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    Originally posted by derrickh
    The recurring argument is that the Wraith would have eventually headed for the mainland so the civilation was on borrowed time anyway. I dont see that as an excuse for Sheppard to quicken it's demise.
    Oh, I see what you're trying to say, now: You'd have wanted Shep and co to do nothing; to stay and be taken by the Wraith(and the Wraith would've stayed and looked til they found the owners of the illegally parked PJ, that's for certain). Of course, then Shep would then be guilty of being captured by the enemy and giving away key information about, oh, say, the real status of Atlantis, and, while he's at it, the addy for that all-you-can-eat buffet that is the MW galaxy.

    Putting criminals on the island may be cruel and unusual for some. But it's better than a needle in the arm. If given the choice of a lethal injection, or being sent to an island where you have a small(very small) chance of escaping a culling, i think most would pick the island.
    Here you are, worried about a few murderers allowed to flee amongst innocent people out of dire necessity, yet you are okay with sending innocent people to live on the island with murderers like Torrell until the Wraith come? Give me lethal injection, any day.

    Oh, and, BTW, Eldon said he was innocent; that his was a case of mistaken identity. He certainly didn't strike me as a murderer. It happens a lot more than you'd think, especially with a magistrate who is more than willing to bend the rules to fill a quota.

    For crying out loud, the former cook was only guilty of not pleasing the Wraith's civilized palate.

    As far as we know, no one was on the island for jaywalking.
    Here's a portion of the dialogue between Weir and the magistrate just after the female aide told Weir what was going on:

    WEIR: What crime has she committed?

    MAGISTRATE: I've recently learned that Marin has been involved in a group seeking to undermine the Olesian government. She's become very adept at spinning lies to suit her organisation's treasonable agenda.

    He made that boldfaced lie up on the spot. That alone is precedence for freeing all the prisoners who can make reasonable claims of innocence on that island.


    -Sheppard should have been cloaked.
    Question: Can a PJ dial the gate while it's cloaked? No, really, I don't know; I don't remember seeing it do that. Maybe, like the Klignon cloaking device, it has to let down the cloak to do certain things?
    Gracie

    A Cherokee elder sitting with his grandchildren told them,
    "In every life there is a terrible fight – a fight between two wolves.
    One is evil: he is fear, anger, envy, greed, arrogance, self-pity,
    resentment, and deceit. The other is good: joy, serenity, humility,
    confidence, generosity, truth, gentleness, and compassion."
    A child asked, "Grandfather, which wolf will win?"
    The elder looked the child in the eye. "The one you feed."


    Comment


      Originally posted by Tok'Ra Hostess
      Question: Can a PJ dial the gate while it's cloaked? No, really, I don't know; I don't remember seeing it do that. Maybe, like the Klignon cloaking device, it has to let down the cloak to do certain things?
      Lorne and Weir dialed out from the Jumper when they were cloaked. So yes, you can dial while you're cloaked.

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      Spoiler:

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        Originally posted by GatetheWay
        Lorne and Weir dialed out from the Jumper when they were cloaked. So yes, you can dial while you're cloaked.
        D'OH!

        Thanks. How wierd; me remembering tiny details about the rest of the ep but not that huge honkin' plot device.
        Gracie

        A Cherokee elder sitting with his grandchildren told them,
        "In every life there is a terrible fight – a fight between two wolves.
        One is evil: he is fear, anger, envy, greed, arrogance, self-pity,
        resentment, and deceit. The other is good: joy, serenity, humility,
        confidence, generosity, truth, gentleness, and compassion."
        A child asked, "Grandfather, which wolf will win?"
        The elder looked the child in the eye. "The one you feed."


        Comment


          You know, I've been thinking about that cook, and....

          How did magistrate explain the death of that poor man to his family and friends? How much you wanna bet that some poor shmuck like Eldon was accused of the cook's murder?

          How many others may have been wrongly sentenced to the island to cover for "Shawn's" impromptu snacking?
          Gracie

          A Cherokee elder sitting with his grandchildren told them,
          "In every life there is a terrible fight – a fight between two wolves.
          One is evil: he is fear, anger, envy, greed, arrogance, self-pity,
          resentment, and deceit. The other is good: joy, serenity, humility,
          confidence, generosity, truth, gentleness, and compassion."
          A child asked, "Grandfather, which wolf will win?"
          The elder looked the child in the eye. "The one you feed."


          Comment


            I seem to recall some people pitching an absolute hissy fit last season when a terminally ill man volunteered to be Wraith food as part of an experiment. But leaving healthy, unwilling victims out to hang is OK because some of them are criminals and "deserve" it?

            Or am I misunderstanding again? I'm so tired right now I'd probably miss everything short of a book being dropped on my head.

            Anyway, as for the morality of it... *shrug* It isn't an easy death, but if the people would have been killed anyway, then how is it any better/worse than, say, being drawn & quartered? Or hanged? Or drowned? Humans have invented some pretty awful ways to mete out "justice". Death by Wraith doesn't seem all that much different.

