Quirrell’s dialog in this chapter has me thinking again about what exactly he did wrong, as David Munroe. I wonder if Eliezer thought that through as well as he should have, being a little too eager to show off the character’s flawed understanding of human nature. From chapter 34:
Professor Quirrell leaned forward at the podium, his voice now filled with a grim intensity. His right hand stretched out, fingers open and spread. “Division is weakness,” said the Defense Professor. His hand closed into a tight fist. “Unity is strength. The Dark Lord understood that well, whatever his other follies; and he used that understanding to create the one simple invention that made him the most terrible Dark Lord in history. Your parents faced one Dark Lord. And fifty Death Eaters who were perfectly unified, knowing that any breach of their loyalty would be punished by death, that any slack or incompetence would be punished by pain. None could escape the Dark Lord’s grasp once they took his Mark. And the Death Eaters agreed to take that terrible Mark because they knew that once they took it, they would be united, facing a divided land. One Dark Lord and fifty Death Eaters would have defeated an entire country, by the power of the Dark Mark.”
Professor Quirrell’s voice was bleak and hard. “Your parents could have fought back in kind. They did not. There was a man named Yermy Wibble who called upon the nation to institute a draft, though he did not quite have vision enough to propose a Mark of Britain. Yermy Wibble knew what would happen to him; he hoped his death would inspire others. So the Dark Lord took his family for good measure. Their empty skins inspired nothing but fear, and no one dared to speak again. And your parents would have faced the consequences of their despicable cowardice, if not for being saved by a one-year-old boy.” Professor Quirrell’s face showed full contempt. “A dramatist would have called that a dei ex machina, for they did nothing to earn their salvation. He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named may not have deserved to win, but make no doubt of it, your parents deserved to lose.”
Amelia Bones’ later dialog suggests he was giving similar speeches as David Munroe.
Now the thing to notice here is that Voldemort’s policies for troop discipline were really not all that exceptional. Lots of armies have had a policy of executing traitors and deserters. A policy of using torture to punish any slack may be hard to find, at least in the modern world, but I think if you go back a couple centuries you’d find militaries using flogging to punish minor infractions. The way the Dark Mark is described here suggests it works slightly different than canon, in that it acts as a magical tracking device whether the bearer deliberately signals Voldemort or not. Obviously no real world military does that, but if it were possible to cheaply put magical tracking spells on soldiers in the real world, it wouldn’t be surprising to see militaries using them to discourage desertion. (In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if there were already a proposal floating around DARPA to put tracking implants in soldiers. For their own good, ya know, so they can be rescued if they go missing.)
Insofar as we can give a sensible account of what “Munroe” did wrong, we might attribute it to bad marketing: pitching it as, “hey let’s do what the Death Eaters are doing!” rather than, “we need to do what any country would do in wartime.” Even a cynic should be able to understand people’s aversion to the appearance of imitating like Death Eaters, and respond by providing would-be followers with rationalizations for why they’re totally different than the Death Earters. Also, from later chapters it sounds like “Munroe” may have been angling to be made magical dictator for life right away. A more sensible approach would have been to first ask to be made temporary dictator, like the original Roman dictators, and then find a way to make the crisis permanent, justifying a permanent dictatorship.
We don’t know anything about what Monroe’s sales pitch was like (or even if he had one). However, given that “People began to speak of him as the next Dumbledore, it was thought that he might become Minister of Magic after the Dark Lord fell” it probably wasn’t as terrible as you’re suggesting.
Quirrell’s conversation with Hermione seems to imply that for the most part, Monroe focused on action rather than speeches, though it may well have been action calculated to look as heroic as possible in order to win public support.
“It also seems this Defense Professor gave a most stirring speech to his students, just before last Yule, castigating the previous generation for their disunity against the Death Eaters.” The old witch looked up from the leather folder. “Madam Longbottom was rather taken with it, and insisted that I read the entire thing. The argument struck me as familiar, though I could not place it at the time. But then, of course, I had thought you dead.”
So it’s not totally clear from that if “Munroe” specifically proposed a Light Mark, or just made similar speeches advocating unity or what. But whatever the case, it seems that, while yes people were talking about him as the next Dumbledore, saying he could become the next Minster of Magic, etc., they were not uniting behind him to his satisfaction.
Quirrell’s dialog in this chapter has me thinking again about what exactly he did wrong, as David Munroe. I wonder if Eliezer thought that through as well as he should have, being a little too eager to show off the character’s flawed understanding of human nature. From chapter 34:
Amelia Bones’ later dialog suggests he was giving similar speeches as David Munroe.
Now the thing to notice here is that Voldemort’s policies for troop discipline were really not all that exceptional. Lots of armies have had a policy of executing traitors and deserters. A policy of using torture to punish any slack may be hard to find, at least in the modern world, but I think if you go back a couple centuries you’d find militaries using flogging to punish minor infractions. The way the Dark Mark is described here suggests it works slightly different than canon, in that it acts as a magical tracking device whether the bearer deliberately signals Voldemort or not. Obviously no real world military does that, but if it were possible to cheaply put magical tracking spells on soldiers in the real world, it wouldn’t be surprising to see militaries using them to discourage desertion. (In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if there were already a proposal floating around DARPA to put tracking implants in soldiers. For their own good, ya know, so they can be rescued if they go missing.)
Insofar as we can give a sensible account of what “Munroe” did wrong, we might attribute it to bad marketing: pitching it as, “hey let’s do what the Death Eaters are doing!” rather than, “we need to do what any country would do in wartime.” Even a cynic should be able to understand people’s aversion to the appearance of imitating like Death Eaters, and respond by providing would-be followers with rationalizations for why they’re totally different than the Death Earters. Also, from later chapters it sounds like “Munroe” may have been angling to be made magical dictator for life right away. A more sensible approach would have been to first ask to be made temporary dictator, like the original Roman dictators, and then find a way to make the crisis permanent, justifying a permanent dictatorship.
We don’t know anything about what Monroe’s sales pitch was like (or even if he had one). However, given that “People began to speak of him as the next Dumbledore, it was thought that he might become Minister of Magic after the Dark Lord fell” it probably wasn’t as terrible as you’re suggesting.
Quirrell’s conversation with Hermione seems to imply that for the most part, Monroe focused on action rather than speeches, though it may well have been action calculated to look as heroic as possible in order to win public support.
Amelia Bones:
So it’s not totally clear from that if “Munroe” specifically proposed a Light Mark, or just made similar speeches advocating unity or what. But whatever the case, it seems that, while yes people were talking about him as the next Dumbledore, saying he could become the next Minster of Magic, etc., they were not uniting behind him to his satisfaction.