One actually diverges from Aleph at the point where Bet made contact with one, but not the other.
That goes against Haywire's theories of divergent universes!
More seriously, it seems to go against Zion's closing of universes too similar to each other.
Less seriously, it's clearly a reference to RL, given the 9/11 reference in the Travelers' arc.
We'll*
Untrue. A government can easily mandate technological bans and expect it to be enforced. They're not obligated to provide anyone with anything. Except in the case of people the state is of course expected to provide for, like captive prisoners.
So, out of curiosity, if someone who is dependent on technology to live--an AI as the above stated or, more realistically, an elderly person using life-supporting technology--wanted to move into Luddite-town, perhaps to enjoy the bucolic life in their sunset years, how do you resolve the rights to lifestyle vs immigration freedom vs local laws? Note I'm specifically suggesting that they bring their own, not that the new government provide them with anything.
Pretend for a moment that Amelia couldn't or wouldn't just heal them to the point that they wouldn't need such tech.
Or perhaps another way to put it is, why is it that a technology ban wouldn't interfere with the rights to preferred lifestyle? It sounds like it's "favor[ing] a...personal preference over any other."
Nice wake-up scene, btw. It's a little bit worrisome that Amelia's harder to clone, since she also can't keep herself young. How often are they updating their backups these days?