Jonathan_S wrote:cthia wrote:Yet, Haven was an expansionist society. They needed to conquer to survive. Yet why hasn't Haven and the rest of humanity continued to look for new worlds?
I meant to respond to this as well in my earlier post, yet given that it was already a wall of text maybe it's better it temporarily slipped my mind.
Haven was expanding to loot economies for quick cash and trade to prop up it's failed economy. It was a short term win, long term problem issue because they were infecting those newly conquered planets with some form of the overgrown dolist state Haven had fallen into, plus damaging their internal economies by sucking away the ready cash - starving them of the investment money needed to keep their economy healthy and growing.
Colonizing new planets is kind of exactly the opposite of what they were trying to do by turning conquistador. Setting up a new colony is a short term economic cost (and a big one) followed - hopefully - by a long term economic payback (once they get established to the point of being a viable trading partner with you - or at least a viable resource producer). If Haven had been able to hold off BLS increases long enough to come up with some medium to long term investment money there are probably better places to have spent it (bigger economic returns sooner) than in setting up a new colony. But they went to war as the only way they could see to pause the increase in BLS spending. I don't think they'd have had any luck trying to sell the same freeze to support a new colonization effort. (And they certainly didn't seem to have lots of people eager to move out of their comfortable urban lifestyle to be pioneers on some brand new planet - so finding willing and skilled people might have been just as hard as finding the money)
Indeed Jonathan. I considered your input myself, and meant to include a side note. Yet my posts continue to be too comprehensive as an initial draft and much is often edited out, lost in translation or overlooked.
I didn't mean that Haven should have been looking for new worlds as a reprieve from their financial burdens. They needed to conquer preexisting systems with credits in the bank.
Yet, IMO, that does not negate the need to continue to search for new viable systems that could eventually lead to contributing to their bottom line, innovations in their tech, or strategic location. Didn't the relation between the MWJ and Manticore teach them anything?
And the fact that they were barely hanging on financially shouldn't have been a spoilsport to any continued plans of surveying. The enormous expenditures of "galactic surveying" sure isn't stopping us now here on Earth. Besides, there were times of peace.
Also, with the maturity of the tech, it would seem that private companies would want to get into the business of long term surveying.
"We've just found some prime real estate some several hundred light years into the boon docks. It is flowing with lands of milk and honey and other convenient goodies."