puzzle
Regular
Don't ask me! I don't have that kind of courage...Now how did I manage to do that?
Don't ask me! I don't have that kind of courage...Now how did I manage to do that?
Thinking on this, however raises an interesting question in my mind: why did Dukhat suggest a jaunt to Z'ha'dum in "In the Beginning"? Was it done at the suggestion of Kosh, or in defiance of Kosh? What would the Gray Council have found, if they'd made it all the way there? How would that have changed things?
Or -- most deviously -- perhaps Kosh instigated the trip to Z'ha'dum in the full knowledge that the Council would never reach it, instead running afoul of the Humans? What did Valen tell the Vorlons about the Earth-Minbari War?
I heard that even with the current production JMS is still trying to get Crusade remade, it could be old news, oddly for a show that i absolutely worship i really haven't gotten into the net community.
Ranger1, you have "Minbar" misspelled in your sig quote... I figured that with a name like "Ranger1," you'd really want to spell that correctly.
Senator Hidoshi is a decent guy, appreciative of Sinclair's handling of the situation, but later on he's quoted as saying B5 is "too big a horse for anyone to ride," as if he feels Sinclair didn't get the job done. He also uses Bester's phrase about needing to know. That latter one is quite a stretch -- it's not an uncommon phrase -- but it might just be a hint that Hidoshi has been talking with Bester.
Interesting idea; did you base it on anything, or is it just an impression?
Interesting idea; did you base it on anything, or is it just an impression?
We see three conversations between Morden and ambassadors. In the case of G'Kar and Londo, both of them have recently had encounters that get them thinking about their worlds: G'Kar, with Londo about the famine on Narn, and Londo with Lord Kiro about "where they lost it all." These two reveal what they want -- which is related to their world's ambitions -- whereas Delenn does not. On the contrary, Delenn sets up the fact that Morden doesn't want to talk to Kosh, because he talks to the others but seems extremely reluctant to talk with the Vorlon.
in my eyes at least he never seemed to act like a man "born" to the position but as a man who had ended up there by some freak accident and felt he should try to do some good while it lasted.
I wonder why Morden visited Delenn at all knowing that the Minbari defeated the Shadows 1000 years ago.Maybe the Shadows wanted to see if there is a Minbari with a high position for them to use in the future.
The other interesting thing is the triangle on Delenn's forehead.Is it some kind of a warning that the Shadows are nearby programmed in Sinclair/Valen's DNA and inherited by his descendants.
Remember that quite recently (at that point) some Minbari had been sheltering a notorious war criminal just because she made good/terrifying weapons. This was not common knowledge, I suppose, but if there really was a connection between the Dilgar and the Shadows as many suspect, then the Shadows would have known a few Minbari were not pure and incorruptible. Warrior Caste in particular.
The triangle is a Gray Council thing. The mystery is why it showed up -- to everyone's surprise, Delenn included -- when Morden was there. It's supposed to be an emblem of rank, not a Shadow alarm.
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