            Now, the innocents sent among the murderers/criminals is another matter. It's wrong to willfully convict someone of nothing, it's wrong to put them amongst those who have and WILL commit violence against them and it's wrong to leave those people to potentially be killed by the Wraith (although killed by anything is equally as bad, in my book). Sure, there's a chance the criminals will leave them alone, sure there's a chance the Wraith won't cull them, but there's also a chance that one or both things WILL happen and even survival wouldn't make for an easy life with the threat of both hanging over their heads.

            Faustian deals are abundant in fiction. It's an interesting way to look at the Magistrate in Condemned and I think that whether or not Carl Binder intended for it to read that way is a little beside the point. Fans will read anything they want into what's written, regardless of whether or not the writer put it there. The Character/Relationships section is living proof of that.

            Comment


              Originally posted by GatetheWay
              Lorne and Weir dialed out from the Jumper when they were cloaked. So yes, you can dial while you're cloaked.
              Not exactly.
              They cloack after getting out of the gate.
              From the transcript:
              WEIR: Dial the Gate -- but go to stealth mode the moment we're through.

              It might have to do with the way cloaking works... knowing how they replaced the city shield with cloaking, it might be of similar nature and interfere with the gate's activity (as in not letting the event horizon pass over it).

              Now, wondering if it might be possible to do the opposite on jumpers, that is used the cloacking projector as a shield...

              Comment


                Originally posted by mmu_man
                Not exactly.
                They cloack after getting out of the gate.
                From the transcript:
                WEIR: Dial the Gate -- but go to stealth mode the moment we're through.

                It might have to do with the way cloaking works... knowing how they replaced the city shield with cloaking, it might be of similar nature and interfere with the gate's activity (as in not letting the event horizon pass over it).

                Now, wondering if it might be possible to do the opposite on jumpers, that is used the cloacking projector as a shield...
                I thought the exact same thing and was about to post that quote when I realised that he was refering to the end of the episode when the jumper dials the gate to allow the prisoners through and the the team


                About turning the cloak into a shield, that might be possible and would be cool but it probably wouldn't be very effective and have limitations (and not just an excuse for the writers to not change the capabilities of a jumper). Like how the same cloaking module that allows a puddlejumper to fly around cloaked needs Atlantis to be a minimum power to work properly.

                Edit:Just had a tought maybe thats what the wraith did in "Defiant One" - jury rigging a shield out of the cloak
                Last edited by Steve_the_Wraith; 16 August 2005, 03:46 PM.
                sigpic

                Comment


                  Originally posted by Steve_the_Wraith
                  I thought the exact same thing and was about to post that quote when I realised that he was refering to the end of the episode when the jumper dials the gate to allow the prisoners through and the the team
                  Hmm they dialed while cloaked, but they didn't get in.
                  I don't see why dialing by itself would be a problem, it's a radio comm or apparented.

                  Originally posted by Steve_the_Wraith
                  Edit:Just had a tought maybe thats what the wraith did in "Defiant One" - jury rigging a shield out of the cloak
                  Oh right, forgot that one... Still we don't know if it was its own stuff (unlikely), or how he knew about this, and why we don't use it.

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by Steve_the_Wraith
                    I thought the exact same thing and was about to post that quote when I realised that he was refering to the end of the episode when the jumper dials the gate to allow the prisoners through and the the team.
                    Heh, it's she. Sorry, just a correction. You couldn't of really known.
                    Last edited by GatetheWay; 16 August 2005, 04:30 PM.

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                    Comment


                      Originally posted by GatetheWay
                      Heh, it's she. Sorry, just a correction. You couldn't of really known
                      Ooops Sorry the "Marcus" Lorne sig should've been a give away
                      sigpic

                      Comment


                        Guess what one of the early working titles for this episode was... The clone/ not the clone story

