I've read the book and it is one of my inspirations.
Hans,
I thought it looked familiar.
Well, there's one variable that might be twiddled with. How much food is there in the cities? Is there any way to introduce a custom of storing a large amount of food in the cities? I have one idea that might work, but I'd like to hear what other people think before I mention it.
There could be a religious angle for your food storage needs. A religious sect in the US, the Mormons, are each supposed to keep a certain amount of food on hand at all times. Of course, Kinorbians who are known to do the same will become targets...
I also don't think it's a matter of how much food is stored in cities as much as it will be a matter of the inability to share or ration that food out before people begin taking matters in the own hands. The corner shop when looted will only feed so many people, the supermarket a little more, and the warehouses more still, but how are you going to distribute it with nearly all your transportation down?
And how much of the food will be spoiled or inaccessible with the systems collapse? Will Kinorb even store or process foods as we do today? Kinorb may be TL8, but that doesn't mean it's
our TL8. Kinorb member of a hi-tech Imperium in the 57th Century and there could be quite a bit of TL15 "retro-tech" about just as we've discussed how your "wind, water, and muscles" TL1 world can have still havesemaphore/heliograph telegraphs, railroads, and the like.
Are you suggesting that the problem will reduce itself to a level where the local resources are adequate to restore order long before anyone from outside the system will arrive?
Sadly, yes.
The regions that cannot sustain themselves will collapse to point where they can sustain themselves. With the planetary transport net down and little transport in private hands, the capital city and the regions around are dead. Everyone is going to die by starvation, violence, or some mixture of the two well before the Fleet jumps in.
Also, because the capital's "starvation contagion" can only spread by foot, the rest of the planet's regions should be spared the worst effects
IF they are have enough food, either stored or scavenged, and
IF their population densities aren't too high. Smaller cities may be very well becomes "starvation bombs" too.
I'm sure TPTB would prefer that aspect of the situation remain under the radar. Just as I would if I was running or playing it. This is roleplaying -- realism is a tool to make the experience more enjoyable, not less.
I'm cannot agree with that position more strongly.
The only analogy I was going for was the political reaction of the American community if 300,000 Americans were involved in a disaster and the American governement decided it wasn't their problem.
We'd send aid and relief workers, we always send aid and relief workers. Hell, during the last catastrophe in Burma/Myanmar/Whatever we were seriously considering using the military to
forcibly send aid and relief workers. I just don't think it evacuating 300K retirees would be high on anyone's list.
However, if you've any suggestions for rendering this one less grim, please don't hesitate to speak up.
The capital city is dead, I can't see any plausible help there.
Having someone in the government or military very quickly proclaim martial law and then deploy troops, call up militia, deputize citizens to strongly enforce food stockpiling and rationing upon pain of death until help can arrive would be a good start. Is there a National Guard or some similar organization? How about prior service clubs like the American Legion? Or even fraternal organizations like the Masons? If they exist, you should get them all involved somehow.
You mentioned a SDB wing I believe. I don't know how the systems failed, but landing a SDB and plugging it into the power net could help if the net can still be used. The USN did that with a SSN in Hawaii not too long ago after a storm knocked out an undersea power transmission cable. Using them as transports can't hurt either. Turning the SDB wing's tech loose on the crashed systems wouldn't hurt either.
But I've read his time displacement books his Dies the Fire books and the Pechawa Lancers. I think you' like them. Though I'm a little annoyed with the mysticism that has crept into his second DtF trilogy.
I finished the loathsome
Draka series on inertia mostly, had to see the end of the train wreck I suppose. Put down the second
Nantucket book halfway through and haven't had the urge to pick it back up.
Peshawar was okay, not good, just okay. I've avoided the
Dies the Fire stuff because I know I'll hate myself for reading it.
Regards,
Bill