Topic Actions

Topic Search

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 28 guests

GA response to SL attempts to prevent seccessions

Join us in talking discussing all things Honor, including (but not limited to) tactics, favorite characters, and book discussions.
Re: GA response to SL attempts to prevent seccessions
Post by PeterZ   » Mon Aug 14, 2017 7:01 pm

PeterZ
Fleet Admiral

Posts: 6432
Joined: Fri Apr 01, 2011 1:11 pm
Location: Colorado

I wonder what Captain Gweon told PUS I. Kolokoltsov the Manties real reason for their belligerence. That real reason and his strategy beyond commerce raiding? This from chapter 59 in Shadow of Victory.

“In the meantime,” Kolokoltsov continued, “one of Admiral Kingsford’s intelligence people, a Captain Gweon, has produced a very interesting analysis of the real reason Manticore and Haven were so determined to get Beowulf into their corner. It makes interesting reading, and I’d like you all to consider it between now and tomorrow.” He smiled thinly. “If Captain Gweon’s right, then it could just be that there’s a quicker alternative to Admiral Kingsford’s commerce raiding when it comes to bloody in the Manties’ nose.”

I suspect they mean to attack those systems in rebellion and awaiting Manty help. They won't get to many systems before the RMN deployed LACs and pods. More likely than not the SLN detachments get wiped out. They will end up destroying some resistance movements. Not many, but some.
Top
Re: GA response to SL attempts to prevent seccessions
Post by Jonathan_S   » Mon Aug 14, 2017 8:58 pm

Jonathan_S
Fleet Admiral

Posts: 8300
Joined: Fri Jun 24, 2011 2:01 pm
Location: Virginia, USA

cthia wrote:Yes, but the legality of a plebiscite is what I question. I thought it was simply to measure the feelings of the population. The plebiscite to determine whether Beowulf would secede was held in spite of the League, of which they are still a part, and was held on Beowulf.

I misunderstood the plebiscite as simply being a determination of the population of Beowulf as whether they wanted to go the next step. I didn't think the outcome of the plebiscite was anything more than the preliminaries. I was shocked to learn differently.

Remember that Beowulf was one of the founding planets of the.League. All of them were separate sovereign systems and all wanted to make sure that if this League thing didn't work out that they could leave.
That's why, like the European Union constitution the League constitution contains an explicit method for any member to withdraw.

RFC hasn't spelled out ine mechanical detail but clearly it must be something that can be exercised unilaterally - otherwise the independent planetary governments wouldn't have joined way back then as they'd be worried about being trapped by some collection of the others.

So while the plebiscite almost certainly isn't the whole mechanism once Beowulf sends formal notice there'd be no mechanism within the written constitution to deny or reject it.


Most of the planets OFS has been screwing over are still protectorate status or however else the League buerocracy can contrive to keep them from having the significant rights of a 'full' member.
Top
Re: GA response to SL attempts to prevent seccessions
Post by Robert_A_Woodward   » Tue Aug 15, 2017 1:12 am

Robert_A_Woodward
Captain of the List

Posts: 541
Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2015 10:29 pm

PeterZ wrote:I wonder what Captain Gweon told PUS I. Kolokoltsov the Manties real reason for their belligerence. That real reason and his strategy beyond commerce raiding? This from chapter 59 in Shadow of Victory.

“In the meantime,” Kolokoltsov continued, “one of Admiral Kingsford’s intelligence people, a Captain Gweon, has produced a very interesting analysis of the real reason Manticore and Haven were so determined to get Beowulf into their corner. It makes interesting reading, and I’d like you all to consider it between now and tomorrow.” He smiled thinly. “If Captain Gweon’s right, then it could just be that there’s a quicker alternative to Admiral Kingsford’s commerce raiding when it comes to bloody in the Manties’ nose.”
(snip)

The odds are high that the analysis is a fraud (after all, we know who Gweon really reports to). However, it occurs to me that Gweon or the Malign analysts that actually wrote the report might have realized that Beowulf could be making the high tech equipment that Manticore no longer can. In which case, this would give extra reason for a strike on Beowulf.
----------------------------
Beowulf was bad.
(first sentence of Chapter VI of _Space Viking_ by H. Beam Piper)
Top
Re: GA response to SL attempts to prevent seccessions
Post by lyonheart   » Tue Aug 15, 2017 3:15 am

lyonheart
Fleet Admiral

Posts: 4853
Joined: Tue Sep 08, 2009 11:27 pm

Hi Jonathan_S,

Quite right.

