cthia wrote:I'm stuck in
Cauldron of Ghosts. And the more I read of Mesa, the less I understand it.
There is only a 30% prime population. The other 70% is comprised of slaves and seccies. If ever I've seen a situation primed and ripe for a "government" overthrow. And the economy, so far, is puzzling.
Why there isn't mass political unrest on that planet is beyond me. There's a real need for an Honorverse equivalent of MOSES. "Let my people go."
Will Manticore honor a submission from 70% of the planet for humanitarian relief?
Cauldron of GhostsMesan authorities had no hesitation when it came to using the death penalty as a means of disciplining the population. Lajos wasn’t sure of the exact number, but there’d be at least half a dozen people being executed every month.
R-E-V-O-L-T-!
Is that what Mike&Mesa is all about? I'm still reading.
Afterthought:
Mesa used to be the headquarters of the MAlign for a very long time. It's inconceivable that there isn't more than a few individuals still on planet that doesn't have viable information regarding the Onion. Residual, incidental information. Onions reek. Command the high orbitals and go door to door with the Manticoran Inquisition - treecat led!
Perhaps you can't squeeze blood out of a turnip. But I bet treecats can cut the truth out of an onion. With tears.
The Mesan society is structured similarly to that of ancient India, but with only 3 classes. The top are the regular humans. The second are the descendants of freed genetic slaves that managed to acquire citizenship before that option was taken away,and the rest are slaves and other "native" non-citizens.
All the more sophisticated weaponry is in the hands of the upper class - including warships and kinetic bombardment platforms.
There is basically no political influence by anything other than the upper class; so "political unrest" really cannot exist; at least not in the normally understood meaning of the term. After all, a stampede of cattle trying to get away from a slaughterhouse isn't "political unrest" in the eyes of the slaughterhouse management, is it?
That may seem harsh, but the "normal" humans on Mesa don't see genetic slaves, or, for that matter, even freed descendants, as really human rather than just as property (in the case of slaves) or some sort of "sub-sapien" (in the case of freed descendants).
Sure, in theory the lower classes could "rise up"; but, realistically, their chances of success would be small enough to be virtually non-existent. No matter how many upper class they kill or capture on the ground, there's no way to effectively oppose orbital bombardment in retaliation.
And, frankly, if things ever got that far, the "normal" Mesans don't really *need* slaves. Mesa is a technological society. It also was colonized from a technological society (Beowulf). They could use automation, instead, that would, actually, be *less* expensive overall. I suspect the only *real* reason they exist at all was as a cover for the genetic experimentation the Alignment was engaging in.
True, Manpower bred and sold them in large lots (as well as individually as "pleasure toys"); but realistically slavery only works even semi-efficiently in low tech, mostly agrarian, settings.