Night_stalker
Slava Ukraini!
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[X] Civilian casualties are already worse than you'd feared
Arguments like 'soldiers should die so civilians don't have to' only apply if you believe victory, or at least survival, to be inevitable.
Well, we just recently got punished for not distributing the fallout, twice even since we're critically low on mecha, and have sacrificed them several times.What's kind of interesting to me is that you as a voter base have gone through all the previous votes prioritising civilian safety and putting your own ship/pilots/fleet on the line to protect them and people like Daystar. Pretty dramatic last minute shift.
The big difference I think is that you always gave us the votes to kill civilians after the battle was won. People are a lot more willing to sacrifice military advantage if they think they won't immediatly need it.What's kind of interesting to me is that you as a voter base have gone through all the previous votes prioritising civilian safety and putting your own ship/pilots/fleet on the line to protect them and people like Daystar. Pretty dramatic last minute shift.
What's kind of interesting to me is that you as a voter base have gone through all the previous votes prioritising civilian safety and putting your own ship/pilots/fleet on the line to protect them and people like Daystar. Pretty dramatic last minute shift.
The morale loss of civilian casualties is not to be ignored either though.this is the fight. we lose, or even take heavy enough losses that we're crippled here, and the war is lost. either here in round two. So right now, millitary advantage is key.
The morale loss of civilian casualties is not to be ignored either though.
Especially not if, as you believe, we'll get a round two within an appreciable amount of time.
We won't. In fact, I am pretty sure we already don't have enough fleet left for an appreciable attack, and that's ignoring that our supply-lines would be really unprepared for such an undertaking right now (and we'd need to do it right now, while the planets are aligned).the main thing I'm hoping is we have enough fleet left after this that we can counter-attack.
We won't. In fact, I am pretty sure we already don't have enough fleet left for an appreciable attack, and that's ignoring that our supply-lines would be really unprepared for such an undertaking right now (and we'd need to do it right now, while the planets are aligned).
And I think the morale issues would be even worse if we immediately sent our soldiers out again, at least give them some time to grieve or spend time with their loved ones.
The enemy has also shown a propensity for suicidal charges, as the attack we just beat off demonstrated.The big difference I think is that you always gave us the votes to kill civilians after the battle was won. People are a lot more willing to sacrifice military advantage if they think they won't immediatly need it.
In the current situation, the option to preserve civilians is diminished because the "preserve civilians" option holds within it the threat of a total loss, which means losing all the civilians.
Right, good point. Though razing all infrastructure has somewhat different implications for a space-borne population than for people on a habitable planet.Reminder: the Divine Navy is technically trying to destroy Saturn's infrastructure, more than the primary objective is to kill everyone.
"The Divine Navy aren't trying to take Saturn intact. They never were."
"What do you mean, sir?" you frown at him.
"I mean, North," he says, "that Lord Admiral Sikes made a joint announcement with her highness, Princess Daystar an hour ago, informing all selected ships of the invasion, and that the enemy's goal is to destroy Saturn's capacity to field any kind of space military presence whatsoever. They weren't trying to take Anchiale, North. They were trying to destroy it, along with its shipyard. They are not concerned with civilian loss of life as long as they avoid another Jupiter after they take the system."
Your voice is quiet and very dry, as you croak, "... and Titan." You begin to realise where this is going, horrified by the sheer, unimaginable loss of life suggested by applying these same tactics to Saturn's most industrialised and densely populated moon, on top of the potential decapitation of the government and the military.
Anchiale is a major shipyard capable of creating large warships, and it makes Iapetus headquarters of the Outer Fleet. They wanted to destroy both targets at once so that the Outer and Inner Fleets couldn't support one another. Remember that the Divine Navy's supply lines are far from secure and they can expect basically no support from beyond Saturn in any kind of a timely manner. A protacted campaign is completely against their best interests -- if this was going to work, it needed to hit Saturn as hard and as fast as possible.@Gazetteer
what was the reason for the other prong of this attack? to my understanding, it was kinda pointless? if they win here we lose anyways, and it was only through extraordinary effort that the ships there where even rallied. If they'd just bypassed that position and gone all in on titan wouldn't they be in a better position to overwhelm that critical linchpin?
Anchiale is a major shipyard capable of creating large warships, and it makes Iapetus headquarters of the Outer Fleet. They wanted to destroy both targets at once so that the Outer and Inner Fleets couldn't support one another. Remember that the Divine Navy's supply lines are far from secure and they can expect basically no support from beyond Saturn in any kind of a timely manner. A protected campaign is completely against their best interests -- if this was going to work, it needed to hit Saturn as hard and as fast as possible.
Yeah, there's definitely a pattern of desensitization. I mean, just look at the in-thread treatment of Mosi. It's fringe, sure, but there were a few voters calling her 'the cockroach' and showing little or no sympathy. Or look at Kim, who - to be fair - was a very minor character in a segment we didn't directly control. Who died in a brutal if quick manner that barely anyone noticed. It's in the nature of the setting, really. Every battle has hundreds or thousands of people dying brutally in the vacuum or being shredded into fleshy micrometeorites for…what?I honestly think people are getting desensitized to the vote too. Instead of genuinely caring about the civilians, all the pyrrhic victories we've had has lead people to only think of the hard numbers. I mean, it's going to suck ass no matter which vote wins, so why be emotionally invested anymore?
Iapetus's system of habitats is intended to be self sufficient, just not for the level of population that Titan's can provide for.right, but I got the impression that if we lsot titan we lose the ability to maintain a population. That would pretty well kill any attempts at ship building wouldn't it?