. What if it was supposed to be only a ruse - to divert possible Gbaba search from some more effective projects (I.e. all-PICA crewed factory ships, Von Neumann probes with stored human personalities, ect.)? ------------------------------
Oh well, if shortening the front is what the Germans crave, Let's shorten it to very end - the length of Fuhrer's grave. (Red Army lyrics from 1945) |
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Re: Possible way to take out the OBS | |
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by Duckk » Thu Mar 10, 2016 11:02 am | |
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viewtopic.php?f=7&t=6072&p=155902
I should qualify that by saying that at least initially, it was an indication of how anti-technology the conspirators believed him to be. They were, after all, taking precautions against something which — at the time — they couldn't be certain was going to happen and which they knew was in direct contradiction of the original mission plan. Which, again, shows they suspected but they did not know. And, again, by people who had their own set of biases against him. They were willing to hedge their bets by stowing the PICA away, but they fully knew that Nimue's death had a good chance of being meaningless if their assessment of Langhorne was in error. As for your thoughts about making the Ark project to fail, that is so obviously wrong on countless levels that it's not worth talking about, or that David has already tossed the idea in direct response to you. -------------------------
Shields at 50%, taunting at 100%! - Tom Pope |
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Re: Possible way to take out the OBS | |
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by Louis R » Thu Mar 10, 2016 4:14 pm | |
Louis R
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You actually answer your own question about Langhorne later in your post: he thought he could pull the hole in after himself _because_ he was convinced that humanity had brought the Gbaba down on themselves by venturing out to the stars.
We know nothing about the remnants that were discovered, so we don't know what tech level those cultures had achieved, nor do we know what Langhorne actually knew about them [no doubt he knew everything he thought he needed to know, but how much was that, really?]. If it seemed that they were all star-farers who stumbled over the Gbaba the way humans did, then obviously the way to stay safe was to make sure that nobody would ever again go blundering around the galaxy poking sticks into ant-hills. If it looked like they hadn't left their home systems, but had high-tech, high-energy civilisations that would catch the Gbaba's attention from a distance and pull them down on their heads, that just means that you set your bar that much lower. Only if some of those dead peoples had clearly had pre-industrial technologies, and been hunted down and killed anyway, do you have to question the safety of your hole. Wiping out a culture like that would require doing so much damage to their world that there would be little or no evidence left of what that culture had been - but then, so would eliminating higher-tech races, with only the fact that the damage was system-wide providing any clues as to which had been space-faring. It wouldn't have been all that difficult for Langhorne & Co. to persuade themselves that everyone the Gbaba cided had had a sufficiently high-tech culture to attract their attention. So, a low-tech planet was inherently safe. It's not so clear why they decided that any other star-farers must necessarily behave the way the Gbaba did - not really hunting for new races, but eliminating anybody who came to their attention. Possibly they simply decided that there must not _be_ any, because the Gbaba got there first, or because if there were, they'd have already offed the Gbaba, and the Federation would have been fighting them instead. Equally possible, the Gbaba represented their ideal: static, unchanging, isolationist, genocidal xenophobes who never venture far from home except to eliminate upstart competition for resources, and they convinced themselves that any truly advanced civilisation must be just like that. If you didn't set yourself up as competition, you'd be safe, and the way to do that is to stay properly at the bottom of your atmosphere and never radiate. Any human-style idiots who decided to run around the stars constantly looking for new worlds to conquer would quickly run up against one of the right-living peoples and _be_ conquered. Which means that they wouldn't be around to stumble over Safehold. Finally, of course, there's the possibility that the thought never crossed their minds, likely because they didn't let it. It wouldn't have been impossible for Langhorne to make provisions in the Writ for a change of course. Going back at least as far as Ecclesiastes, the scripture he was cribbing from includes the idea that every message from God is shaped to the needs of a particular time and place and the capacities of a specific audience. Tucking some of those passages away in a suitable corner would provide the hook on which a new archangel could hang an announcement that the Proscriptions are revoked. God hasn't changed His mind about anything, He's decided that the time has come when mankind is ready for more of the truth than it could accept at creation. Actually, if I were engaged in this scheme, I'd couch it in terms of being ready for powers that were beyond the capacity of the Adams and Eves, to evade questions of how true is truth. Mind you, that approach runs into 2 serious problems of its own. First, you have to give up the conception of the Writ as perfect, complete and immutable - opening the way to all sorts of questions and random [and free] thoughts. That makes it a bit tricky to run the changes through on your schedule, especially if you want to lift the proscriptions in stages, and maybe never really loose men into the wild again. Second, and something Langhorne, with his profound awareness of history, will have missed completely, no organised clergy in history has stood by and watched while its comfortable apple cart was overturned, or even rocked vigourously . Not even when it's the Finger of God doing the toppling. The COGA won't be any different, and given that probably the most corrupt element of the Church is the one charged with defending the Proscriptions, it's not hard to imagine it taking a long, long time for more than rumours of the new doctrine to escape the Temple.