Obviously the SL was never intended to be the monster it became, it was intended to be a council of equals; remembering that Earth was in shambles, and the only interstellar communication was by small dispatch boats, NTM trade was extremely limited; expecting that condition to continue for some time, they made it the primary revenue for the league to keep it small, so it couldn't get big enough to threaten or intimidate any members.

Then another case of 'disruptive innovation' occurred, like the way Eli Whitney's cotton 'gin' destroyed the US constitutional expectation that slavery, being uneconomic, would die out in the early 19th century.

But when Adrienne Warshawski invented her gravity wave scanners and impeller hyper drive [alpha nodes] she also inadvertently ruined the premises on which the SL constitution had been kept small and limited.

Once huge amounts of money began flowing into the SL's coffers, it could not be kept small anymore; and while we don't know how quickly it grew in the 14th century [first full century after Warshawski's discoveries], the potential advantages were obvious to all those near and not members, whose quick membership diminished the influence of those relatively few original members far sooner than they had anticipated, before they could establish other restrictive means and traditions that could perpetuate their intended vision of a very limited alliance or confederation, not a very centralized powerful federation.

One wonders when they realized it was too late to save their original conception.

Given the five centuries of the OFS exploiting the current crop of protectorates rather than helping them as lawfully intended, among other things, one should ask what took any morally based star system so long to quit such an abomination.

Keeping the easy means of leaving probably acted as bait for many star systems, since they could always quickly leave with no league impediments or restrictions.

As usual, Cthia wasn't paying attention or thinking about the implications of the textev.

L


Jonathan_S wrote:
cthia wrote:Yes, but the legality of a plebiscite is what I question. I thought it was simply to measure the feelings of the population. The plebiscite to determine whether Beowulf would secede was held in spite of the League, of which they are still a part, and was held on Beowulf.

I misunderstood the plebiscite as simply being a determination of the population of Beowulf as whether they wanted to go the next step. I didn't think the outcome of the plebiscite was anything more than the preliminaries. I was shocked to learn differently.

Remember that Beowulf was one of the founding planets of the.League. All of them were separate sovereign systems and all wanted to make sure that if this League thing didn't work out that they could leave.
That's why, like the European Union constitution the League constitution contains an explicit method for any member to withdraw.

RFC hasn't spelled out ine mechanical detail but clearly it must be something that can be exercised unilaterally - otherwise the independent planetary governments wouldn't have joined way back then as they'd be worried about being trapped by some collection of the others.

So while the plebiscite almost certainly isn't the whole mechanism once Beowulf sends formal notice there'd be no mechanism within the written constitution to deny or reject it.


Most of the planets OFS has been screwing over are still protectorate status or however else the League buerocracy can contrive to keep them from having the significant rights of a 'full' member.
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
Top
Re: GA response to SL attempts to prevent seccessions
Post by lyonheart   » Tue Aug 15, 2017 4:16 am

lyonheart
Fleet Admiral

Posts: 4853
Joined: Tue Sep 08, 2009 11:27 pm

Hi PeterZ,

Until we get more snippets from RFC, we won't know for sure, but if I were a leader of a SL member contemplating leaving it, the 'mandarins' would be the last to find out.

That is, there should be GA TG's in system long before that particular piece of mail ever reached Sol or Kolokoltsov.

So I'm less worried about the recent ex-members than the MAlign protectorate suckers.

