GENERAL DISCUSSIONS

'Let's be bad guys.' My Son to me: 'Dad, they're BAD guys?'

POSTED BY: CHRISISALL
UPDATED: Monday, March 30, 2009 11:14
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Saturday, March 21, 2009 10:46 AM

CHRISISALL


My Son is tackling the gray area of Serenity. He asked if it's okay to steal from a bad government as long as you don't hurt anyone.

HELP!!!!!!

I dare not show him the scene where Mal shoots the surrendering Alliance guy on Haven!!

How can I explain this to his ten-year-old-yet-brilliant mind?


The turned-around Chrisisall

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Saturday, March 21, 2009 11:09 AM

ZZETTA13


Sometime in war good people do bad things. It isn't always right, it's just the way it is. When the time comes people have to weigh their options. Hopefully they will make the right choice.

As the father of two grown sons, I hope I've taught them to think before they act.

Z

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Saturday, March 21, 2009 7:58 PM

SHINYGOODGUY


Chris,

Z gave probably the best answer ever. He's a dad, like me, and I suspect that if you've done your best you already know the answer as well.

SGGaproudDadisall

Tawabawho?

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Sunday, March 22, 2009 3:43 AM

IMNOTHERE


Quote:

Originally posted by chrisisall:
My Son is tackling the gray area of Serenity. He asked if it's okay to steal from a bad government as long as you don't hurt anyone.



Does it have to be "okay"?

Mal and the crew are criminals, and the Alliance (unlike the scenery-munching evil of Star Wars or Robin Hood) is really no better or worse than the UK or US government (as your son should be beginning to realize if you let him watch the news).

Ask him what he thinks Fanty and Mingo would have done with their share of the money, and what other "businesses" they would be involved in.

Ask him who wold have got the blame, and lost out, as a result of the payroll being stolen.

Show him "The Train Job" and ask what would have happened if Mal hadn't, purely by coincidence, found out what was in the crates he had stolen.

...and then - when you have him ready to string 'em up - change sides and give him Mal's point-of-view.

The lesson is, you don't have to agree with everything someone does or believes in to care about what happens to them or share in their adventures. You can try and understand someone's actions without either condoning them or condemning them, and if they "get caught" you are allowed to have an opinion as to whether they should pay the price or be forgiven.

You can't let a film, book or TV show tell you what is right or wrong, because they don't show the real world, and the writer can play with reality in order to manipulate your emotions (e.g. Mal finding out about the medicine in the Train Job). However, although they won't give you the answers, shows like this might help you ask the right questions - especially if you spot what the writer wants you to think!

Hmm. Quite a lot to lay on a 10 year-old. Maybe don't start him on Battlestar Galactica just yet

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Sunday, March 22, 2009 3:45 AM

CHRISISALL


Thanks guys.


The laughing Chrisisall

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Sunday, March 22, 2009 4:49 AM

PEACEKEEPER

Keeping order in every verse


As with all entertainment shows, they are an escape from the "real world". There are things in life that we often feel like doing, but cannot . Entertainment provides a means to get those impulses off your chest without actually hurting a fly. Im sure theres a way to explain that in plainer language that a youngster could understand. If you get my meaning.

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Sunday, March 22, 2009 5:23 AM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Might be a good time to sit him down and start teaching him concepts like situational ethics and consequences of one's actions, things that often AREN'T looked at with any kind of lingering eye in most TV shows.

Ask him what he thinks would happen if HE tried to steal - from the government, from the store down the street, from a friend, etc. Then ask him to think it through, and see where it goes. "And then what?", etc., etc. Usually thinking through the possibilities to the possible consequences will teach a valuable lesson. "Yes, you can steal and 'get away with it' - for a time. But sooner or later, you're going to get caught. Or you're going to run into someone who was hurt by your actions."

Mike

A baby seal walks into a club...



The "On Fire" Economy -
The Dow closed at 10,587.60 on January 20, 2001, the day GW Bush took office. Eight years later, it closed below 8000 on the day he left office - a net loss of 25%. That's what conservatives call an economic "success".

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Sunday, March 22, 2009 2:10 PM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Kwicko:
Or you're going to run into someone who was hurt by your actions."


Or maybe fight an Operative.


