Wouldn't the 8" tapered pole you were looking at before, cut down to 24', be better than one of the four straight tubes you are looking at now?
I am staying away from the mathematics, but just a direct comparison between that and the 7" straight pole (no. 3 on your list that Dave refers to) it would come out slightly lighter, and with a lower c. of g. The wall thickness is slightly less, but the outside diameter at the base is greater. And its tapered.
Its actually not that hard to make a mast from two parts. But if you can get a tapered pole which is a little longer than you need, and at a good price - well, I wish I could be that lucky.
The tabernacle will be an inch wider, but if that is a problem then you can make an aluminium tabernacle (from folded sheet aluminium) which may help.
With a proper tabernacle I think raising and lowering the mast is still a practical proposition even if the weight ends up around 35 kg. If it is too heavy for you to walk up into position (it possibly would be for me, these days) there are still ways, with or without a strut (sometimes called a gin pole), to apply a little bit of mechanical advantage and get the job done. Here are some examples of raising the mast on a 22' boat, using various forms of mechanical advantage (trailer winch, block and tackle - not shown here but a small electric anchor capstan will also do the job) - and using - and not using a gin pole.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ve8lzTy-7JQ no gin pole
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C5WdqdlB8Nc no gin pole
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w0Sc1e3MXyA gin pole
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l81rwc6-8SM gin pole part 2
Not one of these guys has a proper tabernacle. A proper tabernacle is an advantage.
The junk rig is at a distinct disadvantage here, because of the mast position being a lot closer to the stem head where a turning block would be. If that turns out to be a problem you just have to figure out a way around it - in one of the examples above, the person pulled from the trailer winch instead of the stem head. There's always a way.
I think that whatever mast section you choose, provided you decide it is going to be strong enough, you can just stop worrying too much about other issues and push on, confident that you will find your own solutions to the other problems as they arise (and they will arise.)