So far, we know only Loomis has failed, the other 5 have succeeded of the dozen or so the MAlign have set up, with Kondrati near Maya being the only other named so far.

PUS [I love that acronym!] I. Kolokoltsov stated his belief that the GA couldn't break up their grand fleet as easily as the SLN could send a TF to those former members, which is grossly in error.

Just one or two SDP's [from the GA's current roughly 1200] etc would be overkill for the two BF squadrons to be sent, but I expect the GA to send a larger force so suitable detachments can be quickly made to send to the neighbors of the original requester, when they also choose to quit and join them, now they're certain protection will be quickly provided.

The detached TG's should also include at least one CLAC and munition ship besides suitable escorts and or screen as previously discussed.

One would assume larger TF's at the wormholes, with at least a couple squadrons of SDP's and CLAC's etc standing by for such requests.

By the time the mandarins find out what happened to their first TF's, they may have also lost another hundred members as well.

But by then they'll have worse troubles closer to home. 8-)

L


PeterZ wrote:I wonder what Captain Gweon told PUS I. Kolokoltsov the Manties real reason for their belligerence. That real reason and his strategy beyond commerce raiding? This from chapter 59 in Shadow of Victory.

“In the meantime,” Kolokoltsov continued, “one of Admiral Kingsford’s intelligence people, a Captain Gweon, has produced a very interesting analysis of the real reason Manticore and Haven were so determined to get Beowulf into their corner. It makes interesting reading, and I’d like you all to consider it between now and tomorrow.” He smiled thinly. “If Captain Gweon’s right, then it could just be that there’s a quicker alternative to Admiral Kingsford’s commerce raiding when it comes to bloody in the Manties’ nose.”

I suspect they mean to attack those systems in rebellion and awaiting Manty help. They won't get to many systems before the RMN deployed LACs and pods. More likely than not the SLN detachments get wiped out. They will end up destroying some resistance movements. Not many, but some.
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
Top
Re: GA response to SL attempts to prevent seccessions
Post by cthia   » Tue Aug 15, 2017 4:55 am

cthia
Fleet Admiral

Posts: 14951
Joined: Thu Jan 23, 2014 1:10 pm

Enjoyed the post, right up until the last sentence where you absolutely could not resist taking another stab at me. Does it ever get old with you? Are you even capable of growing up? Do you really think that your ill manners is an embarrassment to me? Really? You do!?

As usual, Cthia wasn't paying attention or thinking about the implications of the textev.


It is cthia NOT Cthia. I purposely use all small letters to signify an ideal and NOT a name. Oh great parser of the implications of Weber textev. :roll:


lyonheart,

I have tried to get along with you. Yet every so often you see fit to get a wild hair up your bum. Every time you stick your head above water you peer through your periscope at me. Does it ever get tiresome? You are not frightening me, just annoying me.

In the secessions thread that you created, I attempted to inform you of the wrong choice of words in your title "succession" as opposed to "secession." I attempted to manage it as respectfully as possible. I even admitted to coming close to making the same mistake—an admittance tendered for the sole purpose of lessening any of your potential embarrassment. I even smiled when you seemed to accept it graciously and thanked me for it. And then I considerately refrained from pointing out that you corrected the choice of words but left it misspelled, as it is still misspelled in the title. But all and all I thought we had broken new ground and I also thought maybe, just perhaps... but then you later proceeded to call off an interesting conversation that had developed in the thread (playing moderator), and claiming that the discussion that had materialized "was growing tiresome for the rest of us."

What "rest of us?" "The rest of us" were participating in the discussion. The discussion saw input from every single participant. Even lyonheart himself. Yet you spoke for everyone, when everyone were part of the thread drift. It was interesting. Yet I dropped it as soon as you interrupted it, for the sake of peace. Didn't I?

I didn't mean to hijack your thread, if that is what you feel I did and is the essence and fuel of your new wild hair. I only saw a matter that I thought needed addressing, and did.

