Again. My issue isn't that the situation is being analyzed with what we know we have. My problem is that the "unknown unknowns" are essentially being treated as a non factor because you can't account for them when you make your arguments and extrapolate. They are still part of the equation however and this reaches far enough into author original content territory that I find it illogical to be doing this so confidently.
This is essentially how all physics modeling is done in real life. We predict the number of habitable planets in the universe, develop nuclear fusion, build atomic reactors with models. What you are talking about is the range of applicability of the model. Which I specifically noted to not be all-encompassing.
Are there possible entities and events out there that do not fit my model? Yes, absolutely, we know of at least several: Ebon Dragon's Neverborn (I keep using this example since it was confirmed to exist in text), probably all other Neverborn, angels, when acting unbound by the Rules, SuperSayians, Xeelee (since we know that aliens exist, we cannot discard the possibility of an alien invasion), E9 akuma!Molly from the future (time travel exists, so we cannot discard the possiblity of a future evil Molly coming back to corrupt / replace us), Ferrovax and Pyriothrax acting together, Advaita Iraivan gaining sentience and deciding to wreck our sh*t. And if some of those sound absurd, that's because they are, but we cannot, by the very nature of them being unknown, disregard those unknowns.
My point is that we cannot do anything about those anyway. We don't know how strong they are, how plausible they are, how dangerous they are, if they exist at all or not. We cannot plan for them full stop. We don't know if one AP spent for one turn would be enough to defend against them, or if 8 AP and 24 SGI AP spent for the next twelve turns will, or if spending more AP on this is even meaningful. Perhaps the only way to defend against them would be to reassemble the exalted host, train everyone up to at least E5, and have 50 TransPrimordial devil tigers on our side. Perhaps even that would be not enough. This way lie meta arguments, and I seriously don't want to go that way.
So, we
have to completely disregard unknown unknowns. Because we don't know anything about them. Planning for them is impossible, the only way to allocate resources if we are worried about those is to allocate all resources to the problem. And that way lies defeat because of opportunity costs. So, yes, I am disregarding those.
Within the boundaries of what we were shown, and what we know from canon sources, however, I stand by my analysis. We saw how an ancient war god fights. We saw how a yama king designed superweapon built using malfean brass fights. We saw how a heavily invested by outsiders archmage fights. We saw how a lesser walker fights. Saw how a magic-specked denarian fights. None of those with the possible exception of the archmage make large and prepared magitechnological armies meaningless. Further, we know that large magical armies of modereately enhanced humanoids are a good strategy to defend the Outer Gates. We know that large magitechnonological armies of <E5 dragonblooded were instrumental in defeating Primordials, and later in defeating solars. There's a long and consistent trend in both settings that indicates that large magically enhanced armies are a very big hammer even the strongest of heroes and monsters cannot completely disregard as a threat, especially when forced to openly confront on prepared ground.
TL;DR: Because it's completely impossible to plan for unknown unknowns, we have to plan for known unknowns. Within the range of what we, or at least I, know and can estimate of the setting, spending 1 AP + 2 AP + several SGI AP (rolled into Sanctuary management and some other things) should be good enough without incurring strong opportunity costs that would come bite us later.
This I feel is kind of his whole point I may be putting words in @Yog's mouth but we definitively can't devote enough AP to deal with any and every possible scenario and even pretending like we can is going to Cripple us with insane paranoia and inaction.
Nah, you pretty much got exactly what I am saying. I am glad to hear that I am capable of communicating my thought at least somewhat effectively.
Anyways leaving debts for 20 years or something is bad because it means those people aren't going to want to give you more favors if you aren't paying off the ones you already have. It's political as much as it is practical. And due to IRL things a lot of people would just rather not have outstanding debts at all.
Twenty years no, of course not, but please recall that in setting it has been less than two months since we got those debts. Less than a season to produce miracles of ancient wonder unlike anything the world has seen since the Age of Legends is not long. It's goddamn miraculous and I fully expect most of our debtors to assume it'll take at least a year for us to get back to them. Well, maybe not Archive, since she has at least somewhat of a mortal perspective of time.