The laughing Chrisisall

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Sunday, March 22, 2009 2:52 PM

BYTEMITE


Unfortunately, strictly speaking, Mal, Jayne, and Zoe are "bad guys." They just have redeeming qualities, and sometimes, from a looser ethical perspective, they do the right thing. Because of that, we're still able to root for them, even when the "bad guy"-ness takes over them. When they're bad guys, we hope that they come to their senses and become good guys again.

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Sunday, March 22, 2009 9:19 PM

RCAT


Most kids above 8 years old that I've encountered can wrap their heads around the idea of "Robin Hood" to some degree. For many (or at least for me) this was/is the first example of right v. law. I guess the idea of grey areas grows from there for many. The concept of stealing a loaf of bread to survive v. stealing from the weak for personal gain is an extension of that concept, I suppose...that's part of Mal's conflict (as a the moral person that he is) in series and if explained/interpreted in the right way could be quite a lesson to young-uns, IMO.


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Sunday, March 22, 2009 10:48 PM

RALLEM


Maybe you could tell your son about Frank and Jesse James who fought on the losing side of the American Civil War and afterwards felt disenfranchised by the Government, so they turned to a life of crime. Then you could maybe talk to him about the people the James brothers hurt with their actions. Or maybe you could just explain that this is a romanticized show where the characters were thrust into extreme situations and concepts of right and wrong shouldn’t be taken from it in black and white terms.



http://www.swyzzlestyx.com/index.html

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Sunday, March 22, 2009 11:16 PM

PEACEKEEPER

Keeping order in every verse


Or maybe theres far too much analysis going on here and just explain to him that it is actually "make believe".Jeess!!!!

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Monday, March 23, 2009 12:33 AM

ZZETTA13


Quote:

Originally posted by Rcat:
Most kids above 8 years old that I've encountered can wrap their heads around the idea of "Robin Hood" to some degree. For many (or at least for me) this was/is the first example of right v. law. I guess the idea of grey areas grows from there for many. The concept of stealing a loaf of bread to survive v. stealing from the weak for personal gain is an extension of that concept, I suppose...that's part of Mal's conflict (as a the moral person that he is) in series and if explained/interpreted in the right way could be quite a lesson to young-uns, IMO.




One of my all time favorite movie quotes is from “Time Bandits”

“ Robin Hood...why do you steal from the rich?”

RH, “ Because the poor have no money!!”

Z

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Monday, March 23, 2009 1:09 AM

GILOVE2DANCE


As Wash said, "Honey, we're crooks. If everything were right, we'd be in jail."

I'm sure you'll be able to explain everything in a way that'll make sense to your son. Kids are smart.

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Monday, March 23, 2009 2:45 AM

RALLEM


Quote:

Originally posted by peacekeeper:
Or maybe theres far too much analysis going on here and just explain to him that it is actually "make believe".Jeess!!!!



Or there is that.



http://www.swyzzlestyx.com/index.html

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Monday, March 23, 2009 2:56 AM

PIZMOBEACH

... fully loaded, safety off...


Quote:

Originally posted by peacekeeper:
Or maybe theres far too much analysis going on here and just explain to him that it is actually "make believe".Jeess!!!!



I agree with PeaceKeeper, at least keep it real simple, "well, when they steal they're being bad."

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Monday, March 23, 2009 3:23 AM

PEACEKEEPER

Keeping order in every verse


As my Dad always used to say to me. "shut up,son. ITS JUST A BLOODY FILM!!!!!!

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Monday, March 23, 2009 4:05 AM

BYTEMITE


Problem is, the Robin Hood analogy isn't an accurate one. That Inara even makes that comparison is either an indication of either some naivety or some delusionment.

Granted, Mal and Zoe are rebelling against a government that, while not always evil, the side they tend to encounter is uncaring, harsh, bureaucratic, and sometimes downright corrupt.

However, most of the crime they do, government officials or the government itself is not the victim. Mal tries to steal only from nasty folk: Magistrate Higgins, the security company on Lilac (you can bet there's probably some criminal element there, Alliance contract or not), other thieves. But that's not always how it works out, and he doesn't always return the medicine. What's more, he does kill people, he doesn't give his bounty to charity, and he profits from what he does.

You can steal a loaf of bread to survive, but no one thinks about the bread merchant's living. Could be they're as bad off. Or what about if you decide to steal a prototype medicine because you need it and can't afford it? Think of all the other people you've denied treatment from your actions.

Stealing is selfish, and it hurts people. Killing is wrong. Doesn't matter what you're rebelling against.