I attempt to participate in everyone's thread. I really hate leaving a thread dangling as someone created that thread wanting to discuss it. When I participate in threads, I try and do it peacefully and in a respectful manner. I even participated in your "Names for Space Stations thread" in a respectful manner. Yet you keep following me with silly, childish nonsense. I do wish the real Duckk, the real moderator, would please stand up. There seems to be several in the forum.

Now go on and tell me again how your disrespect, how your lack of manners is somehow my fault and not your own, how my failing to read the series fifty-leven times has given moral license to abandon common courtesy, decency and respect.

Perhaps Duckk should quickly move to place that requirement in the forum rules -- "Must be inhuman and can remember every single thing that you read, or must have read the series X number of times. And must not, absolutely not, have any opinions of your own, especially IF your member name is cthia. Eh? And you must not improperly digest, "misassimilate," or disagree with anyone in the forum, eh? And you cannot be human. One must be perfect as is lyonheart."

Anyway, the thread had faltered, as soon as you disrespected me. I noticed that disrespect seemed to have the effect of you shooting it in the foot. I think people are tired of your incessant childishness. Perhaps you give more credit than is merited to the fact that you may have met many of the members at HonorCons. That does not mean they share your ill manners or common lack of decency. It is that that people seem to grow tired of. Perhaps it is why this thread died a quick death after your disrespect??? You should consider ceasing embarrassing your friends.

This was an attempt to revive the thread. You are welcome, though your appreciation is absent.

Duckk, I really wish you would fix whatever the hell the problem/quirk is with the mechanism to place enemies on your foe list. It does not work properly. In my case, it does not "refuse to display" foes' posts when I am viewing as a guest. Simply when I log on. What good is the option in that case. It also will display the users post the first few times in either case. What good is the option? It does not work globally and it does not wholly work locally.

I'd really like that feature to work properly, seeing as though this rampant disrespect by a couple of members will not be moderated, unless it would have the effect of closing one of my threads, that is.

lyonheart, you will be permanently ignored. It is odd your ill manners, as you always begin your posts with a pleasant greeting "Hi." Reminds me of an old saying...




lyonheart wrote:Hi Jonathan_S,

Quite right.

Obviously the SL was never intended to be the monster it became, it was intended to be a council of equals; remembering that Earth was in shambles, and the only interstellar communication was by small dispatch boats, NTM trade was extremely limited; expecting that condition to continue for some time, they made it the primary revenue for the league to keep it small, so it couldn't get big enough to threaten or intimidate any members.

Then another case of 'disruptive innovation' occurred, like the way Eli Whitney's cotton 'gin' destroyed the US constitutional expectation that slavery, being uneconomic, would die out in the early 19th century.

But when Adrienne Warshawski invented her gravity wave scanners and impeller hyper drive [alpha nodes] she also inadvertently ruined the premises on which the SL constitution had been kept small and limited.

Once huge amounts of money began flowing into the SL's coffers, it could not be kept small anymore; and while we don't know how quickly it grew in the 14th century [first full century after Warshawski's discoveries], the potential advantages were obvious to all those near and not members, whose quick membership diminished the influence of those relatively few original members far sooner than they had anticipated, before they could establish other restrictive means and traditions that could perpetuate their intended vision of a very limited alliance or confederation, not a very centralized powerful federation.

One wonders when they realized it was too late to save their original conception.

Given the five centuries of the OFS exploiting the current crop of protectorates rather than helping them as lawfully intended, among other things, one should ask what took any morally based star system so long to quit such an abomination.

Keeping the easy means of leaving probably acted as bait for many star systems, since they could always quickly leave with no league impediments or restrictions.

As usual, Cthia wasn't paying attention or thinking about the implications of the textev.

L


cthia wrote:Yes, but the legality of a plebiscite is what I question. I thought it was simply to measure the feelings of the population. The plebiscite to determine whether Beowulf would secede was held in spite of the League, of which they are still a part, and was held on Beowulf.

