cthia wrote:My father taught me to think outside the box where life really is. Grayson is somewhat outside the box. Religion puts them there. Oftentimes Grayson's reactions will depend on their religious beliefs, and forming a psychological profile on Grayson simply cannot be done without an understanding of their inner core. Which is devoutly religious in nature. This is the most important fact that eluded Houseman.
It's not that it 'eluded' Houseman, he straight out didn't even TRY to understand the Graysons. He was up on his soapbox, looking down on all Graysons and expecting them to automatically listen simply because he opened his mouth.
He's described in the same book as being an "Ivory Tower intellectual" due to his being a graduate of Mannheim University which was nicknamed "Socialist U" for its graduates' tendency toward ivory-tower intellectualism and supporting liberal views. There's clear evidence he dismissed literally everything about his briefings about them before he ever even spoke to one based on his attitudes and words in that final briefing/dinner aboard Fearless.
And that's unfortunately becoming an ever greater problem these days. More and more people are in ivory towers, thinking they know things, making statements that have precious little to do with reality, and expecting their words to become reality simply because they said so. Then get angry with anything that is not 100% total agreement, or simply have a different view on 'how' to do/fix whatever you're discussing, let alone if dare you poke holes in their 'logic' to point out flaws.
Which is also exactly what happened to Houseman, he was on his soapbox to the Graysons about the 'nobility' of peacefully giving money to a would-be Conquistador, and not breaking your bank to build up
any fleet even for purely defense reasons. And then he got all sulky later when Courvosier figuratively drove his face into a document to explain the various reasons why Grayson is bankrupting itself for even a hope at defending itself. IIRC it was even pointed out the similarities between Masada/Grayson with Haven/Manticore which ol'Reggie conveniently forgot later during the High Ridge cease-fire.
It's truly a shame that
somehow Reginald's actions as Second Lord of the Admiralty weren't deemed as actually illegal and he was permitted to retire into academia and become a lecturer at Mannheim. He
knowingly cooked the books to produce the specific results that High Ridge wanted during the early days of the ceasefire, and he knowingly
failed to properly advise about minor details including things like the lead-up time to resuming construction. Most of the Cabinet were surprised that simply authorizing construction at Grendelsbane did not actually mean that construction would resume the minute the order arrived but it would take several weeks.