Kytheros wrote:A Pirate is an opportunist, sure. But he's also going to be smart about it, and what he can and cannot afford to do.
That's my point as well. A pirate can't afford to ignore a score of a whole herd of buffalo corralled into one freighter when buffalo are so dry on the plains of Kansas. That
isn't smart. How can you not expect that any pirate is looking for that one big score? The career expectancy of a pirate can't be as long as his life. Especially when you're on Harrington's short list. You can't keep going out on these excursions stealing nickel and dime booties for minimum wage.
Piracy is real in the Honorverse and very much alive. One, because the hunting grounds - therefore the policing grounds - are so immense.
Whereas, I do agree that the Golden Age of piracy is probably over; the Bronze Age isn't exactly slim pickings. Especially in Silesia.
Kytheros wrote:The smart pirate takes smaller scores, because that's what can be relied upon to be regularly available and regularly disposed of safely for profit.
Perhaps this is how it works in RFCs world. I don't know. Haven't discussed it with him. But in reality, in as huge an expanse as the Honorverse, I would imagine that a pirate takes whatever
weakling that comes along in a back alley of space. The smaller shipments are probably more numerous and weakly guarded. A freighter partly loaded or fully loaded will both easily die with a freighter's buffalo gun. A pirate is supposed to pass up a score that size because he can't hide it all? In the immensity that is space? And I'm supposed to believe that he can't find any fences for it, in the immensity of space? With all the poor and corrupt governments? I'm supposed to believe, that the long history of piracy in the Honorverse hasn't produced a number of fences that pirates know about? I'm supposed to believe that when a pirate boards his catch and sees it too full of buffalo he throws it back into the ocean because it is too large a catch? I thought you only throw small fish back into the ocean. (Except my sister, who wants to keep them all for stew. lol)
Kytheros wrote:The smart pirate doesn't draw undue attention to himself and his operations.
Continuing to go out on small penny anty scores and getting picked up and put on a Harringron short list is calling attention to yourself, of the worst and quite possibly fatal kind. Getting in and getting out, doesn't.
Kytheros wrote:The smart pirate plans around irregular small scores, because, frankly, a pirate will have dry spells where he's not making money on new prizes.
A smart pirate plans around what's available. The plains are dry of buffalo. It's like saying that the fishing trawlers, who always have dry runs, are going to ignore an opportunity for a big catch because its too huge - when its so dry.
The only dry spell a pirate
really worries about is the one caused as a result of being airlocked. So, get in. Get out.
Kytheros wrote:A once-in-a-lifetime mega score of a multi-trillion cargo is almost certainly something that you can't shift very easily. It's also the kind of thing that stays under escort at all times. That's ignoring the fact that it paints a massive target on you, even supposing you pull it off.
First off, let's not be so quick in assuming multi-trillion dollar shipments are rare. Freighters are designed to carry that much capacity for a reason. They need too! The demand is there. They are supplying goods to entire planets that has to last at least for months along their routes. You don't just order 18 palettes of commodity A. You order several billion. The supplier won't be back until the next season - if you're lucky and it's not shortstopped by another pirate named Murphy. So, multi-trillion dollar shipments seem large in our minds, but these are shipments in the Honorverse. And they are not escorted at all times. They can't be. Or piracy would be dead. Even textev states that they travel in herds when possible, for safety, when escorts aren't available.
It's like looting the Louvre - or any major art museum - of its entire collection - how are you going to shift it all? Answer, you can't shift it quickly, you have to take time to move any of it safely.
It is NOT like looting the Louvre! Many people are familiar with the Louvre's inventory. And it would be stolen on Earth and fenced on Earth. Big difference.
As opposed to stolen in the huge expanse of space and sold elsewhere in the huge expanse of space. When you steal in the Honorverse, your goods are already loaded in the getaway car. And it's always dark outside. And deserted! Besides, anyone looting the Louvre already has a buyer. Smuggling is their only problem. There is no immediate concern for customs in the Honorverse.
Kytheros wrote:In the Honorverse, the only for-profit pirates have been using light cruisers and smaller. The only times we've seen heavy cruisers or battlecruisers in the hands on non-state actors, they're either acting as a political movement's supporters/loyalists or as mercenaries, sometimes both. The Honorverse's Golden Age of Piracy is over.
The Bronze Age in Silesia is still pretty profitable.
Ok, the freighter is a multi-trillion dollar catch. So what. It is still consolidated and wrapped in a nice big pretty bow of one single freighter. With all of the corrupt systems, poor systems, and corrupt poor systems, and corrupt rich systems, fences are everywhere. Really, how hard can it be to fence in a huge ocean like space? Heck, the bright light given off from the huge smelters and welders can be visible for parsecs, and still not be seen.
lol