I misunderstood the plebiscite as simply being a determination of the population of Beowulf as whether they wanted to go the next step. I didn't think the outcome of the plebiscite was anything more than the preliminaries. I was shocked to learn differently.
Jonathan_S wrote:Remember that Beowulf was one of the founding planets of the.League. All of them were separate sovereign systems and all wanted to make sure that if this League thing didn't work out that they could leave.
That's why, like the European Union constitution the League constitution contains an explicit method for any member to withdraw.

RFC hasn't spelled out ine mechanical detail but clearly it must be something that can be exercised unilaterally - otherwise the independent planetary governments wouldn't have joined way back then as they'd be worried about being trapped by some collection of the others.

So while the plebiscite almost certainly isn't the whole mechanism once Beowulf sends formal notice there'd be no mechanism within the written constitution to deny or reject it.


Most of the planets OFS has been screwing over are still protectorate status or however else the League buerocracy can contrive to keep them from having the significant rights of a 'full' member.

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
Top
Re: GA response to SL attempts to prevent secession's
Post by lyonheart   » Tue Aug 15, 2017 7:34 am

lyonheart
Fleet Admiral

Posts: 4853
Joined: Tue Sep 08, 2009 11:27 pm

Well Hi cthia,

And good morning to you too. :D

My apologies for again misspelling secession's, and woe is me for misspelling it twice [I thought I had deleted the second C, but my eyes are getting rather worse], though I wanted to avoid the apostrophe in the title. :oops:

I don't understand how you can claim I'm trying to frighten you [HOW?], albeit trying to stifle your silly ideas (though I was never a fan of All In The Family) when I think you're wrong, yes.

However, your lengthy bizarre vilification of me below reflects more on you as your previous presumptuous attacks did.

I am merely disagreeing with you and your apparent trolling from obvious wrong assumptions and premises, especially when I find it very disagreeable.

Am I allowed to disagree with you?

Can we have an honest truthful discussion?

What is the best way you feel I should correct one of your mistaken ideas or concepts?

Granted it may just be easier for you to post some silly idea at the forum than bothering to look in the books, even when you know its impossible, or silly to start with.

I capitalized Cthia as a attempted compliment as I do all posters, yet you are the only one to take umbrage. So be it.

I honestly appreciated your correction to my original post and said so very honestly and courteously, leaving only my original textev error so people could still understand your post.

I thought that was the courteous thing to do, to keep your post meaningful, not obsolete, but take it how you will, though I must thank your extra effort to help me finally get it right.

Hurrah! :D

Yes, I too thought we'd broken new ground in our distant arcane relationship. 8-)

I'm sorry and surprised you felt I was trying to act as the moderator in shutting down the quandary over the TQ's poor basic education, [the idea of attempting to moderate boggles my mind] but you and PeterZ had gone round and round, and other posters had felt it wasn't progressing either.

Now I was indeed excited by all the great posts and wanted to add my own enthusiasm.

I'm sorry you took it so awry to think I thought I could speak for all the other posters, when I can only express my own opinion, I've never tried or claimed to speak for others.

I've only attended the first Honor-con, so how did you get the impression I try to somehow lord it over others?

I was amazed that particular thread drift did stop, so I thank you again for that, since from our past experience thread drift never has stopped in the past, despite however many remarks by all and sundry etc. :)

How can I be so inhuman as you claim when I'm so obviously a flawed human as to annoy you so easily?

You seem far more agitated by a few critical words than I would think someone of your apparent accomplishments would or should be, so I'm curious how your beautiful wife and brilliant niece point out any of your all too human mistakes or frailties.

Although I have no intention of pleasing Rose by having us become one of her 'couples', I'll try to ignore or overlook your silly jabber the way Steph learned to do with Andrew [chapter 29, CoG], who you remember, was a genius in his very special area of expertise, so I'll pay very polite attention when you broach something you know a lot about.

