Which is why pure majority rule doesn't work without protection for minorities.
Because my standards are set to what I prefer would be the case for all, not the standards of Thedas' terrible government in general. Almost every demographic deserves improvements in its living, but only one, the mages, has actually been able to push for it via force of arms (although Briala's city elves may well be the second to do so, and I'm quite happy to aid them as well).
For finances, the Inquisition and Chantry (given that if the mages are freed, Leliana would still be allied with them) would work for both seed money and possible continued income; I've advocated several times to actively recruit Orzammar's casteless dwarves for enchantment work on the surface. For training... well, I never argued that hedge magery was adequate in and of itself.
Why would the Chantry, even under Lels, continue to fund an organization that started a war to prove how much they didn't want anything to do with the Chantry? "We support your rights to self-determination and self-governance" is very, very different from "We are going to keep paying some or all of your bills". The two could actually be interpreted as mutually exclusive, in fact. If the mages want to run themselves, then they have to stand on their own.
As for the Inquisition, where would they be getting the funding to support themselves, much less make charitable contributions to an organization as expensive and self-absorbed as the College of Enchanters? Troops, even former Templars, don't work for free. Arms, Equipment, and crops don't grow in ice fields. Fortresses on other people's land don't pay rent and upkeep for themselves. The Inquisition has no territory to call its own except maybe Skyhold, and that's assuming that whichever nation owns that spot in the Frostbacks is willing to sell/give it away. They can't levy taxes, they don't produce anything for export, and basically have less to offer by way of income than even a nascent College of Enchanters. As a massive charity case themselves, completely at the mercy and whim of sympathetic rulers for their very existence, the only way they are in a position to 'support' mages is if the mages were conscripted. Then, at least, the Inquisition could allocated some portion of whatever charity they get for upkeep to their version of a mage collective.
I hit 'post' too soon.
The casteless idea is a good one, provided you can convince them to leave Orzammar, have someone who can train them, and have some way to pay them for their work. They still aren't going to be cheap. The Tranquil worked for room and board, and had no ambitions. Dwarves, even casteless ones, won't do that.





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