Nico wrote:Do remember that such a backlash had already occurred and that the great majority of Graysons reacted with revulsion and outrage against both the assassination attempt on Benjamin Mayhew and later on Honor. That reaction on both occasions can be seen as a pretty good indicator of the direction that popular opinion on Grayson would take in the year's to come.
tlb wrote:The backlash, such as it was, predated the alliance with Manticore and was mostly a personal reaction by cousin Jared against Benjamin's foreign education, which caused him to aid a Masadan fifth column. That resulted in an assassination attempt against both Honor and the Protector. Jared had inherited the position of Maccabeus from his father.
The only other assassination attempt on Honor was the nanotech controlled shooting on the bridge by Honor's aide; the faked hanging of Honor that aroused so much feeling was an execution, not an assassination.
Jonathan_S wrote:What about Burdette's attempt to have Honor killed?
Taking out her pinnace and sending attackers in to shoot the survivors (killing Reverend Hanks). I'd call that a 3rd assassination attempt...
tlb wrote:Quite right, sorry about that.
stewart wrote:By now, with (1) Honor on "leave of absence" from uniform and full-time Steadholder and Mommy, and (2) the Grayson treecat colony at 50-75 cats, Mueller, Burdette and company are likely being VERY circumspect in their public actions as they know (and all other Graysons know) that their emotional patterns are being read by any available 'cat within range. There would be at least 3 'cats present anytime the Keys are in chambers (Nimitz, Benjamin's guardian and the Chancellor's guardian).
The only "safe" place is within their own steadings.
Since Honor executed Burdette (after her would-be assassin confessed everything) and Mueller was executed after the attack on the Protector and the Queen, I believe you must be referring to anyone who might think like "Mueller, Burdette and company".
Going back to that assassination attempt that shot down Honor's shuttle; although we expect that some of the feelings were due to respect for Honor, probably a large part was due the the deaths of children and of Reverend Julius Hanks. The feelings about Honor are complicated, because there was a significant percentage of the population that had considered her to share blame for the deaths of those children, prior to the confession of Burdette. Freed of that smear, she defeated Burdette and then defeated Haven's attempts to attack Grayson and liberate Masada. It was those events, rather than the assassination attempt, that eventually resulted in putting her statue on a pedestal.