But don't expect me to ignore all of your silly jabber. ;)

L


quote="cthia"Enjoyed the post, right up until the last sentence where you absolutely could not resist taking another stab at me. Does it ever get old with you? Are you even capable of growing up? Do you really think that your ill manners is an embarrassment to me? Really? You do!?

quote As usual, Cthia wasn't paying attention or thinking about the implications of the textev. quote

It is cthia NOT Cthia. I purposely use all small letters to signify an ideal and NOT a name. Oh great parser of the implications of Weber textev. :roll:


lyonheart,

I have tried to get along with you. Yet every so often you see fit to get a wild hair up your bum. Every time you stick your head above water you peer through your periscope at me. Does it ever get tiresome? You are not frightening me, just annoying me.

In the secessions thread that you created, I attempted to inform you of the wrong choice of words in your title "succession" as opposed to "secession." I attempted to manage it as respectfully as possible. I even admitted to coming close to making the same mistake—an admittance tendered for the sole purpose of lessening any of your potential embarrassment. I even smiled when you seemed to accept it graciously and thanked me for it. And then I considerately refrained from pointing out that you corrected the choice of words but left it misspelled, as it is still misspelled in the title. But all and all I thought we had broken new ground and I also thought maybe, just perhaps... but then you later proceeded to call off an interesting conversation that had developed in the thread (playing moderator), and claiming that the discussion that had materialized "was growing tiresome for the rest of us."

What "rest of us?" "The rest of us" were participating in the discussion. The discussion saw input from every single participant. Even lyonheart himself. Yet you spoke for everyone, when everyone were part of the thread drift. It was interesting. Yet I dropped it as soon as you interrupted it, for the sake of peace. Didn't I?

I didn't mean to hijack your thread, if that is what you feel I did and is the essence and fuel of your new wild hair. I only saw a matter that I thought needed addressing, and did.

I attempt to participate in everyone's thread. I really hate leaving a thread dangling as someone created that thread wanting to discuss it. When I participate in threads, I try and do it peacefully and in a respectful manner. I even participated in your "Names for Space Stations thread" in a respectful manner. Yet you keep following me with silly, childish nonsense. I do wish the real Duckk, the real moderator, would please stand up. There seems to be several in the forum.

Now go on and tell me again how your disrespect, how your lack of manners is somehow my fault and not your own, how my failing to read the series fifty-leven times has given moral license to abandon common courtesy, decency and respect.

Perhaps Duckk should quickly move to place that requirement in the forum rules -- "Must be inhuman and can remember every single thing that you read, or must have read the series X number of times. And must not, absolutely not, have any opinions of your own, especially IF your member name is cthia. Eh? And you must not improperly digest, "misassimilate," or disagree with anyone in the forum, eh? And you cannot be human. One must be perfect as is lyonheart."

Anyway, the thread had faltered, as soon as you disrespected me. I noticed that disrespect seemed to have the effect of you shooting it in the foot. I think people are tired of your incessant childishness. Perhaps you give more credit than is merited to the fact that you may have met many of the members at HonorCons. That does not mean they share your ill manners or common lack of decency. It is that that people seem to grow tired of. Perhaps it is why this thread died a quick death after your disrespect??? You should consider ceasing embarrassing your friends.

This was an attempt to revive the thread. You are welcome, though your appreciation is absent.

Duckk, I really wish you would fix whatever the hell the problem/quirk is with the mechanism to place enemies on your foe list. It does not work properly. In my case, it does not "refuse to display" foes' posts when I am viewing as a guest. Simply when I log on. What good is the option in that case. It also will display the users post the first few times in either case. What good is the option? It does not work globally and it does not wholly work locally.

I'd really like that feature to work properly, seeing as though this rampant disrespect by a couple of members will not be moderated, unless it would have the effect of closing one of my threads, that is.

lyonheart, you will be permanently ignored. It is odd your ill manners, as you always begin your posts with a pleasant greeting "Hi." Reminds me of an old saying...




lyonheart wrote:Hi Jonathan_S,

Quite right.

