cthia wrote:Regeneration seems to be an untapped field. Limbs and body parts can be regrown, and the MA has the ability to clone, along with their unprecedented ability in the area of genetic research.
Now, Alfred Harrington supposedly did a lot of testing and research on Nimitz trying to honor his promise to Honor to fix Nimitz. Suppose that data got back to the MA, along with ample samples of Cat DNA. Do you doubt what they might be able to do?
Regeneration + cloning + genetic research = homegrown treecat
We don't even know if Alfred's work bore fruit. It's been over a decade and there's been no mention of Nimitz regaining his voice.
That's however not the issue. Alfred did study him, so the data exists and whether the research achieved the goal he set out for is irrelevant. But of all the unadopted humans in the Galaxy, Alfred is the one least likely to make mistakes when it comes to treecats, and that includes taking care of his data. It's probably guarded with a higher secrecy than even the Apollo FTL link, if for no other reason than the team that had access to the data was smaller and there was no manufacturing involved. The MAlign can probably have better hope of convincing a treecat clan to emigrate voluntarily than to get their hands on Alfred's data.
Then there's the issue Brigade brought up: culture. Cloned humans are still in a human society; a cloned treecat is not. The MAlign could have the DNA and clone one, but be unable to predict just how societal treecats behave. Think of an analogy of humans: if we weren't taught to stand up and walk on two legs, wouldn't feral humans simply continue to use hands and feet? Maybe not all the time, but far more frequently than adult humans do, which is practically never. Would a feral human have developed the dexterity to hold a weapon? In the treecat's case, would a feral treecat have known to sheathe their claws? Because if they don't, then the MAlign wouldn't know how to program the muscle memory to unsheathe them in first place before the attack.
Then there's the whole communication and cognition issue. We've just discussed that the nanites must do quite a lot of information processing in order to determine that the trigger conditions have been met. This must have been done by tapping into the signals coming into the brain (unless you suppose that the nanites are literally skin-deep and have formed sensory organs of their own), but this requires training them on a subject that will confirm that they are indeed seeing the conditions. The signal pathways on treecats would be totally different, so they need the treecat subject to confirm what they're seeing / sensing. It's not enough to show a picture; babies know that a picture of someone is not that someone, and you obviously can't bring the target into the training facility.
Even if all of this could be overcome somehow, I don't think it would work. There's rarely a situation where high value targets are in the presence of a single treecat (unless it's their own bodyguard). Treecats can sense the onset of the manipulation on humans; it stands to reason they could even more easily on treecats, possibly sufficiently earlier to neutralise the mind-controlled treecat.