Therefore, while there ARE shades of gray, and you can understand WHY the crew does some of what they do, Mal, Zoe, and Jayne are professional bad guys. Anything else is being just a bit too forgiving of their faults.

Of course, because they do have redeeming qualities, and because the 'verse would be worse off if they weren't around... If it was ever up to me, and I'd caught them, I'd let them go, just like the Sherriff of Paradiso.

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Monday, March 23, 2009 4:50 AM

CYBERSNARK


I pretty much grew up immersed in the Rebel Alliance, so I'm more than comfortable with the idea of law breaking. Han Solo taught me everything I know.

The trick is to look at motivation.

They don't commit crime just 'cause it's fun. (Well. . . other than Jayne, they don't commit crime just 'cause it's fun.) It's an ugly situation, but they have no other choice.

Mal & Co. have shown no hesitation to take legal jobs. In fact I'm sure they prefer it (fewer folks shooting at them, for one). The trouble seems to be that legal jobs cannot sustain them financially (even at the bare-bones level they usually subsist at). The pay isn't good enough, the taxes are too high, the bureaucracy means that they'd spend weeks sitting in dock waiting for paperwork to tell them they can load the cargo that's sitting at the foot of their ramp --in order to turn a profit they'd need massive cargo ships or entire shipping fleets --and I'd bet that Blue Sun owns all of them too, which means you'd need license fees and monthly dues.

Looking at the Alliance's signs of conspicuous consumption (Miranda, the city-sized starships, Blue Sun's monopoly, etc), there doesn't seem to be any economic crisis. There's more than enough money to go around, it's just that about 90% of it is lining the pockets of the Core Worlders and the Parliament. We see that the people on the rim have to grow/forage their own food because the Alliance is not providing any service.

Outsiders like our BDH are offered exactly two choices: starve legally as the Alliance taxes you 150 cents on the dollar, or break the law and maybe get food on the table.

Hell, that might well have been on of the points of the Independent's side during the war --a more equalized economy where it's possible for private interests to turn a profit. Hell, Blue Sun may well have been what allowed the Alliance to win the war (the biggest fish in the pond helping to kill off any competition).

Maybe if the Browncoats had won, tariffs would be low enough to let independent shippers make a useful living, and Mal wouldn't have to smuggle Geisha bobbleheads.

-----
We applied the cortical electrodes but were unable to get a neural reaction from either patient.

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Monday, March 23, 2009 4:57 AM

MANWITHPEZ

Important people don't do field work.


I realize this is a serious situation. That being said this reminds me of my daughter's first response to Firefly.

We had just watched Lonesome Dove, and my daughter was young enough, I thought, for it not to have bothered her. She didn't really pay attention to much of it. We were watching Firefly, and she apparently loved the music, especially the theme song. When I asked her if she liked the show, however, she said that "cowboys scare me."

She equated westerns with horror films.

So, I thought about it. Horrific deaths are emplyed in both situations, especially in Lonesome Dove. She didn't view Firefly as science fiction, she viewed it as a western, hence, horror. I honestly thought she wasn't paying attention to the show. Turns out, of course, she was paying much closer attention than I gave her credit for. There is a similiar level of stylized violence employed here.

This situation has passed, and she does like Firefly now. And westerns as well. We watch 3:10 to Yuma last time I saw the kids, and she seemed to like that plenty.

Just struck me as unusual, is all.

Kaylee: "What's so damn important about being proper? It don't mean nothing out here in the black."
Simon: "It means more out here. It's all I have..."

http://manwithpez.livejournal.com

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Monday, March 23, 2009 4:57 AM

BYTEMITE


No doubt about it. Rim world industry is at a disadvantage, and they're kept at a disadvantage because Alliance war patriots want to see the Independents, and by extension, the Rim, punished. So they don't receive the supplies or the civilization the Alliance promised, because every bit of legislation that could help the Rim ends up locked in rewrite/nay vote hell.

You can't fault someone for trying to keep living. But that doesn't make what they do right, just desperate.

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Monday, March 23, 2009 5:03 AM

RIPWASH


I tend to agree that the Robin Hood thing isn't accurate. They ARE bad guys, but likable ones and that's what I've told my kids. Mal, Zoe and Jayne directly; Wash, Kaylee, Inara and Book by association; Simon and River because they are refugees.

Like Mal says in "Train Job": We're NOT thieves. Okay, we ARE thieves, but that's not the point.

