Dilandu wrote:The INITIAL PLAN of the operation Ark proposed exactly that. The colonists memories were supposed to be erased (at least partially), so the high technology could be safely suppressed for the centuries of "hiding" (with the exception of carefully hidden control enclaves). Its debatable, how far the initial memory correction was supposed to went, but clearly far enough.
Langhorne, being the designated leader, have the rights to change the plan. He was the one, responsible for the survival of human race, after all. He could not do it, while operating under a rigidly pre-established set of instruction (what if something unexpected would come?) Remember: Dr. Pei never questioned the LEGALITY of Langhorne's actions, only their rationality.
So, Langhorne was within his rights. He may stretch thrm quite a lot, actually, but he have an authority from the operation Ark planners (and so from the Federation Prezident) to do so.
The original plan was to alter the settlers' memories to edit out advanced technology. For example, as a kid growing up in the Federation you might've taken your future wife (who is with you on the ship) to your high school prom in a flying limo. You'd still remember the event, but maybe as a harvest festival in your village that you either walked to or rode with her in a horse drawn carriage. That sort of thing. I recall something Merlin was saying about a contract the colonists signed and how what Langhorne and Bédard did was a violation of that contract.
Eric Langhorne was a colonial administrator, not an autocrat with absolute power. I doubt he would've been given the ability to scrap the
essence of the plan - to eventually emerge from the self imposed medieval period - although as you say, he likely would've had the discretion to adjust the time frame if he believed it was necessary. But brainwashing colonists and making himself a semi-divine figure in a new religion? I can't imagine that not being grounds for removal. And genocide would be grounds to arrest him and convene a war crimes tribunal.
I got the impression that legally he had overstepped his bounds quite a bit. Shan-Wei was simply in a position where, with all his superiors dead back on Earth, Langhorne had seized power, refusing to respect whatever system of checks and balances exist to limit that power, so she couldn't remove him via the established process. A protracted war using advanced tech (among other things) would probably mean discovery by the Gbaba. So they decided hey, we may not be able to unseat Langhorne but he can't really make us comply with his revised plan either. They weren't expecting him to take things so far.