evilauthor wrote:Weird Harold wrote:I think you're ignoring the Psychology -- i.e. anti-tech bias -- of anyone who would fit that description among "Langhorne's Faithful" (or Chihiro's cronies.)
There's no doubt that Chihiro or one of his cronies could have built a PICA before Hamilcar was disposed of, or even in some hidden tech repository under the Temple, but that would be like the Dalai Lama becoming a jet-set playboy -- possible, but highly improbable.
Yeah, and Stalin completely followed Lenin's vision of Communism, right?
Wait, no he didn't.
Lenin didn't follow Marx's vision of Communism. He couldn't. Marx assumed Communism would arise in a developed industrial economy, like Germany, not an agrarian state like Russia. (And Marx was rather vague about how he expected it to come about.) Lenin had to make up a lot as he went along. And bear in mind that Lenin and Stalin were co-rulers and collaboratorsafter Stalin came on board , so the final effort was a joint venture.
We don't know enough about Chihiro to say he subscribed to Langhorne's EXACT vision or if he was only paying lip service to it to retain power, or something in between.
And of course, Chihiro didn't mind control everyone under him to follow his agenda either or else there wouldn't have been a War of the Fallen. There was quite a bit of cloak and dagger going on among the Command Crew even after you factored Shan-Wei's faction out of it.
Part of the fun here is that we don't know what anyone's motivations were. Archbishop Michael talked about that in an earlier book, when he said we knew what the Archangels had done, but not what they were thinking when they did it. We know what, but not why.
One thing that occurred to me is that our initial impression of Langhorne and Bedard came from Merlin, and he got it from the data dump Commodore Pei left for Nimue when her PICA woke up under Mt. Olympus. The kinetic bombardment system had just converted the Alexandria Enclave into Armageddon Reef, and Commodore Pei announced he was going to a meeting with Langhorne and Bedard, along with the only other person who knew of Nimue's existence, and was taking a pocket nuke along that would leave no survivors.
Merlin got the idea Langhorne was the main bad guy, with Bedard only a step behind.
We've subsequently discovered that Chihiro was apparently maneuvering to supplant Langhorne from rasther before the Alexandria Enclave strike, that it may have been Chihiro who actually ordered the strike on the Alexandria enclave, and that the OBS had been manufactured on Hamilcar in secrecy by Angels loyal to Chihiro, and deployed hours before it was used on the Alexandria Enclave, so Commodore Pei wouldn't be able to intervene.
We've also discovered that the War Against the Fallen didn't take place till two years after the Rakurai strike, and David has mentioned elsewhere that there was a period of confusion as surviving angels and Archangels ducked for cover after Langhorne's administrative center went up in a fireball and everyone tried to figure out what was going on and what to do next. This would have been when Chihiro consolidated his power.
David has also stated that Shan Wei was loyal to Langhorne right up until the Rakurai strike, and was the first victim of the rebellion, and that there was a general agreement among the command crew about the necessity of the CoG. (The original CoG, not the CoGA that resulted after Chihiro took the reins.)
What we thought we knew was the the original plans for Operation Ark back on Earth were for the colony to abjure advanced technology for 300 years, to give the Gbaba time to decide they had exterminated humanity and stop actually looking for tech traces, but that they would need to redevelop technology. We also thought it was Langhorne and Bedard that changed that plan to "abjure technology forever".
We also know there was internal opposition to Langhorne and Bedard from the beginning, witness Commodore Pei musing just before Nimue said goodbye and OA executed Breakaway to sneak past the Gbaba that he was part of a conspiracy against Langhorne and Bedard.
Merlin has been forced to adjust his thinking about Langhorne a bit, and we might need to as well.
One thing that occurred to me was related to the general agreement among the command crew that the CoG was a necessity which David mentioned elsewhere. Langhorne and supporters might have actually agreed on the need to eventually rediscover technology.
Bedard wiping the colonist's memories, the creation of the Holy Writ, and the use of technology by the command crew to appear to be divine beings might have been a misguided attempt to address a fundamental problem. You have a tiny fragment of humanity on an alien terrestrial planet, that has been partially terraformed into a place humanity can live.
Given the difficulties involved in survival, a question becomes "People being people, if they know technology exists, there will be a lotof reasons to want to apply it, simply to survive. How do we make sure the colonists do restrict themselves to wind, water, and muscle power for 300 years?" One way is wipe their memories of technology, create a Holy Writ, appear to be divine beings, and say "God said to!"
It may just be Chihiro that decided the ban on tech should be permanent, and taking out the Alexandria Enclave was intended to make sure the records Shan Wei was preserving to enable technology to be rediscovered were destroyed. It's possible Commodore Pei nuked the wrong bad guys. (When I described the setup to my SO, she said "That's a fundamentalist Christian sort of attitude." She's quite right, in that there are historic examples of believers deciding that calamities were God's punishment for man over reaching himself, dating back to the notion that Eve listened to the serpent and fed Adam fruit from the Tree of Knowledge, and the awareness that produced caused God to toss them out of the Garden of Eden. The idea the Gbaba were God's punishment for man advancing beyond what God wanted is an all too possible notion.)
We know Chihiro had made changes to Langhorne's plans, but we don't know what they were, and we don't know what Langhorne's plans were and how they might have differed from the original orders Langhorne was given when he was named Administrator of Operation Ark.
We also don't know about the Fallen. We know now that they were mostly navy and marine personnel who crewed Commodore Pei's military escorts, and who were turned into a planetary police force and disaster relief crew after their ships were discarded. But we don't know what they wanted, or what they would have done had they won.
I suspect we have a fair bit to learn, and surprises along the way as we discover conditions aren't what we thought they were.
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Dennis