I mean, they make no bones about it. They know what they are and we shouldn't resist it. Most, if not ALL, thier jobs has to do with breaking the law in some form or another. They steal, they smuggle illegal goods, they harbor fugitives, they kill at times. All to stay alive and keep flying, but still illegal.

To them - Mal, Zoe, Jayne, etc. - there are morally grey areas because of their past and their beliefs, but you can't get past the fact that in their society, what they're doing is wrong.

Don't struggle with the gray areas to a kid that young. Just say, "Yes, they're bad guys, breaking the law of the society they live it. We may like them, but what they're doing in the show is wrong."



Zoe: "Get it running again."
Mal: "Yeah"
Zoe: "So not running now"
Mal: "Not so much"
- Out of Gas

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Monday, March 23, 2009 5:28 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by RIPWash:
but you can't get past the fact that in their society, what they're doing is wrong.

Don't struggle with the gray areas to a kid that young. Just say, "Yes, they're bad guys, breaking the law of the society they live it. We may like them, but what they're doing in the show is wrong."


Is a lion wrong when it kills a gazelle to feed it's pride?

I take exception to the notion that breaking any unreasonable or self-serving law as being "wrong."

As head of the household, if I make a law that any spilling of milk on the carpet will get my Son no supper for a week, would you fault him for cleaning up a spill quickly and not tellin' me about it??

Laws are written by them that can, sometimes not with the best intentions for the masses. Sometimes just because they can. Sometimes to line the law-maker's pockets. Such is the history of human law. I'm referrin' to people here. Fallible, honourable, selfish, upstandin' people. I reject the idea of the Superior Elite knowin' by their very nature what's best for us (just look to our present financial situation).

"Gray areas" sometime just mean situations you yourself never had to face.



The laughing Chrisisall

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Monday, March 23, 2009 5:45 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by peacekeeper:
As my Dad always used to say to me. "shut up,son. ITS JUST A BLOODY FILM!!!!!!

Films enter our consciousness, and sub-conscious. The colour some of the way we see things IRL. An unanalyzed film can be a dangerous thing sometimes, embedding an unwanted message or feeling about something.
Example: Batman is best watched with the conscious idea the Bruce Wayne is somewhat off his nut, else the idea of righteous vigilantism becomes acceptable, and torture of peeps without due process can become the norm in one's mind.


The laughing Chrisisall

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:00 AM

RIPWASH


Quote:

Originally posted by chrisisall:
Quote:

Originally posted by RIPWash:
but you can't get past the fact that in their society, what they're doing is wrong.

Don't struggle with the gray areas to a kid that young. Just say, "Yes, they're bad guys, breaking the law of the society they live it. We may like them, but what they're doing in the show is wrong."


Is a lion wrong when it kills a gazelle to feed it's pride?

I take exception to the notion that breaking any unreasonable or self-serving law as being "wrong."

As head of the household, if I make a law that any spilling of milk on the carpet will get my Son no supper for a week, would you fault him for cleaning up a spill quickly and not tellin' me about it??

Laws are written by them that can, sometimes not with the best intentions for the masses. Sometimes just because they can. Sometimes to line the law-maker's pockets. Such is the history of human law. I'm referrin' to people here. Fallible, honourable, selfish, upstandin' people. I reject the idea of the Superior Elite knowin' by their very nature what's best for us (just look to our present financial situation).

"Gray areas" sometime just mean situations you yourself never had to face.



The laughing Chrisisall



Way to take what I said and blow it WAY out of proportion!! Why you always gotta pick on ME, Chris? Don't take exception to it as I clearly meant no offense by it at all.

Read my entire post. The characters of the show admit they're criminals. They don't even try to hide the fact. Yes. They're criminals. They do things that are against the law. Plain and simple. They have a conscience about what they do sometimes, but more often than not, they're doing it for their own gain as long as it doesn't hurt anybody (for the most part ). So the basic answer to your son's question is, "Yes, they're bad guys." They kill, steal, smuggle. Period. Those that helped slaves escape during the pre-Civil War era were doing so against the law. I don't agree with that law, but they were breaking said law. Harboring Jews in Nazi Germany was against the law. I don't agree with that law, but those that did so were breaking the law. Plain and simple.

Like Smokey and the Bandit. Good golly, there's nothing morally wrong with transporting beer across state lines, but it was illegal and therefore Bandit is a bad guy. We like him, but he's breaking the law.

