solbergb wrote:DrakBibliophile wrote:As for the anti-white collar bias, well he has little good to say about corporation CEO's which does reflect his experience with working with labor unions.
Are you guys reading the same 1632 series I am?
He's got a CEO as head of the navy. The CEO wasn't a "good guy" in the first book but they realized they needed his organizational and military experience by 1633 and he (and his society wife) were major players by 1634. The townsfolk were suspicious of this visiting urban rich carpetbagger (he was there for a wedding) but once both sides got over their initial distrust he was far too experienced and his unique skillset and background were just too useful to leave him marginalized.
He's also got as a major subplot stock market shenanigans instigated by youthful Americans, including the darker side of getting greedy with that. Indeed much of the reason innovation is going on is that the uptimers introduced the concept of incorporation and venture capital on a wide scale, partly to break the guilds.
Doctors and teachers and heck, anyone with some education are highly valued, both "uptime" trained and "downtime" (the guys with practical experience of things like plague, merchant cartels, politics and such). As are administrators and accountants of all stripes. The clergy (both uptime and downtime) also get sympathetic treatment.
What are the white collar values being stomped on here? I see education and innovation as the key to individual success in the 1632verse, although it has to be backed by a political and military security that in the 21st century they could take for granted.
Just because he ALSO has been trying to break down class barriers and introduce the concept of fair wages for less educated workers to the 17th century and has some wild eyed faux-communist revolutionaries serving fast-food and the local union boss became the transplated town's first "president" doesn't mean he's presenting a one-sided world here.
Um. Okay, politics. Cheez.
First off, I am definitely right of center (though not so far right --- by US standards, at least --- as some people believe) and a Methodist layspeaker, which probably gives you a pretty good feel for where I'm coming from on a personal basis.
Second, I'm fine with anyone's politics as long as that person actually thinks about his/her position instead of operating on (a) inherited knee-jerk ideology; (b) emotional insistence on the way "things have to/can be" which ignores pragmatic constraints (more below); (c) a refusal to permit opposing viewpoints to be heard in their own words equally with one's own; (d) an automatic refusal to listen to a potentially (or even absolutely) opposing viewpoint with at least a marginal willingness to consider that one might actually, I don't know, learn something in the process; and (e) the understanding that it is perfectly possible for someone to be wrong without being dishonest, lying, paranoid, part of a conspiracy, or evil.
To expand slightly on that "things have to be/can be" point, I think it's vital for anyone to have a belief that lives and societies can be improved (and to have a notion of how to go about doing it) and also for them to have a belief that there are worthwhile aspects of lives and societies which need to be preserved and cherished. But it's equally important --- possibly even more important --- to have a pragmatic sense of these things. For those advocating change, that means an ability to recognize the limitations of the fiscal, physical, and ideological resources available to them. What can be paid for, what can be physically accomplished even if you have all the money at the world (and what is competing for those resources), and how far can you realistically carry political and ideological support for what you want to accomplish. For those advocating preservation, that means recognizing when preservation for preservation's sake becomes destructive of lives and happiness, recognizing that as societies grow and change, new problems (or new wrinkles on old ones) arise, as do new groups of actors whose interests are just as legitimate and vital as the society's original stakeholders. And those preservationists had better understand that they are going to have to find ways of addressing those new problems and those new groups that are just and equittable.
I think it's probably fairly clear from my books that my primary emphasis is on responsibility taking. In being involved and contending for your beliefs, whichever side of the spectrum may be more comfortable to you. And my view is also that the imposition of one's views on someone who does not share them is usually a bad thing. Note that I did say "usually," however, because I don't have any problem with "imposing my views" (or those of my society, at least) on anyone who practices thing like honor killings, enslaves his fellow men and women (I'm thinking here about the pre-1860 US, guys, not any particular contemporary group! [G]), denies any group of human beings the same rights and liberties he claims for himself, or would impose his views on me or mine. In other words, I am more of an absolutist than a relativist when it comes to culture and morality and, as a child of classic Western philosophy, I have a deep and abiding belief in the individuality of human beings which leads to a personal abhorence for anyone or any philosophy which would submerge or ruthlessly subordinate the individual and the individual's rights.
