11-22-2011, 12:43 AM | #171 | |
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Re: 'Imperial Culture' (non-canonista)
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Moreover the TC didn't exist until after the Vilani were a clear threat.
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11-22-2011, 01:02 AM | #172 | |
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Re: 'Imperial Culture' (non-canonista)
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I didn't write that the TC encouraged war before the wars began, only that it made political hay from fear of the Vilani. The TC justified its control of Earth and the colonies by the use of fear-mongering, hatred directed at 'The Other', and other tried and true methods of government. In the beginning, it encouraged people to accept its decisions on the basis of 'homeworld security.' As Confederate forces pushed deeper into the Ziru Sirka and seized more and more worlds, the propagandists began to talk about 'the high destiny of Terran civilization' , 'universal human rights' and 'liberating the peoples now oppressed by the Vilani Empire.' Those in power reaped vast material and political benefits from the wars, of course. Governments during wartime are often able to enact 'emregency measures'- and when the war never really ends, neither do the extra powers claimed by the state. As important as any territorial gains were the internal shifts in power that made the TC supreme over the old nation states, kept colonies in line, and enriched the Confederation elite. Your second point only reinforces my thinking on this. Without the Ziru Sirka, the TC would not even exist. It needed the Great Satan, the Enemy at the Gate, or it would lose its power. When the Vilani were finally conquered, that actually happened. Of course, this is all speculative historiography, at least as much as Word of GM. There's more than one way to look at things, IMTU. I'm just giving my own personal interpretation. YMMV Last edited by combatmedic; 11-22-2011 at 01:23 AM. |
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11-22-2011, 01:47 AM | #173 |
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Re: 'Imperial Culture' (non-canonista)
It's plausible at least in part. I think the simplest answer to why the ISW went on is simply that there were no balancing powers and the motive for war was stronger then that for peace. During the Vilani initiative, war didn't cost the Vilani all that much. During the Terran initiative, it would have been quite easily argued that as even if they made peace their would be another round they might as well get as much advantage while they were winning. If they make a cease-fire they leave an undestroyed fleet or an unconquered naval base for the next generation. With only two powers in the area, war was inevitable as long as there was no obvious stalemate.
Also it's not as if it was just the government's manipulations. It was after all a good job and the Vilani incompetence at war made it more safe then it might have been. Once that was done pocketing ones retirement benefits and setting up on ones own with a few likely lads was a good deal.
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"The navy could probably win a war without coffee but would prefer not to try"-Samuel Eliot Morrison Last edited by jason taylor; 11-22-2011 at 01:52 AM. |
11-22-2011, 01:51 AM | #174 | |
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Re: 'Imperial Culture' (non-canonista)
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11-22-2011, 07:08 AM | #175 |
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Re: 'Imperial Culture' (non-canonista)
Nor was I. I was useing a very limited frame of refference to say that an Empire, which has a very religious populace, could have a secular governing elite. The original arguement was about China. The USA has never been an Empire (we won't argue that point), but it has been a highly religious society with a secular government. And you will note the reference to Roman attitudes to religion in one of my posts.
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11-22-2011, 12:42 PM | #176 | |
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Re: 'Imperial Culture' (non-canonista)
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I doubt every single Terran who was part of The Government(which, given the draft and the Military Diaspora caused by the war was really most Terrans) was thinking in those terms. Perhaps a FACTION of the government was; in fact probably. But that is different. Or to be closer to home, I am a library volunteer. Therefore I am a part of "The government." However if you say "The government cares about nothing except it's own power and ability to exploit", I would beg leave to point out that I am rather disappointed in being exempted from all that wonderful power. Also much of the Terran conquest ran on inertia like most famous conquests. There seems to be times when the TC government would actually have preferred to halt it, but it just wasn't. The Free Traders for instance were often in defiance of the TC. To say the government had ulterior motives in spreading propaganda is a truism; everyone has ulterior motives for everything they do. However the idea that the government in general were consciously acting cynically against their own actual beliefs is unlikely. Some might have been doing so. Certainly they exagerrated how evil the Vilani were; they were no worse then a typical Terran hydraulic despotism. However they were right that the Vilani were a great threat. Moreover to say that the anti-vilani propaganda comes from the government ignores the fact that most of it probably came from private sources acting on their own and the fact that their would have been times when the Terran Government(or rather key members of it) would have wished to downplay the threat.
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11-22-2011, 08:29 PM | #177 |
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Re: 'Imperial Culture' (non-canonista)
Saying "We can't but you can" is no protection to the people, only the member states. It's worse than no protections at all for many of the people.
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11-22-2011, 08:36 PM | #178 | |
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Re: 'Imperial Culture' (non-canonista)
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11-22-2011, 08:42 PM | #179 | |
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Re: 'Imperial Culture' (non-canonista)
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Oh, and it's no fair to make bold claims, like 'the US has never been an empire' and then forbid anyone to challenge said claims. Either make statements you can defend, or don't make them. :) I'm going to ask again- can we please move the non-Traveller stuff to PMs? I'm perfectly happy to discuss imperialism, secularism, federalism, militarism, and Astromancerism in a more appropriate venue. I'm offering you that venue; let's talk about this stuff in PMs. Last edited by combatmedic; 11-22-2011 at 09:16 PM. |
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11-22-2011, 09:36 PM | #180 | |
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Re: 'Imperial Culture' (non-canonista)
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Alternatively you can posit that this only refers to the topmost levels of The Government. For two hundred years.
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