Duckk wrote: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.
I think the only Langhorne-related plot twist I could buy is the one where it wasn't actually Langhorne behind the Alexandria Strike, and instead it was someone else, presumably Chihiro, who was trying to coopt Langhorne's plan and position for himself and eliminate any potential rival powerbase(s) for personal gain, not necessarily because they believed in Langhorne's anti-tech position. In this scenario, Alexandria had to go for two reasons - the same reason Langhorne is thought to have pushed the button on them, and because there's no way Alexandria and Shan-wei would have gone along with someone launching a coup to coopt Langhorne's position.
And that's basically what Cody's Journal suggests. In this scenario Langhorne was certainly misguided and wrong, and did terrible things, but was acting out of good intentions.
As far as running sims go ... I can't believe that there's any way that the planners back on Earth wouldn't have (a) run sims, and (b) had a massively better basis and capability to run larger, more accurate sims than anything that Operation Ark could have done. VR and AIs can massively compress time, so there's no reason to think that sims would have needed to be carried out in transit.
As far as the tech-enclaves devolving, remember, the entire world was supposed to be late steam-age/just pre-electricity in pretty much every way, and that there'd still be a largish chunk of original crew left when the time came to restart high technology. For that matter, I suspect that if she hadn't transferred, Nimue would still have been alive when the time to restart high technology came around. The knowledge of what was out there wasn't supposed to be lost.