Bruno Behrends wrote:n7axw wrote:I kinda expected the reaction I got to that one. Maybe I even deserved it...
But... I think that it would be more damaging if it were a pattern of behavior than as a one time incident.
[snip]
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I love kzt's response. "You should go to Derry and ...". Brilliant, heh.
Still: I have to side with n7axw here. For the Northern Ireland parallel to work Mesa would have to equal Derry and The League would have to equal Ireland.
In the broadest strokes one could make that case I guess. But there are so many differences that the equation does not really add up IMO.
First Mesa is not part of the League. Second Mesa has always had a bad reputation. Third there is the minor fact that the Bloody Sunday did happen but Mike's alleged bombardment of Mesa did not. And very important - to me at least - is n7axw's pointing out that this alleged bombardment by Manticore does not fit a perceived pattern - contrary to the Northern Ireland situation.
In my opinion a better comparison would be the the Katyn - massacer of WWII.
The Soviets did it but blamed it on Germany. The propaganda did work - for a time. In the end it bit them on the ass though. (And in that case the propaganda actually did fit a pattern since Germany
did commit all kinds of war crimes in other situations though not that one.) Since Manticore's supposed bombardment of Mesa does
not fit a pattern I suspect this lie will bite the Alignment on the ass even sooner.
There is the problem that the Alignments existence is highly dubious at this point of course (from the POV of most of the Solarian Public I mean). That's the biggest ace of the 'Manticore did it!' faction IMO. Once that card is gone though the 'bite on the ass' part will come pretty fast I think.
I think there are a couple of problems with your otherwise very good analysis.
You’re right that Mesa isn’t part of the League and that Mesa has always had a bad reputation. In terms of League reactions and long-term memory, so it’s a little more like going to Pittsburgh and asking someone on the street about Bloody Sunday.
You’re on a little shakier ground though when you point out that “this alleged bombardment by Manticore does not fit a perceived pattern.” In the Fringe and Verge, that’s certainly true. In the case of the League, it really doesn’t matter a lot. The League doesn’t actually know all that much about Manticore, except for those portions of it directly involved in interstellar commerce. Which is to say, a segment of the population pretty much equivalent to the percentage of the current US population directly involved in trans-oceanic commerce. Aside from those people, Manticore tends to be one of those third-world (or perhaps second-world) countries somewhere a long, long way away, with the added advantage that what they
have heard about it probably had something to do with “damned Manty merchant marine” or “arrogant demands” from Manticore. Unless they’ve done a fair amount of research of their own, most of what they know about Manticore is going to be what’s come to them through the media (which, as we all know,
never has a nation-centric bias) and what “everyone knows” on the League’s equivalent of social media. Moreover, this isn’t
just Manticore. There’s a substantial Havenite component in Tenth Fleet, and if anyone goes and looks for it — or if any newsies want to bring it up — there is plenty of evidence of “iron heel” responses coming out of Nouveau Paris back when Haven was the People’s Republic of Haven . . . all of three or four years ago.
My point is that in the Core, where policy decisions are made and where the only public opinion the Mandarins worry about is formed, Manticore is only one more neobarb, and one which is more uppity and arrogant than most, for that matter. And Manticore’s previous record isn’t going to be as big a factor in that arena as it might be elsewhere.
Now, I realize that we’re talking about the
long-term consequences, not just the immediate ones. But by the time the truth starts overtaking initial impressions — and assuming that there ever is general agreement on what the “truth” is — that initial impression will have set pretty deep and hard in the League. Maybe not so much in the Fringe and the Verge, but definitely in the League. It’s going to be one of those “everyone knows” things that the intellectually lazy never question.
Your analogy about the Katyn Forest massacre has a certain degree of point, but let’s not forget that the Soviets who got bitten ultimately by their own propaganda were pretty bad actors in their own right. In fact, horrible as the Katyn Forest was, compared to the total death toll of Stalinist Russia, it was barely a statistical blip. The extent to which the Mandarins are ultimately discredited — and to which
they are perceived as the originators of the “Manticore did it” interpretation — will/may have a bearing on how likely future Solarian opinion is to accept that it was all a lie. And the fact that the Mandarins
didn’t, in fact, originate that narrative, whereas the Soviets clearly
did in order to cover their own crime, will also have a bearing. Unless, of course, the Alignment
is dragged into the open and Manticore and its Allies manage to convince the galaxy at large that it truly is an Evil Conspiracy™.
That, alas, may not be as easy in-universe as it is for me to convince the reader of it, and the longer this lingers — and, as someone else has pointed out, especially if the fact that Anton and Victor did, in fact, unlock the nuke used in the Green Pines bombing comes out — the more damningly credible it will seem and the more opportunity it will have to sink into the collective consciousness with the impossible-to-erase durability of Bloody Sunday.
It’s true that
outside Ireland, Bloody Sunday isn’t exactly burned into the memory of everyone you speak to. In fact, I’d venture to say that you’d have to explain what Bloody Sunday was to the majority of people in the US before you could discuss it with them. That isn’t to downplay the enormous historical significance of the event; it’s simply that on the other side of the Atlantic, after this many years, that significance simply doesn’t even cross the mental horizon of most Americans.
The deaths of multiple millions of human beings in the violation of an edict the Solarian League Navy has a constitutional mandate to enforce is going to loom rather larger in the Core Worlds’ thinking and collective memory, I suspect.