Talk:Neia Baraja/@comment-45.56.46.26-20180510070543

Neia's moral insight is surprisingly profound. Weakness is a sin. Causing others to sin is also a sin. So using strength the way Jaldaboath does, to grind down others and make them weaker, is wrong. But so is using strength the way Remedios tries, to make the weak depend on the strong for everything rather than becoming strong themselves.

That also applies to how Calca and Kelart, and others, coddled Remedios' mental weakness rather than insisting that she not be so foolish all the time.

In contrast, Ainz doesn't needlessly destroy the strength of anyone who doesn't use it to tear down Nazarick, nor does he allow anyone to be abjectly dependent. Instead he encourages everyone to become stronger and use that strength to continue building each other up, as long as it won't create a threat to Nazarick.

Demiurge genuinely doesn't think that way at all, while he is carrying out a plan that will ultimately make both the demihumans of the Abelion Hills and the people of the RHK stronger, that is only because they will be under Ainz's influence after being subjugated. He sees making those who submit to the SK prosperous and strong as a mere means to the end of making it easier to subjugate other nations. Therefore he won't bother with it if there's no plan to make use of that tactic, and he

What will be interesting is how Albedo reacts to a religion of worshipping Ainz that so boldly and clearly expresses his (previously somewhat indecipherable) moral values.

P.S. We'd already know how Ainz will react to being worshipped even if he hadn't already shown us. If not for his undead status he'd probably die of embarrassment multiple times over.