Brigade XO wrote:Well, if a culture is going to reject all sorts of medical treatment, then they are going to (the culture) just have to deal with the effects of that.
If the leadership of the Faithful won't let their people have Prolong it is quite possible that some people- once they hear and understand what is being offered- will find ways to have access to it, at least for their children.
Indeed. Albeit, I wouldn't think that the people looking to circumvent the religious laws against the heretic evil and receive prolong anyway, are the people Manticore needs to worry about. It is the die hard fanatics who don't even want the stuff in the system who are the worry. The less fanatic, who may end up with the treatment anyways, will only serve to bring the Faithful down from within.
Brigade XO wrote:The Faithfull former ruling leadership would all be too old to have Prolong. How many of them would be willing to have their children get it is another question.
I don't recall any discussion about Prolong being part of medical treatment on Mesada but that could just by a gap in memory.
Much of the Grayson population has ended up embracing a lot of change brought by the contact and cooperation with Manticore but Manticore was not forcing them to modify their religion. From what I gather in the story line, the Grayson perspective of The Test generaly allows them to evaluate things based on knowledge and the tenents of the faith.
That is not to say that there were not nor are not religious fundamentalists and fanatics in the population but those are not the ones who are either incharge or able to dictate policy. Manticore doesn't hand down fiats to Grayson. It does make agreements and offers. For the most part, we see (what we do see of it) people who make decisions based on negotion and people are presented as having to make up thier own minds. Not what you get with The Faithful.
Indeed. The thing is, Grayson was prepared for change. They were meeting their test. And remember, it wasn't, isn't, easy for them to do so either. There is still opposition to Protector Benjamin's plan. Manticore didn't force anything on the citizens of Grayson, no, but the opposition felt that Protector Benjamin was forcing the Mayhew Restoration on them.
Brigade XO wrote: Note that what we were shown of the operations of The Faithfull high leadership both in their councils and home life included an awfull lot of hypocrisy of action, manipulation of the letter of convention and flaunting of things they can get away with......nice portrays of corrupt and self-serving theocratic politicians in the worst possible light.
Fanatics who totally misinterpret tenets, religious laws and teachings are as common as religion and are as dangerous as war.
IMHO, the uncivil war with the Faithful filtered the excrement out of Grayson religion, and what is left are the true believers and worthy inheritors of Tester's will.