Obviously the SL was never intended to be the monster it became, it was intended to be a council of equals; remembering that Earth was in shambles, and the only interstellar communication was by small dispatch boats, NTM trade was extremely limited; expecting that condition to continue for some time, they made it the primary revenue for the league to keep it small, so it couldn't get big enough to threaten or intimidate any members.

Then another case of 'disruptive innovation' occurred, like the way Eli Whitney's cotton 'gin' destroyed the US constitutional expectation that slavery, being uneconomic, would die out in the early 19th century.

But when Adrienne Warshawski invented her gravity wave scanners and impeller hyper drive [alpha nodes] she also inadvertently ruined the premises on which the SL constitution had been kept small and limited.

Once huge amounts of money began flowing into the SL's coffers, it could not be kept small anymore; and while we don't know how quickly it grew in the 14th century [first full century after Warshawski's discoveries], the potential advantages were obvious to all those near and not members, whose quick membership diminished the influence of those relatively few original members far sooner than they had anticipated, before they could establish other restrictive means and traditions that could perpetuate their intended vision of a very limited alliance or confederation, not a very centralized powerful federation.

One wonders when they realized it was too late to save their original conception.

Given the five centuries of the OFS exploiting the current crop of protectorates rather than helping them as lawfully intended, among other things, one should ask what took any morally based star system so long to quit such an abomination.

Keeping the easy means of leaving probably acted as bait for many star systems, since they could always quickly leave with no league impediments or restrictions.

As usual, Cthia wasn't paying attention or thinking about the implications of the textev.

L


quote="cthia"
Yes, but the legality of a plebiscite is what I question. I thought it was simply to measure the feelings of the population. The plebiscite to determine whether Beowulf would secede was held in spite of the League, of which they are still a part, and was held on Beowulf.

I misunderstood the plebiscite as simply being a determination of the population of Beowulf as whether they wanted to go the next step. I didn't think the outcome of the plebiscite was anything more than the preliminaries. I was shocked to learn differently.quote
Jonathan_S wrote:Remember that Beowulf was one of the founding planets of the.League. All of them were separate sovereign systems and all wanted to make sure that if this League thing didn't work out that they could leave.
That's why, like the European Union constitution the League constitution contains an explicit method for any member to withdraw.

RFC hasn't spelled out ine mechanical detail but clearly it must be something that can be exercised unilaterally - otherwise the independent planetary governments wouldn't have joined way back then as they'd be worried about being trapped by some collection of the others.

So while the plebiscite almost certainly isn't the whole mechanism once Beowulf sends formal notice there'd be no mechanism within the written constitution to deny or reject it.


Most of the planets OFS has been screwing over are still protectorate status or however else the League buerocracy can contrive to keep them from having the significant rights of a 'full' member.quote
quote
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
Top
Re: GA response to SL attempts to prevent secession's
Post by ldwechsler   » Tue Aug 15, 2017 9:34 am

ldwechsler
Rear Admiral

Posts: 1235
Joined: Sun May 28, 2017 12:15 pm

[quote="lyonheart"]Well Hi cthia,

And good morning to you too. :D

My apologies for again misspelling secession's, and woe is me for misspelling it twice [I thought I had deleted the second C, but my eyes are getting rather worse], though I wanted to avoid the apostrophe in the title. :oops:

Why don't we all give peace a chance?

Yes, we can disagree on minor points about secession in a fictional galaxy from the distant future, but we all worship at the feet of the great chaser of the magic veggie.

As for allowing secession, you have to remember that it is allowed if the people involved can get away with it.

Look at Earth and Europe. England gave Scotland the opportunity to vote on secession. And it failed. Catalonia took a vote on independence and Spain refused to acknowledge it. Since the Catalans are not stupid enough to raise an army, things will not change much.

