Re: Cutting Byron from season 5
But what made him a "genius" in his own mind at least was that he had a plan to overcome the influence of the Corps.
A plan which could not succeed. When fighting a centralized institution of superior power, it makes no sense to centralize your supporters -- make them one big target before they can fight. Far better to hide, undermine and bide your time.
By allowing his followers to gather on Babylon 5, Byron made them a target. By hoping for conflict avoidance to secure protection, he gave up good opportunities to disperse and disappear.
Eventually, he undermined the very strategy he hoped to secure protection, by relying on blackmail.
But how many of the indoctrinated broke through their indoctrination? Not many, it seems.
Many enough to weaken the Corps. How many refused to develop piloting skills? How many accidentally hurt themselves, or damaged Corps property during training? How many played stupid, not appearing to learn which way to hold a gun? How many openly refused from becoming anything more than a commercial teep?
He could have dragged out his training... wasted the resources the Corps spent on training him... fallen ill or got slightly hurt... accidentally bumped into a fellow pilot, leaving both alive but wrecking two Black Omega fighters.
Indoctrination and enlistment into a totalitarian system is gradual. He could have resisted before he was forged into a weapon.
Eventually, even after it all... he could have, instead of firing at the civilian transport... ordered the Starfury to apply full burn. Not everyone in the squadron could have pursued him -- some were needed to destroy the civilian ship. He could have escaped, or at least killed a Psi-Cop while trying.
Naturally until that point, he never appeared to realize how the Corps really operated. I hold this blindness against him, like I hold their respective mistakes against other characters -- Londo, G'Kar, Delenn, Kosh, Sheridan and perhaps even Sinclair (although the latter does not appear to have made mistakes of comparable caliber).
Did the show say he had not asked what they wanted?
One is never considered a representative of wider groups... before one provides proof. If I claim to represent your opinion, I must produce a record of you authorizing me to represent you.
And remember that this was just a small portion of the people he was working for and with.
I have the opposite impression. Those on B5 were the majority of "his people". Others assembled around different, more reasonable strategies, and chose different leaders.
He and his followers claimed that he worked for all the Teeps who had escaped the Corps, and we know from previous episodes that these were not small numbers
The emphasis should be placed on
claimed.
exactly how many people does it take to "deserve presents of planetary dimension?" Remember how few the colonists were in "Patterns of the Soul"?
They already had the planet -- and were entitled to its possession via their heritage. They only needed defense, which is easier to provide than a planet.
Yet no one said they had to leave the planet because their "narrow group had no merit to deserve presents of planetary dimension."
You are missing the point. The planet was theirs. The only present was defense.
This is based on what? It is a non-argument.
This is based on never hearing of their merits.
He was desperate, because he could see that time was running out (the deal with Bester expired after 60 days)
He was a fool to enter the whole situation, or not advise his people to quietly slip away from Babylon 5.