pappilon wrote:
The kids stole them. He could have told them to "put them back where you got them." So killing 6 million in a nuclear detonation is a terrorist attack but killing 600 or 60 or 6 is not? He's the adult, he gave them the targets. Yes not his fault one kid went off the rails. He still said "here, kid, take this bomb and set it off somewhere you might only kill 60 people, because if we kill 600 its a terrorist attack." Said nobody ever.
Zilwicki was a foreign national who had no authority to tell the seccies anything. If he'd tried that, they would just leave and either ignore Zilwicki and Cachat, or turn them in. It was their fight, their tools. He could, and did, offer some technical assistance; and he used the group assistance to get out of Mesa. But he wasn't the group's leader, or the groups' conscience. Nor does it mean the seccies weren't adult enough to make their own choices. It wasn't up to him to tell them not to use whatever they wanted. Nor did Zilwicki want to give the flake the job of setting it; that decision was made by Carl Hanson, who
was the leader of the group.
It is worth noting that these bombs were available to construction companies for what appears to be routine, if very controlled uses. It was the slack security that allowed them to steal them. And, they weren't designed as weapons--they are construction tools in a timeframe when apartment buildings have fusion plants in the neighborhood.
And you can go to almost any country in a civil war, and if such weapons were available, people there would use it. Sinai? Lebanon? Syria? They'd throw them into Israel. Iraq? when I was there, the remnants supporting Hussein, Zarqawi's Al Quaida in Iraq, or any of a half dozen other militias would have used it on us, or on the "interim" government. Or on each other, since all of them seemed to be feuding all the time. Their were constant assassinations. And the PKK would have used such things in Turkey.
The seccies in the book were fighting an irregular and nearly hopeless war on Mesa, just as the Ballroom was fighting an irregular war off Mesa. But it was still a war.
Rob