Theemile wrote:The LAW was anthing that moved between PLANETS or HABITATs didn't require customs inspections. So you just ship whatever you want to move to somewhere where the Customs enforcement was Lax - hence Basilisk. Stuff could come in, or go out of the Warehouses without Customs checking it. If you did it at the Wormhole warehouses - People were looking there because there, people were supposed to look at everything.
Ah, I see what you're saying. You make entry into the SKM by way of the easiest port of entry, which at the time just happened to be outside the Manticore Binary System. Now, that might actually be in any one of the Talbott Quadrant systems. where a certain level of corruption still exists, like say the Split system.
The only problem is of course the chicken and the egg. When Basilisk was annexed, there were no orbital warehouses and customs inspections for there to be a lax security on. The first few were so low in volume that you couldn't expect there to be much of an opportunity to "lose" cargo. It was clearly cheaper for any legitimate business to ship straight to the wormhole.
Until, that is, the cycle gets broken by the Government. As you said:
I of course am reading between the lines here, but seeing Young's character, His father's ownership (and use) of the North Hollow files, the traitoress greed of the Lords of the Conservative and the Progressive Parties, and their bahavior during their mid-war control of the Government, it makes sense. The Basilisk Warehousing complexes were rebuilt with Government funds, to a greater Scale - along with a Naval Fleet base and Planetary forts. The work was done by Conservative family owned Construction corporations at a markup. Having Young protecting "Family" investments follows a trail of deeds that preceeds and follows the incident at Basilisk. Only Pavel's laziness and animosity against Honor (And members of the Naval senior leadership which saw through his shenanigans and worked against him) caused the whole operation to fall apart.
The less reputable members of the House of Lords may have seen an opportunity. Invest government funds into orbital warehouses and insufficient customs inspections to take opportunity of the law that says that shipments between SKM planets is free of inspections. And as a cherry on top, they probably sold this to the proponents of a stronger presence in Basilisk as regional investmentt. They probably convinced legal shipment to go there, despite the 30 hours minimum delay (hyper limit to Medusa orbit back out to WH), by offering tax incentives.
That kind of stuff does exist in today's world. In Brazil, industries setting up
in and around the city of Manaus (in the middle of the Amazon) pay less taxes and no import or export duties. It was created in the 1950s, but expanded in the late 60s and 70s by the military governments as a strategic defence solution by way of regional development.