Things are like that in the Solarian League. Those planets that wnat to secede and can secede probably will secede. Since the Mandarins have no plan to leave and they have no plans for peaceful succession of their power (just HAD to get that word in), they will oppose it as much as they can in ways that they hope will not cause them to lose even more power.

My guess is, since there is only one more book, that things will collapse somewhat and there will be an armistice of sorts.
Top
Re: GA response to SL attempts to prevent seccessions
Post by Jonathan_S   » Tue Aug 15, 2017 10:00 am

Jonathan_S
Fleet Admiral

Posts: 8300
Joined: Fri Jun 24, 2011 2:01 pm
Location: Virginia, USA

lyonheart wrote:Then another case of 'disruptive innovation' occurred, like the way Eli Whitney's cotton 'gin' destroyed the US constitutional expectation that slavery, being uneconomic, would die out in the early 19th century.

But when Adrienne Warshawski invented her gravity wave scanners and impeller hyper drive [alpha nodes] she also inadvertently ruined the premises on which the SL constitution had been kept small and limited.
[snip]
Keeping the easy means of leaving probably acted as bait for many star systems, since they could always quickly leave with no league impediments or restrictions.
Hi lyonheart,
I like this categorizing improved hyper travel technology as a disruptive innovation that screwed up the League's base assumptions.

However I think there's more in play with the secession clause than just leaving it as bait for new members; though that might have been a side benefit.
I suspect that they effectively couldn't have removed it from the written constitution. I have to imagine that a constitutional amendment would be subject to the same veto powers as lesser laws in the League and there's no way 100% of the members delegations will accept the loss of sovereignty involved in removing their right to leave (no matter how likely that right is to be invoked)

For that matter simply bringing the concept of removing it up for discussion and a vote might do the exact opposite of what the Mandarins would want and encourage systems to at least think about and start discussing leaving.


It's much easier to leave it as written and, like much of their constitution, simply ignore it to focus on how the system has evolved into actually working.
Top
Re: GA response to SL attempts to prevent seccessions
Post by PeterZ   » Tue Aug 15, 2017 10:04 am

PeterZ
Fleet Admiral

Posts: 6432
Joined: Fri Apr 01, 2011 1:11 pm
Location: Colorado

Robert_A_Woodward wrote:
PeterZ wrote:I wonder what Captain Gweon told PUS I. Kolokoltsov the Manties real reason for their belligerence. That real reason and his strategy beyond commerce raiding? This from chapter 59 in Shadow of Victory.

“In the meantime,” Kolokoltsov continued, “one of Admiral Kingsford’s intelligence people, a Captain Gweon, has produced a very interesting analysis of the real reason Manticore and Haven were so determined to get Beowulf into their corner. It makes interesting reading, and I’d like you all to consider it between now and tomorrow.” He smiled thinly. “If Captain Gweon’s right, then it could just be that there’s a quicker alternative to Admiral Kingsford’s commerce raiding when it comes to bloody in the Manties’ nose.”
(snip)

The odds are high that the analysis is a fraud (after all, we know who Gweon really reports to). However, it occurs to me that Gweon or the Malign analysts that actually wrote the report might have realized that Beowulf could be making the high tech equipment that Manticore no longer can. In which case, this would give extra reason for a strike on Beowulf.


We know that the move against Beowulf was not driven a strategy to hurt Manticore but one to prevent the secession of league member worlds. This tactic sounds like a novel tactic the MAlign wants to implement.

The only strategy the MAlign would foster would be one that furthers their plan. Sending SLN to member worlds would further reduce trust in the League by member systems and set up the Renaissance Factor nicely. Attacking independent Verge worlds would do the same and would be more likely to succeed. Neither option has a snowball's chance of seriously harming the SEM. But may cause enough collateral damage to the target systems that there may be a general pox upon both your houses manifesting in the galaxy. That would limit the size of the future Manticore Alliance/Grand Alliance/ Alliance of Nations. This would then make the RF a much more viable alternative to any SL successor and Haven Sector Alliance.
Top

Return to Honorverse