you cannot unknow any of this stuff except by obliterating yourself.
This works too, but I think you meant obliviating :) Other than that, good point. Destroying the dementor present would be a good opening move for several different strategies—anything that requires him to be taken very seriously, really.
If his explanation about the nature of the patronus was believed, the active patronuses should dispel.
So if he demonstrated and convincingly explained his patronus and chose not to destroy the dementor he would be the sole person in the room with control over the creature.
EDIT:
The trouble is, that even if he manages to control the Wizengamot in this way, he can only control them for so long, as they remain in the room.
So he probably would have to rely on their status and/or ‘Most Ancient Tradition’ keeping them from fleeing the room or calling in reinforcements, while he threatens to release the dementor and/or the information.
(Note that he wouldn’t have to reveal his dementor-destroying ability this way, just his ‘perfect shield’.)
That would antagonize the wizengamot very, very badly. Not a good long term strategy, even if you intend to dissolve it. Destroying it, explaining, and letting them work through the logical implications on their own suffices. If most people lose the ability to halt dementors at all, and a few people gain the ability to destroy them outright, they are no longer usable tools of enforcement, and disposing of them all together becomes quite urgent.
Indeed. The Dementor is storywise too conveniently present not to destroy as a way to grab the Wizengamot’s attention—Harry having been established as being in the possession of Chekhov’s Gun. Certainly not sufficient in itself, as you said. Give it 0.8 as a part of the solution.
(As for potion-making, I doubt the information would be very inflammatory to this audience, but good point from OP about him being able to wonk their economy a bit.)
I’ve seen this ‘convenient dementor’ point a few times. But in canon, Dementors escort prisoners in other trials for serious offences, don’t they? Pretty sure I remember them doing so.
This works too, but I think you meant obliviating :) Other than that, good point. Destroying the dementor present would be a good opening move for several different strategies—anything that requires him to be taken very seriously, really.
If his explanation about the nature of the patronus was believed, the active patronuses should dispel. So if he demonstrated and convincingly explained his patronus and chose not to destroy the dementor he would be the sole person in the room with control over the creature.
EDIT: The trouble is, that even if he manages to control the Wizengamot in this way, he can only control them for so long, as they remain in the room.
So he probably would have to rely on their status and/or ‘Most Ancient Tradition’ keeping them from fleeing the room or calling in reinforcements, while he threatens to release the dementor and/or the information.
(Note that he wouldn’t have to reveal his dementor-destroying ability this way, just his ‘perfect shield’.)
That would antagonize the wizengamot very, very badly. Not a good long term strategy, even if you intend to dissolve it. Destroying it, explaining, and letting them work through the logical implications on their own suffices. If most people lose the ability to halt dementors at all, and a few people gain the ability to destroy them outright, they are no longer usable tools of enforcement, and disposing of them all together becomes quite urgent.
Indeed. The Dementor is storywise too conveniently present not to destroy as a way to grab the Wizengamot’s attention—Harry having been established as being in the possession of Chekhov’s Gun. Certainly not sufficient in itself, as you said. Give it 0.8 as a part of the solution.
(As for potion-making, I doubt the information would be very inflammatory to this audience, but good point from OP about him being able to wonk their economy a bit.)
I’ve seen this ‘convenient dementor’ point a few times. But in canon, Dementors escort prisoners in other trials for serious offences, don’t they? Pretty sure I remember them doing so.
I don’t recall there being one visible in the Pensieve-memory of Bellatrix’s trial, at least not one that was present for the whole thing.