Equating what animals do in the wild where there are no "rules" except survival of the fitest is not the same thing as humans doing something contrary to the rules set up by system of government.

Right or wrong, the Alliance is the ruling body of the 'Verse. They set up rules and regulations. What Mal & Co. do is against the laws of that governing body and therefore illegal and "wrong" - IN THE CONTEXT OF THE SHOW. And that's the frame of reference we're talking about here. The show.

Simon was in a Black-out Zone. An area set up by the Alliance and we can only assume it is off limits. Simon broke the law being in that zone. He was doing so for good reasons, but still breaking the law of the Alliance. Not neccesarily a bad guy, but a law-breaker nonetheless.

With the whole milk thing . . . *sigh* . . . you're a harsh man to make that kind of rule in your house (LOL), but UNDER YOUR RULES, he broke the law. Whether you catch him doing it or find out about it . . . I wouldn't fault him, no. But he DID do what you told him NOT TO. And yes, I know that was hypothetical.

Yes . . . grey areas are tricky things. I don't generally care for 'em myself (I kid, I kid).



Zoe: "Get it running again."
Mal: "Yeah"
Zoe: "So not running now"
Mal: "Not so much"
- Out of Gas

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:06 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by RIPWash:

Right or wrong, the Alliance is the ruling body of the 'Verse.
What Mal & Co. do is against the laws of that governing body and therefore illegal and "wrong"

Again, I reject the use or the word "wrong" here. Illegal yes, but that cannot instantly be equated to a moral right or wrong.

Man writes law.
Man can be a d**k.
Therefore: Laws can be "wrong."


The laughing Chrisisall

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:08 AM

RIPWASH


Quote:

Originally posted by chrisisall:
Quote:

Originally posted by RIPWash:

Right or wrong, the Alliance is the ruling body of the 'Verse.
What Mal & Co. do is against the laws of that governing body and therefore illegal and "wrong"

Again, I reject the use or the word "wrong" here. Illegal yes, but that cannot instantly be equated to a moral right or wrong.

Man writes law.
Man can be a d**k.
Therefore: Laws can be "wrong."


The laughing Chrisisall



Not disputing that, bro. Only saying that in the context of the show they are wrong in the eyes of the Alliance. They know it and admit to being criminals in the Alliance justice system.

Zoe: "Get it running again."
Mal: "Yeah"
Zoe: "So not running now"
Mal: "Not so much"
- Out of Gas

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:09 AM

BYTEMITE


Killing and stealing aren't those kind of arbitrary laws, though. Every single government or community must have some covenant about what is considered a person's property that they can protect and expect the rest of the community to leave alone.

Most communities tend to recognize a person as owning their body, and look down on people taking and killing other people's bodies. Communities also tend to recognize the things that a person has made, traded or bought as belonging to them.

Within a community, universally, across and without all kinds of religion, there is a universal standard that people shouldn't kill or steal from their neighbors/friends/family/kin. It is HARMFUL to the person acting to hurt other people. Tell me the misanthrope hardened by their life of crime has not been hurt by what they've done, even if they don't see it that way.

Even in anarchy communities some sort of loose unspoken agreement must be present, or all you'll get are bullies running around taking by force, and possibly even reestablishing a non-anarchic form of government.

Laws against killing and stealing aren't arbitrary and something to be ignored when convenient. They're necessary, and not just because they're laws. They're a fundamental piece of human nature, and in a perfect world, should not be broken for selfish reasons, both for the mental and physical well being of the breaker, and for the community at large.

It's not a perfect world, and that's why sometimes we can allow some leeway, as in the case of Mal and crew. But it doesn't change the fundamental fact that it's wrong, only that sometimes breaking those laws are understandable and necessary, like when a person defends their own life from those that would take it.

Expand upon that self-defense to include lifestyles, food, or whatnot as you will. The basic message is there, and it's what my perspective is.

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:11 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by RIPWash:
Only saying that in the context of the show they are wrong in the eyes of the Alliance. They know it and admit to being criminals in the Alliance justice system.


Clarification brings agreement.


The laughing Chrisisall

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:12 AM

RIPWASH


Took us long enough! LOL

Zoe: "Get it running again."
Mal: "Yeah"
Zoe: "So not running now"
Mal: "Not so much"
- Out of Gas

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:19 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
Killing and stealing aren't those kind of arbitrary laws, though.