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Re: Possible way to take out the OBS | |
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by Jonathan_S » Thu Mar 10, 2016 7:38 pm | |
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i forget the timing of that suspicion. Did they suspect from the get go or was this something that they came to realize after Ark was initiated and Langhorn had a chance to start showing his colors? |
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Re: Possible way to take out the OBS | |
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by Michae » Sun Mar 13, 2016 3:56 am | |
Michae
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i forget the timing of that suspicion. Did they suspect from the get go or was this something that they came to realize after Ark was initiated and Langhorn had a chance to start showing his colors?[/quote] [/quote] I believe it says that certain people in the Chain of command for operation Ark suspected very strongly that he would try something along those lines,but they couldn't convince the people that were in change of actually appointing the positions that he wasn't the best candidate for the job,as they do mention another name that they felt would have actually stuck more closely to the original objectives of Operation Ark. |
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Re: Possible way to take out the OBS | |
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by Rob Mac F » Tue Mar 15, 2016 7:41 pm | |
Rob Mac F
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immortal facts about humans:
right or wrong, someone will contradict you. it's not lessons learned, it's lessons observed. someone in a group will laugh about fart jokes. no one cares how much you know, until they know you care. and for Langhorn and Co., when getting a job, it's not what you know, but who you know. as for the OBS, a couple of miltidrive missles going ballistic above 0.75c, I'm sure there is an asteroid belt handy to set up a missle plant run by a less sophisticated version of Owl. put that assault shuttle to use as an intra system transport. |
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Re: Possible way to take out the OBS | |
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by Max » Thu Jun 09, 2016 7:33 pm | |
Max
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Well, no there is no textual evidence to that end, but it does fit well enough with the story line to be plausible and it leaves Langhorne with a better aroma than usual. In this version, he and the rest of the planners have tried to find a way to make the tech enclaves work. The models have the colony degenerate and either lock up socially or die. The other failure mode has it grow and expose itself to the Gbaba. The religious scenario allows a long period of non-technical growth and has at least some chance of a technical break-out after it gets big enough. The original planners do not have all the data. The sims keep running during the entire run for cover. It's only when it comes to crunch time that the decision is made. Since the tech enclaves are a serious threat, they have to be shut down hard. Debate will lead to half-measures which will not work. (Not quite the "Cosmic Computer" scenario mentioned above, but close or worse.) So, BANG!, the OBS comes on-line and gets used. Langhorne more or less lets himself get killed since he's one of the weaker links in keeping the decision secret... (There might still be a record in the computer files under the Temple.) Rest of story follows... And that puts at least one plot twist into play: There could be the first in a series of "revelations" that would start the technical up-turn coming out of the Temple sub-cellars. It would not be a complete release of the electricity ban, but it could be a restart of mathematics and mechanics; possibly a recommendation of water or even steam power systems. In other words, exactly what is happening story-wise. There would be a release of the electronic tech bans schedules for another K-year or two down the road... And if RFC is being really nasty, Merlin's release is a planned part of the Temple plot... (Ugh, Lensman, Ugh!) |
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Re: Possible way to take out the OBS | |
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by Duckk » Fri Jun 10, 2016 2:49 pm | |
Duckk
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If there were any sort of evidence that Langhorne was a Good Guy, I could accept the potential existence of such a plot twist. The problem is that there is literally zero basis for it in both the text and David's posts here on the board. One could just as easily suggest that Pei and Langhorne decided to team up and solve crimes as the unlikeliest pair of detectives, every Thursday night at 10/9 central. That's the problem I have with every Langhorne Was a Good Guy theory - the overwhelming preponderance of evidence points otherwise.
I find it far more likely that someone else inside the command staff was less than fully committed with the plan. We know a lot less about that period of time, and the people involved, than we do about Langhorne. For instance, the War of the Fallen sounds like it had help from the inside, in order to gain access to Hamilcar to produce and distribute the industrial modules which fueled the war. -------------------------
Shields at 50%, taunting at 100%! - Tom Pope |
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Re: Possible way to take out the OBS | |
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by fossten » Fri Jun 10, 2016 7:13 pm | |
fossten
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He could just borrow Tyler Vernon's SAPL design.
Poof...OBS gone. |
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