The only thing I abhore more than someone who will ruthlessly crush the individual and all dissent in the name of a truly held ideology or religion is someone who will use an ideology or a religion as a vehicle to power for power's sake or out of raw personal ambition instead of acting out of genuine (if destructive) belief. I suspect the true zealot is more dangerous in the long run, but at least I can respect his honesty, and it's the self-server who gnaws away at the foundations of any society's true strength, thus weakening it for a right-wing man on a horse or a left-wing revolutionary because the existing system has become too rotten and damaged to survive.
Interestingly enough, Eric and I are pretty much alike in that regard and I am proud to have him as a friend as well as a collaborator. There have been a few times we've found ourselved, ah, warmly debating a point (especially when it might pertain to foreign policy, I fear), but by and large we are in general agreement on most everything except the future of capitalism. Which, after all, is a relatively minor point, right? [G] I think it is true that Eric sees society from the bottom up, whereas I'm more comfortable than he is with characters looking from the top down. I would point out, however, that most of my characters who end up at the top didn't start there, and that the abuse of inherited or unearned power, privilege, and/or wealth is a fertile source for the villains in my books.
I think Eric tends to see his "good guys" as validated by their lower-class, proletarian origins and their willingness to take the fight to entrenched bastions of power and privilege in favor of a society in which personal freedoms, economic opportunity, and the benefits of society --- education, medicine, personal liberty, material wellbeing and comfort etc. --- are as broadly distributed as possible. That, after all, is the "Stearns Platform" (and strategy for victory) in the 1632 universe in a nutshell. (For that matter, it's a big part of the "Merlin Platform" in the Safehold books, when you come down to it.) Actually, now that I think about it, there's also a "sub-class" of Eric's good guys who are members of the elite who have thrown their allegiance to the proletarian struggle (and been validated thereby), although Eric is far too good a writer to cause most of them to do this for purely selfless reasons. His treatment of Gustavus Adolphus (and, for that matter, the Infante in the Low Country) is a case in point . . . and a very good one, too, I might add! [G] His treatment of Bellisarius in his collaborations with David Drake could be seen as another example of this, but I actually think Bellisarius (who, by the way, I love as a character) is more similar to one of my "climbing to power" characters than Gustavus is.
I tend to see my "good guys" as validated by their belief in human dignity and freedom and by their willingness to lay themselves and their lives on the line in the protection of societies which provide those same things Eric's characters are striving to secure for their members. Our characters' perspectives and points of origin differ; the destination and the values for which they contend are very much the same. We have somewhat different views of exactly how those values may be best effectuated in the destination society we finally reach, but I suspect either of us would be able to settle into the other guy's destination quite comfortably once we got there. We both have personal life experiences which have formed and shaped our beliefs in what that society will be like and how we'll get there, but both of us (I think) agree on what must be (as opposed to "ought to be") preserved along the way.
This is longer than I meant to go, but I'll finish by adding one thing. John Simpson Chandler is "my" character just as Victor Cachat is Eric's. I asked him if I could "rehabilitate" John when we wrote 1633, and Eric was fine with the idea. In fact, I think he rather likes John these days, which he darned well didn't when he first created him! [G] And Eric created Victor for the Honorverse to give us a sympathetic radical up-from-below Peep character . . . who I've grown to like very much. I was also grateful to Eric for Cathy Montaigne, who provided me exactly the "hook" character I wanted for the Liberal Party I intended to build to replace New Kiev's in the SKM. She's a little more radical (not a lot, but definitely a little) than what I had in mind because I expected the fiery abolitionism of the Liberal Party I intended to create to emerge only after Manticore discovered the existence of the Mesan Alignment. I wanted a general hostility to interstellar slavery, but I hadn't really considered a character with that laser-focus on the issue from the get-go. Having said that, I think she actually works far better as a character because of that radical element, and her views on the other issues confronting the SKM/SEM are veru much what I wanted all along. In fact, Simpson, Victor, and Cathy are three of the best examples I can think of of what happens when a collaboration goes right, instead of wrong.