                        Originally the island was full of clones of people in the city

                        But TPTB decided that it was too similar to a certain film in cinemas at the moment so they changed it
                        Wow, what are the chances of that?
                        About the ep, I liked it quite a lot, not only with Chewbacca and McGyver lines you already have mentioned but also with some other lines, such as the irony of McKay about death penalty on earth "Yes, certain countries, yes" . I quite like the bantering Canada-USA that have popped up from time to time (in season one I recall Shep making a comment about ice hockey or something). I like the show remaining international, and I don't even care the guy that appears in first ep of S1 with Spanish flag, has Mexican accent
                        I agree. I love all the international aspects of it, from McKay's Canadian comments and "ZedPM" to Radek's no-security-clearance-needed video message.
                        Did anyone else think that the "fissionable, non-radioactive material" the Olesia's (that's how they spelled the land in the closed captioning) were studying could be naquada? That was the first thing that came to my mind. Too bad Rodney wasn't able to check for it. Would also explain how such simple explosive devices were able to seriously damage a puddle jumper.
                        If my memory serves me correctly, didn't McKay ask "Is that possible?" when told about it? It can't be naquadah then, because McKay would know all about it as one of the foremost experts on the Stargate, which is itself made of naquadah.
                        Was their any discussion about the events of Duet this ep?
                        No, unfortunetly, but Stargate writers aren't that big about referencing past episode unless it relates to the plot. I just about died and went to heaven when Rodney mentioned the Intruder incident in Runner.
                        But he’s rapidly falling into the “too perfect” category. Despite all of his character flaws, he’s always pulling something impossible out of his hat. It becomes a case of letting one character get away with the impossible with the convenient stroke of a pen. Characters should never be that enormously competent.
                        In my opinion he's not as bad as Carter who can do anything from blowing up stars to decrypting computer codes for which Barrett needed a Data Retrieval Team. I was thinking along your lines, but then I thought, well, the civilization didn't make it. McKay would have been too perfect if he'd been able to save the Olesian city with amazing technology. And I remember Mr. Hewlett saying in an interview that it's not always going to work out for McKay this season, so I'm looking forward to that.
                        ...and was there a mysterious Sheppard moment in there - when the leader told McKay he knew what *their* kind was like ...telling everyone about the situation being impossible, but later ...having a "Gargantuan" moment just to be considered a hero...(?) Either Sheppard was annoyed at that remark for McKay's sake (meaning he values Rodney more than he reveals), or something from his own past seemed to be triggered from his own thoughts (thinking pre-Atlantis military rescue days).
                        Interesting ideas.
                        - Torrell's insight into McKay that reveals Rodney may not perform as many miracles as he'd like us to believe...and Sheppard's reaction to this possibility.
                        So are you saying that his reaction is that he was annoyed with McKay for being like that?

                        I'm glad other people noticed it, because I'm really curious as to what Sheppard was thinking/the point in showing Sheppard's reaction. I don't think this commentary on Rodney's character would come as any surprise to him. Maybe he was surprised that Rodney admitted it? Or was he realizing that maybe the PJ wasn't completely broken? I'd be interested in more thoughts on it.

                        Comment


                          Either Sheppard was annoyed at that remark for McKay's sake (meaning he values Rodney more than he reveals), or something from his own past seemed to be triggered from his own thoughts (thinking pre-Atlantis military rescue days).
                          It's lovely how the same picture leads to different ideas, I just thought Sheppard was actually shocked by the accuracy of the profile Torrell did (he must be Bethazoid (sp?) or something). The profile was so accurate, that even McKay admitted to be true sometimes, and he just don't usually admit things easily, as we can see in the "other than that" line when Ronon Dex points out the campfire.

                          But I doubt we'll see eye to eye on this so I'll leave it.
                          I don't think the point is to see this things eye to eye. I love the fact you have your own ideas and the fact we are sharing them. In a democratic country that's the common currency, the girl that tried to help Atlantis team didn't have the right to think different and was accused of treason just because she said her opinion.

                          As a matter of fact, IMHO one of the things that might seek the writer with this chapter, is that we discuss and think about issues like the death penalty. Where I come from, death penalty is seen as uncivilized, and I do like reading your posts in order to understand a punishment that is beyond my comprehension as a democratic and Christian guy. Other interesting thoughts (for me) popped up in my head such as which are the bars we lower here on earth to apply the death penalty. In some countries you can be hung just because being gay (Iran), in others you can be killed just because you are politically incorrect (like the girl in the show) in certain countries the money can save your butt although you are a murderer. I think it's good the discussion we all had about Sheppard's dilemma

                          Sabre
                          Last edited by Sabre; 16 August 2005, 08:33 PM.

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                            Lets say for a moment that I'm convinced Sheppard did all the right things and is a hero since he took the best/only available option at the time to save his team.

                            That means the magistrate is a hero,too. And his predecesors. He's been branded as a bad guy, evil man, and so on and so forth. But he took the only available option for the greater good of the whole planet. He could either agree to send the prisoners to the island to be culled. Or have the entire society destroyed. He chose to save as many people as he could. Just like Sheppard. What was the result? A HUGE drop in crime and becuase of the lack of cullings, the civilization grew and became one of the most advanced in the galaxy. But then they ran out of prisioners. So he decided to try to save as many people as he could by a sacrificing few more. It was either that or -everyone- dies. In a battle with the Wraith, they would've been slaughtered.

                            The magistrate made essentially the same type of decision that Sheppard made, but instead of a few team members, he had the weight of an entire planet on his shoulders. If we're choosing heroes based on the 'greater good' then the magistrate is a legend.

                            D

                            Comment


                              Our friend "Shawn" seemed awfully ambitious - as if he fully intended to place himself on a rather high pedestal within the Wraith society. I can see the Magistrate becoming lunch, but not the whole society. That would put a damper on Shawn's plans. After all, we didn't see the Cruiser culling people, just arriving - bringing Shawn for a nice chat with the new leaders?

                              Too many doors left open on this episode, which leads me to believe TPTB intend to go back to this world.



                              When all else fails, change channels.

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                                As for Shep, he's just following the long line of Stargate's tradition of seemingly good-willed gestures which will come back to kick everyone in the ass later.

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