Hate maybe have been too strong a word. Byron did rebel against Bester when he was forced to kill mundanes. He was a sincere pacifist, and yet he killed one of his people. As he said, "We are no longer what we were, we are now what we have become." Perhaps that led to his suicide.The most poignant part of the Byron story for me was when the telepath terrorist announced he would shoot the hostages, saying "after all, to us--" and Byron completes the sentence, "they're only mundanes." At that terrible, bitter moment, Byron understood why he had failed. He was still Bester's protege. He hated and despised the mundanes as much as Bester did -- jms makes that clear in the earlier episodes. He realized that was what made him make the decisions that led to disaster, and the despair that understanding brought upon him led to his suicide.
Did jms consider his pacifism one of those flaws?
~ I don't trust anyone who holds a belief of their own race/religion/etc superiority. We know through history that this always ends badly.~
~ He hates normals just as much. Granted, his hate is justified, but he's lowering himself to the same level as the normals with his hate. I hope I'm somewhat making sense here~
Lyta got no respect, and eventually she just couldn't take it any more... leading to one of my favorite scenes in Season 5.
It just seems a bit like thanking Superman profusely for saving your life, then telling him he can sleep in the barn when he can't get a job.
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