But they can make a law that keeps a ship from finding honest jobs, that seem right to you?
Make laws that force laws to be broken & who's really in the wrong?

So if an impartial court sentenced that surrendering dude on Haven to death for crimes against humanity, or Mal shoots him, what's the objective difference? Mal did it more to avoid complications & save time than anything else IMO, but really, from outside the situation, who cares?

Inequity, more than any other single factor, influences the 'Versal crime rate, way I see it.


The laughing Chrisisall

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:38 AM

THESOMNAMBULIST


Originally posted by chrisisall:
Quote:

Again, I reject the use or the word "wrong" here. Illegal yes, but that cannot instantly be equated to a moral right or wrong.

Man writes law.
Man can be a d**k.
Therefore: Laws can be "wrong."



Not to get all theological but that moral law you speak of is from the bible, old testamenty and such, y'know Moses came down with the stone tablets and then... (you seen Raiders of the lost Ark, right?). Defintative rights and wrongs were kinda fuzzy back then so they needed something written in stone (parden the expression) :) Anyways moral laws, the kind that allow you to rest your head to sleep at night and don't keep you awake through fear of God, are different to the man made laws which though heavily based upon religious moral laws aren't the same. Man made laws you can bend and twist to suit your needs, the other kind (moral) - well I expect we're all in for a bit of a shock when/if we meet a certain Peter fellow in the clouds.

..not sure what my point it actually...

...Er maybe that the best thing 'Sonisall' can do in the world is know he's gone through the day and not caused anyone any harm.

Or in the words of Bill and Tell

"Be excellent to each other and Party on dudes!"





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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:44 AM

BYTEMITE


In that situation, Mal cares. He cares enough to kill the guy. And angry as he was, I'm pretty sure, being who he is, that on some level it's hard for him to kill someone who is surrendering. And when he is forced to do it, I think it's a bit damaging to the psyche. That means it was technically wrong.

Your argument that it was the easy, time-saving thing to do doesn't exactly convince me otherwise. Would it have spared the man undue suffering by killing him? If Mal had actually accepted the man's surrender (hypothetical, I know), do any of us think Mal would have allowed any of his crew to torture the man for what he did?

I also imagine the surrendering Alliance jerkface who was following orders and killed Haven cares too. But we don't care about him or his stinkin' family, because they're Alliance jerkfaces. Right?

I've never argued that the strictness of the Alliance laws and their efforts to undermine trade in the Rim were right. Never. In fact, I think they're being damn petty.

That's what makes the crew's law breaking understandable. But it doesn't make their killing and stealing right, because what they do has consequences beyond just sticking it to the Alliance government.

Now, if you REALLY wanted to break my mind, you'd bring up that one time Mal steals from that slaver guy. But then again, who's really going to suffer when that slaver has no money to feed his slaves?

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:44 AM

AGENTROUKA


I firmly reject the equation of religious laws with morality.

One can be firmly moral without having a shred of religion, and people have been for millenia outside the influence of the particular morals of judeo-christian commandments. Just saying.

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:45 AM

BYTEMITE


Agreed. Laws against killing and stealing exist without religion, and also exist across a wide religious spectrum, not confined to just one.

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:50 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by TheSomnambulist:

Not to get all theological but that moral law you speak of is from the bible, old testamenty and such, y'know Moses came down with the stone tablets and then... (you seen Raiders of the lost Ark, right?).


If memory serves, Indy broke some of those rules at times.


The laughing Chrisisall

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:50 AM

THESOMNAMBULIST


Quote:

Originally posted by AgentRouka:
I firmly reject the equation of religious laws with morality.

One can be firmly moral without having a shred of religion, and people have been for millenia outside the influence of the particular morals of judeo-christian commandments. Just saying.



Never said people who believed it are religious. Just saying thems it's origins that's all.

Anyway did you see my quote from Bill and Ted - that's the real issue :D

Good to see you again AR





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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:52 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
In that situation, Mal cares. He cares enough to kill the guy. And angry as he was, I'm pretty sure, being who he is, that on some level it's hard for him to kill someone who is surrendering. And when he is forced to do it, I think it's a bit damaging to the psyche.

When he does it, I actually tear up some. Mal takes a step to the Dark Side.


The laughing Chrisisall

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:53 AM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by TheSomnambulist:

Or in the words of Bill and Tell

"Be excellent to each other and Party on dudes!"





I can't wait for that future, dude.


