spiderfrommars wrote:Yeah. But the way he just popped out the front door for a second then brought her in was a bit WTF.
To be fair, I had seen the season 3 trailer and picked up the bit of dialogue where Leoben said "this is Kara, your mother", so I had been mildly spoilered.
Though it does blow the whole "love is the missing ingredient" thing out of the water.
Btw, do you think Starbuck's cracked (the holding hands thing) or just playing along?
I'd lean towards the latter... possible she just got a bit caught up in the moment, but I'd more likely suspect she's being of teh sneaky.
Brendocon wrote:
Ostensibly to make up for the genocide of the human race by living together in peaceful harmony.
They've got a funny way of showing it. Threatening to kill Baltar if he didn't sign 100 death warrants. They can nuke the humes and be done with it! Or just stick them all in farms.
I was going for the "pretending" definition of ostensibly. The speech that Cavil(s) gave at the end of season 2, plus Boomer and C6's comments give the impression that they've learnt their lesson and they're there for peaceful and benevolant means... obviously their behaviour inside Colonial 1 so far this season completely belies all of that.
It's apparant from their attitude towards the graduation bombing (a few Cylons needed resurrecting > lots of humans dead) that the bulk of them haven't changed their attitudes in the slightest.
The Occupation/Iraq allegory is a resonant one but in the scheme of things does it make sense?
I think it'll make a bit more sense once their proper motives are revealed. If there are any proper motives, that is, and not just a mess of conflicted motives vying for superiority... Seems that Boomer and C6 are the only ones that are really into the peaceful co-operation thing; whilst the others are happily playing along so that they've got a nice easy method of slowly continuing the genocide. It's easier to commit a holocaust when the victims don't realise they're in a concentration camp. The ones who try and resist are shot to quell insurgency. "We only want to help." Then calmly lead the others into a gas chamber.
Intrigued by the notion that they need a death warrant signed by the Prez to stop it being murder in God's eyes. Though it does make sense from a history-of-the-death-sentence perspective. Once they're officially stamped as criminals, they stop being people... not that the Cylons think much of people anyway. They've just moved onto morally/legally justifying their genocidal tendencies.
That said, killing Baltar would be a mortal sin. Though, as Cylons don't actually pass onto an afterlife, I don't really get why they'd be bothered. Is religion really all that important to a race of what are effectively immortals?
I love tv that gets me thinking!
Grrr. Argh.