D
**DONOTDELETE**
Guest
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, arial">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Jade Jaguar:
Dark Lord, it was really Kosh and the Vorlons who, at Sheridan's behest, changed the rules of engagement by attacking in support of the Alliance, not Sheridan's attack on Z'Ha'Dum, which came later. And of course, Kosh was killed for that infraction.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
No, if you recall... it was SHERIDEN who asked the Vorlons to fight for them. Remember? Interludes and examinations? Kosh was the one who said no, but Sheriden pressed the issue until he agreed. Sheriden got the Vorlons to break the rules. Kosh ALSO told him not to goto z'ha'dum basically but he went anyway and blew up a good chunk of it. Breaking the rules of engagement. FORCING the Vorlons to back up Sheridens play, Ulkesh says he opened an unexpected door which is why they had to enter into it all. This is confirmed in ITF when the Vorlons state he is the one who got them to do this. Or are you saying attacking homeworlds is part of the game?
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, arial">quote:</font><HR>The world is NOT flat. Good and evil are not just a point of view. If armed people broke into your house, tortured and killed your family, and left with the contents, are you saying that wouldn't be evil just because it worked for them? I don't think so. Certainly there are grey areas, but if beings in possession of their faculties, acting of their own volition, do extremely harmful things for purely selfish reasons to innocent people, that is evil. I think Angel Summers' analysis is rather apt, especially in view of the behavior of the Shadows and the Vorlons when Sheridan exposes them, as they immediately act like frightened children themselves. I am not a Buddhist like Angel, and I don't believe that desire is intrinsically wrong, or dangerous, but I recognize that desire is often, if not always, the motivation behind evil acts, and I think Angel does pinpoint the moment the Shadows became unequivocally evil. Before that, although I think their means were very bad, and unjustifiable,infact evil, it could be argued that their motivations, to strengthen the younger races, were good. Good and bad, though sometimes murky, are easier to tell than evil. At exactly what point does someone/thing cross the line from bad to evil? That can be tricky. For me, the Shadows crossed it just by deliberately fomenting wars. And the Vorlons, who seemed to be the good guys, definitely did evil by destroying whole planets to eliminate the Shadows' influence, regardless of any innocent people who might be hurt.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
No, it is round... which is why things are NOT easy to define. As Sheriden put it, like trying to stack marbles into a corner.
That depends AGAIN, doesn't it? That was actually DONE many times in history, but some families WISHED it so. Such as religious having someone born who they think is evil, so the religious would come and burn them for their evil. THAT was considered good back then! It isn't now because society has changed as has the definition. To an alien race who has a society based on this, it is GOOD... but to us it is EVIL. Maybe they think of death as an adventure and those choosen to die are the worthy and best of their race. I however am not arrogant to believe either is good or evil because such things rely totally on perspective.
Hitler is considered evil but the more often missed name of Stalin isn't usually, even though he is responsible for more death. God is considered good yet he wiped out the world... more than Stalin OR Hitler. Why so different? Because it depends on perspective again.
The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one. The Vorlons thought this, and when stacking the life of billions against that of countless trillions... they choose the former to save the latter. You consider that evil, but then people would think of them as evil for doing NOTHING to save them. So it's lose lose, they choose to lose saving the most amount of people. Because getting rid of the shadows means no more death on galactic scales EVERY thousand years, which is a helluva lot... would have to go into shorthand scientific notation to count them all.
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Marc Cosgrove
"From chaos, order came. As was inevitable." -Summoning light
Dark Lord, it was really Kosh and the Vorlons who, at Sheridan's behest, changed the rules of engagement by attacking in support of the Alliance, not Sheridan's attack on Z'Ha'Dum, which came later. And of course, Kosh was killed for that infraction.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
No, if you recall... it was SHERIDEN who asked the Vorlons to fight for them. Remember? Interludes and examinations? Kosh was the one who said no, but Sheriden pressed the issue until he agreed. Sheriden got the Vorlons to break the rules. Kosh ALSO told him not to goto z'ha'dum basically but he went anyway and blew up a good chunk of it. Breaking the rules of engagement. FORCING the Vorlons to back up Sheridens play, Ulkesh says he opened an unexpected door which is why they had to enter into it all. This is confirmed in ITF when the Vorlons state he is the one who got them to do this. Or are you saying attacking homeworlds is part of the game?
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, arial">quote:</font><HR>The world is NOT flat. Good and evil are not just a point of view. If armed people broke into your house, tortured and killed your family, and left with the contents, are you saying that wouldn't be evil just because it worked for them? I don't think so. Certainly there are grey areas, but if beings in possession of their faculties, acting of their own volition, do extremely harmful things for purely selfish reasons to innocent people, that is evil. I think Angel Summers' analysis is rather apt, especially in view of the behavior of the Shadows and the Vorlons when Sheridan exposes them, as they immediately act like frightened children themselves. I am not a Buddhist like Angel, and I don't believe that desire is intrinsically wrong, or dangerous, but I recognize that desire is often, if not always, the motivation behind evil acts, and I think Angel does pinpoint the moment the Shadows became unequivocally evil. Before that, although I think their means were very bad, and unjustifiable,infact evil, it could be argued that their motivations, to strengthen the younger races, were good. Good and bad, though sometimes murky, are easier to tell than evil. At exactly what point does someone/thing cross the line from bad to evil? That can be tricky. For me, the Shadows crossed it just by deliberately fomenting wars. And the Vorlons, who seemed to be the good guys, definitely did evil by destroying whole planets to eliminate the Shadows' influence, regardless of any innocent people who might be hurt.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
No, it is round... which is why things are NOT easy to define. As Sheriden put it, like trying to stack marbles into a corner.
That depends AGAIN, doesn't it? That was actually DONE many times in history, but some families WISHED it so. Such as religious having someone born who they think is evil, so the religious would come and burn them for their evil. THAT was considered good back then! It isn't now because society has changed as has the definition. To an alien race who has a society based on this, it is GOOD... but to us it is EVIL. Maybe they think of death as an adventure and those choosen to die are the worthy and best of their race. I however am not arrogant to believe either is good or evil because such things rely totally on perspective.
Hitler is considered evil but the more often missed name of Stalin isn't usually, even though he is responsible for more death. God is considered good yet he wiped out the world... more than Stalin OR Hitler. Why so different? Because it depends on perspective again.
The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one. The Vorlons thought this, and when stacking the life of billions against that of countless trillions... they choose the former to save the latter. You consider that evil, but then people would think of them as evil for doing NOTHING to save them. So it's lose lose, they choose to lose saving the most amount of people. Because getting rid of the shadows means no more death on galactic scales EVERY thousand years, which is a helluva lot... would have to go into shorthand scientific notation to count them all.
------------------
Marc Cosgrove
"From chaos, order came. As was inevitable." -Summoning light