The laughing Chrisisall

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:54 AM

THESOMNAMBULIST


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
Agreed. Laws against killing and stealing exist without religion, and also exist across a wide religious spectrum, not confined to just one.



Yes but they didn't exist before, that's all I'm saying. Not implying anybody is religious because they adhere to a law written on a stone block, far from it.

Hey - I eat pasta but I aint Italian.





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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:58 AM

BYTEMITE


Well... It's sort of a chicken or egg argument, but I think religion arose from when people came together as a community and talked among each other to reach a consensus about how they think natural phenomena occurred. After all, one person believing something spiritual isn't a religion, it's spiritualism.

So I think, even before people could come together to create a religion, they had to reach an agreement to not kill each other in order to form a community in the first place.

So I think laws came first.

Anyway. To be fair, even though it's basically true, it is just a bit too over-simplifying to call Mal, Zoe, and Jayne bad guys. I don't claim that they're evil, or that they enjoy what they do.

Bringing in some outside (and possibly really nerdy, don't judge me!) terminology, I'd call them chaotic neutral in general. Sometimes they might manage some true acts of benevolence or malevolence, but mostly it's "I'm looking out for me and mine, and to hell with the Feds."

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Monday, March 23, 2009 6:59 AM

CHRISISALL


Well put IMO.


The laughing Chrisisall

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Monday, March 23, 2009 7:07 AM

BYTEMITE


I'm also willing to admit, that of all things they could smuggle or steal, choosing to deal in supplies like food for Rimworlders who don't have it, when they could be doing more profitable cargo... That does say something positive about them. Even if they don't do it on charity.

And Alliance salvage laws are total bullshit. No one was using those food bars, so why should a person be punished for stealing them off a derelict and getting them to people who need it?

Great humanitarians, the Alliance ain't.

(But I still argue that in general the killing and stealing is a no-no, and that they're bad guys to the people who suffer the consequences of their killing and stealing)

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Monday, March 23, 2009 7:28 AM

THESOMNAMBULIST


Originally posted by Bytemite:
Quote:

(But I still argue that in general the killing and stealing is a no-no)


I'd have to agree with you on this - but what makes Firefly and Serenity so good is that just for a moment, in a totally make believe world you get to experience that rush of breaking the laws, of subverting the system, and just briefly sampling what it may be like to be 'bad'. That's fun! C'mon being bad is fun, every now and then you have to howl at the moon just so as you know you're still alive right!? And people who do that make you keep you're sense of self alive and that's important. That's how a regime is held in check, because without those bad guys, without the conflict, the regime would take over - THX 1138 style.




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Monday, March 23, 2009 7:39 AM

AURAPTOR

America loves a winner!


Kinda how Star Wars went to, in the last prequel. The Emperor was bad, but taking him to trial when the entire system was corrupted would have been futile. ( or would it ? ) That's the rub then, as to how you see the world. Was Anakin naive, to think the Emperor wouldn't work the system, and use all that corruption to his benefit, or was he really that far gone to the dark side, and actually wanted to take him to trial, and there by play along w/ the ruse that the system worked.

"As much as I respect what he's doing, really the economy is something he should focus on more than the brackets. "
- Duke University basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski, after Obama snubbed Duke in his Final Four picks.



The U.S. economy WAS on fire under Bush, for 6 years. Until the Democrats took control of Congress. It's been all down hill since then.

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Monday, March 23, 2009 7:41 AM

CHRISISALL


I'm printing this whole thread as soon as it's finished; good posts all around.


The laughing Chrisisall

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Monday, March 23, 2009 9:02 AM

AGENTROUKA


Quote:

Originally posted by TheSomnambulist:
Quote:

Originally posted by AgentRouka:
I firmly reject the equation of religious laws with morality.

One can be firmly moral without having a shred of religion, and people have been for millenia outside the influence of the particular morals of judeo-christian commandments. Just saying.



Never said people who believed it are religious. Just saying thems it's origins that's all.



But... that's really the point. They're not the origin. Just one list that survived because of certain circumstances.

Bytemite put it pretty well. There were laws about these things before, they just didn't happen to morph from Judaism into Christianity and become established as state religion by a Roman emperor, thus connecting many different societies through the Catholic church and intertwining Western culture with this particular religious set of laws. It's easy to put on a lense that suggests the ten commandments were the beginning of law and strong morality, but that has never been true.

Quote:


Anyway did you see my quote from Bill and Ted - that's the real issue :D



Truth!

