FaxModem1 wrote:So, no one would be in favor of a system of people coming back to the wasteland to rebuild civilization and bringing about peace, education and civilization after a fall, or making it accessible to those who want to flee whatever chaos is actually out there? I think, while establishing back-up repositories and databanks on the moon/satellites/whatever is a good practical goal, it most certainly means that mankind won't receive the benefits of all of history and knowledge until after it's no longer needed.
I guess we should hammer down whether or not we want to just be a safehouse for knowledge, or to also be some sort of school to help those afterwords.
The problem is putting such things in the hands of savage people, technology and science, could potentially worsen the situation and prolong the anarchy. Some spikey haired gas station warlord getting his hands on a repository won't be interested in seeing the Mona Lisa or studying the antikythera analog computer. At best he will exploit the tech to build weapons to dominate his enemies (this could actually be a good thing in the long run by uniting people though the short term will be bad) but more likely he will use Lisa as firewood and scrap the computer to make bullets or spear points depending on his level of tech. Some vault containing all those items won't be seen as something to preserve, it will either be a treasure chest to plunder or a new house (any place that survived the apocalypse is going to make a great base).
By making it so people can only access the vaults or moon bases when they have the necessary tech means they will have worked to gain that tech and will be atleast somewhat civilized. They are more likely to not abuse the wonders and horrors we chucked in the vaults and be more likely to continue to preserve what we left behind rather then looting it.
Now maybe to help rebuild we don't only try to preserve our knowledge but some people as well. On that moonbase or in the vaults, we make them bigger so scientists, engineers, artists, and other people of not that could try to help preserve knowledge and pass it along to their descendants. These keepers of the lore of our world can be nice safe and sound while the world fries and when the dust and radiation settles can maybe go out and help try to rebuild.
Of course they probably won't be met with open arms by survivors and their descendants. People are going to look at thse technologically advanced people with envy, either kill them out or spite or try to torture the location of where they came from.
So these vaulters would probably not be coming out with books but guns, civilizing the wasteland by force.
You'd might wind up with a organization like the Enclave, willing to conquer and kill to bring back civilization. Some might consider that a good thing but others not so much. Even if they have the best intentions and actually mean to do good shit still alot of people and cultures might be harmed. But thats if they even plan to help out, they could be saying shit people want to hear but secretly planning on killing off all the dirty wasters like John Henry Eden, President of the Enclave, President of America, President... of your heart.
More likely we'd see a repeat of colonialism where powerful invaders exterminate or exploit less civilized people. It would be their "Learned Man's Burden" to liberate the planet from ignorant savages and either destroy the savages or "civilize" them by any means necessary.
Still helping people out would be good. Build a shitton of supply shelters that contain some supplies and some information. Only information that can't be used to easily create weapons. Medical knowledge, farming knowledge, survival tips, all would be great for survivors to..... well survive. Maybe etch them into the walls of the shelters in easy to understand pictographs so even if its pretty savages people finding the places they can probably figure out some stuff from the shelter.
But helping out people should not detract from the main goal, preserving not individual people but the whole of humanity and all it has built.