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... you're on a Chaos March world that has been rocked by civil wars, political stalemate, famine and disease for close to 10 years. And then the Wob arrive - would you throw in with them?
I'd be inclined to say yes. I mean, in hindsight you know they're freaking crazy and will start the Jihad shortly but, think about what they're offering:
- the chance and the ability to re-unify the planet under a single, functional government
- access to education and medical software, training, facilities, staff, etc
- security in the form of a Level III of mechs and armor or so and they actively want to help you set up an on-world militia
- money! Soldier and staff on leave spend money at bars, clubs, hotels, restaurants, etc and that stimulates the economy. Imagine them doing so on your world.
Not only that, but some of those troops and staffmembers are going to settle on your world and they'll bring their dependants.
Not a bad thing for a planet that may have been heavily depopulated by a decade of infighting.
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What it boils down to is this: who you going to trust, a bunch of mercs who are governed by self-interest and the horrid status quo of war... or a wealthy order that is interested in building and developing your world up, gets you access to Terra and the best schools available for your kids (thats including NAIS) and the only governing body that has managed to keep it's charges, Terra and Gibson, out of the genocidal hands of warring successor lords?
Even in hindsight and knowing the WoB for what it is, in the 3060s as a Chaos citizen or noble I'd still have supported Blake... and I'm a freedom loving, star league hating periphery rat to boot!
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Focht's puppet ComStar may wish otherwise, but Blane was intelligent in who he chose and how they made their cases.
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Impersonating another command is hardly uncommon, and major militaries aren't exactly known for standards of honor. That said, the whole operation on Terra probably wasn't as openly reported on interstellar news as the birds-eye view of it we have.
Blatantly expansionist agenda... helping the worlds that by and large welcomed them in or that they saved from (in and OOC) the brutal oppression they were living under?
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Impersonating another command is hardly uncommon, and major militaries aren't exactly known for standards of honor. That said, the whole operation on Terra probably wasn't as openly reported on interstellar news as the birds-eye view of it we have.
Blatantly expansionist agenda... helping the worlds that by and large welcomed them in or that they saved from (in and OOC) the brutal oppression they were living under?
Anyways, a lot of people stereotype the Blakists as some kind of absolute evil, but it looks like they weren't necessarily that different from other factions, in terms of means or ends, in the Battletech universe, though I guess the issue of methods is questionable.
On the one hand they are presented as pretty devious and ruthless, on the other it sounds like such behavior was common in the Chaos March and the Great Houses during the Succession Wars, and even by the Lyrans during the FedCom Civil war:
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Discuss: Were the Blakists evil overall? How do they compare to other factions in terms of good or evil? Do you think it could have been a good thing if they won? How much is the fact that they are cybernetic/religious part of why people dislike them? Are their methods really better then other factions? And do you think the common people were better off under them in a way?