Quote:


Good to see you again AR



Thanks! Same to you!

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Monday, March 23, 2009 9:59 AM

CYBERSNARK


Quote:

Originally posted by AURaptor:
Was Anakin naive, to think the Emperor wouldn't work the system, and use all that corruption to his benefit, or was he really that far gone to the dark side, and actually wanted to take him to trial, and there by play along w/ the ruse that the system worked.


That is the rub. The Empire/Rebellion conflict was never about "Evil" versus "Good," AFAIC, but about "Lawful" versus "Chaotic" (yes, there were just as many good people within the Empire as there were dangerous sociopaths among the Rebels --and the sad truth is that many of these "good" people needed to be sacrificed, because they would never have allowed what the Rebellion wanted to restore).

I remain convinced that, for Sidious, despite being a Sith Lord, revenge on the Jedi was just a side-effect of his true goal: he was a civilized man who wanted to bring peace and order to a corrupt, violent galaxy. Anakin, when it came right down to it, was the same way.

The only problem was that they were both convinced that order --i.e., a strong set of laws and harsh punishments-- was inherently good. True, strong laws would (in theory) cut the crime rate, and centralized power would ensure that the bureaucracy is kept under control and that the Head of State can make policy decisions quickly (without the Senate to make a mess of things), but the cost of this "security" is the loss of everyone's freedom. It requires everyone to be made the same and put in their socially-mandated box, never to escape.

The Empire/Alliance would most definitely try to "take the sky." I'm sure the "protectors" of society would love nothing more than to enforce legally-authorized spacelanes --no one would be allowed to break from their pre-assigned course or affect the traffic pattern. No shortcuts, no dawdling, no staying off the radar. No more "flying," just "traffic."

The most peaceful and orderly place you'll find is a graveyard --or Miranda.

The universe needs chaos. It's chaos that allows evolution and change. Without chaos, no one will ever have the chance to become greater than they were born. The risk of falling --of "evil," is a necessary one.

That's why Justice is more important than Law. Law is inflexible, it's based on the principle that we are all fundamentally the same. If a society was ever able to maintain that status --where the laws applied to the CEOs and heads of state as much as to the inner-city dropouts, subsistence farmers, and free traders, then yes, law and justice would be the same.

Justice is flexible. It has to be, because "law" can too easily be turned into a weapon of corruption, ignorance, apathy, and fear. When it does, illegal (and even immoral) actions become necessary --though never preferable.

One should never seek another's death --but should be prepared to accept that outcome if no other choice is possible.

(Yeah, I'm still in the Rebellion. )

-----
We applied the cortical electrodes but were unable to get a neural reaction from either patient.

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Monday, March 23, 2009 10:43 AM

THESOMNAMBULIST


Originally posted by AgentRouka:
Quote:

But... that's really the point. They're not the origin. Just one list that survived because of certain circumstances.


Wow! Ok well it's semantics, but I see your point...

Quote:

Bytemite put it pretty well. There were laws about these things before, they just didn't happen to morph from Judaism into Christianity and become established as state religion by a Roman emperor, thus connecting many different societies through the Catholic church and intertwining Western culture with this particular religious set of laws. It's easy to put on a lense that suggests the ten commandments were the beginning of law and strong morality, but that has never been true.


- And these laws that existed before are...? Based upon which writings? I'm only asking because I'm ignorant of that of which you speak so matter of fact. I was under the impression that the religious belief behind most societies of the ancient world dictated the laws that it's society would endure and strive to uphold - wether it was the Phoenicians, Egyptians or whomever, not the other way around. But hey, I could be wrong - I have been on so many occasions before.




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Monday, March 23, 2009 11:10 AM

BYTEMITE


The first known written set of laws, the Code of Hammerabi (I think that's spelled right) were civil laws, not religious. They bear a number of similarities, however, to religious laws that have been carried into the modern day.

However, I wasn't even talking about that. I was speaking more generally. Religion = requires community consensus. Community = more than 1 person. More than 1 person = not killing each other.

So, by that logic, Law -> Community -> Religion.

And I also take the fact as circumstancial evidence that pretty much all religions have some version of some very similar laws (thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not steal in the very least). I believe that indicates that those laws predate most religions, and those laws had to be spread early on to become globally accepted mnemes in all the religions we see. Either that, or some laws are a basic part of human nature, and existed before communities as well.

But that's just what I think.

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