PsiTraveller
Cosmic Mongoose
That is an excellent concept. Nice. I will be using that. 

Hakkonen said:phavoc said:So... whether you are King of Ashire, or President of Bshire, both forms of government can claim to be a government. Both can ban internal warfare, etc, etc. And both forms of government can get small parties to stop fighting through a variety of means, including force. And both can govern. And both can push their governed people into a violent overthrow of the current government.
Now I'm dead certain that you didn't actually read my post. In this scenario, I am not the ruler of Ashire OR Bshire, but of Ashire AND Bshire, both provinces of Ctania. Once more: if I can't get Ashire and Bshire to stop fighting each other, whether by legal means, diplomacy, or military force, then in what sense do I rule either of them?
Put another way: if the Spinward Marches goes to war with the Trojan Reach, and the Imperial military and/or government lacks either the ability or the will to stop them, then for all practical purposes there is no Imperium. There may be a guy who calls himself the Emperor, but if nobody recognizes his authority, or if he lacks authority in the first place, he's just a guy with a fancy hat.
Reynard said:"Bribe the right nobles and you can do almost whatever you want?"
Sounds very.... familiar. Reality stranger than fiction?
This is definitely a useful idea. But there are typically a lot of entities that can maintain control over a colony that is viable as a nation state on a balkanized world, so that sort of balkanized world would likely have only a few nations. Another model might be for there to be many nations, a few of which are colonies, client states, or allies of outside entities, and many others that are not aligned with outsiders. Such a world might resemble Africa before colonialism has placed most of the continent under control of an assortment of European colonial powers, or Africa during the decline of colonialism.Rikki Tikki Traveller said:. . .
I like to play with the Balkanized government code (GOV 7) and consider most of them to be "double-colonized".
PsiTraveller said:On a low tech world out in the wilds, what is to prevent a higher population world from setting up a colony on a lower population world in some unpopulated corner of it?
Look at Drinax and Asim. There are just 200 000 Asim citizens on a planet. Drinax could open up a colony city/province on another continent, or other side of the world and start extracting resources or growing more food.
Who would stop them?
In Imperial space how is the flow of people controlled from planet to planet?