Louis R wrote:You don't seem to be grasping the fact that they came from _Meyerdahl_. While there may or may not have been institutional memory of the fact that the First Wave colonists were modded for the environment, the simple fact that the family had survived there for several generations would be all the evidence required.
-snip-
Indeed Louis. Yet,
that very evidence
would be required.
Or, the same deception could be orchestrated that is pulled off by out-of-state college students JIT relocating in-state to live with a friend or relative just prior to applying for significantly lower in-state tuition. And since there is no MWJ at the time, and communication legs are in months, the scheme could be much easier to pull off.
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First, I'd like to thank Vince for sharing info of the existing article and its coordinates.
I really didn't get the memo and I consumed it after the fact
err initial thread creation. Also to kzt who mentioned it again and in doing so reminded me that I needed to read it. So I did. Very interesting consumption.
To soothe your worry Louis, I was aware that the Harringtons are descended from the Meyerdahl First Wave. And I don't doubt that Manticore "recruited" heavy worlders in light of needing new blood, which is in keeping with my thoughts that a planet would be remiss to not insist that an immigrant be "preconditioned." Yet, it is the exact same veracity of this fact that prompts me to believe that a planet would insist on incontrovertible proof in some form or fashion.
I can't see a planet blindly accepting someone's word for it (I imagine it is part and parcel of what the immigration process is all about). An applicant could be a criminal element or an entire family could be seeking to escape prosecution from the League or any other planet or enterprise via Meyerdahl. And we just don't know if Meyerdahl, or any other high G planet, would insist on preconditioning before emigrating as does the Star Kingdom. There could be citizens living a completely grav plate and "portable G" life on Meyerdahl. There could also be "illegal applicants," those without heavy G mods which would not be pursuant to what the Star Kingdom sought
as well as applicants who are actually from a lower than standard G planet. Never mind that such a deception wouldn't be advisable or smart of an applicant to do, but humanity is not always smart or logical in their actions or without criminal and deceptive ways for reasons known only to them.
I would even more so assume that proof is required considering these facts, compounded by the fact that in the immigration handbook it states that entire clans were sought, where several generations of Harringtons could top out in excess of several thousand people arriving in-system who are "illegal" because of having lied. Illegal arrivals who are now completely dependent on the government for food stamps and grav plate vouchers, thinking they won't be diverted by a planet needing new blood.
Also, the MWJ wasn't discovered until after the Star Kingdom began to receive new immigrants which meant the entire process of the communication and immigration process, both ways, took months. I imagine Stephanie's letter took months. So how could an immigration policy rely on the word of off-worlders, especially when viruses could be introduced to the Star Kingdom from off-worlders as well?
In short, I was simply leaving room for the human element when I assumed that the immigration process would be predicated on certain steadfast policies written in stone, regardless of what an applicant may or may not claim or communicate over a distance of months.
All of which should conspire to explain the title of the thread, "The
logistics of travel and immigration."
This certainly doesn't mean I'm correct, just giving the reasoning behind my madness.
Theemile wrote:Louis R wrote:cthia,
You don't seem to be grasping the fact that they came from _Meyerdahl_. While there may or may not have been institutional memory of the fact that the First Wave colonists were modded for the environment, the simple fact that the family had survived there for several generations would be all the evidence required. In fact, i would put down real cash money on the proposition that Meyerdahl and other high-g planets were specifically targeted for recruitment when looking for new settlers for Sphinx. Suggesting, BTW, that the modern population has an interesting brew of designed and natural adaptations bouncing off each other. Probably not surprising that Alison has been keeping busy.
Even if heavy gravity planets were not specifically targeted ( which would make total sense, btw), those that applied were most likely weighted towards those with heavy gravity experience. Just like when you place a job offer for an IT position, you tend to get resumes of people with computer knowledge.
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