>>ZHD - Thoughts<<

 Posted on 11/5/1996 by J. Michael Straczynski <71016.1644@compuserve.com> to CIS


Scott Baker <76072.1744@compuserve.com> asks:
> If, however, we are fully human in our "native" state, that is,
> there is no where to go, then the question of "Who are you?" If
> the Shadows are evil and bad, what happens when the "good" start
> acting like the bad and take their eyes off their Ideal, and
> start striving for what they want? The Vorlons manipulate races
> genetic codes to create telepaths, they manipulate Sheridan to
> put him in a place to head the AOL so that he will wipe the
> Shadows away, and they are so sure that they have answered the
> question "Who are they?" Delenn and Kosh hide the truth from
> Sheridan, don't trust him to be who he is, and then excpect him
> to do what they ask? In trying to stop evil, the Vorlons and
> Minbari have fallen into the oldest trap that evil has, they have
> become what they fought, they have become so busy asking everyone
> else "Who are You?" while they were answering "What do you want?"
> By forgiving one another, and by being forgiven, they can begin
> to answer the question of "Who are they?" What do you think?

That's an extremely good and cogent analysis. And you hit the
theme right on the head, one we'll explore in year four with the
Vorlon/Shadow situation...and which was presaged in "Infection," right
in the first season, the first episode shot. Sinclair says, in the
ultimate moment in that conflict, "You forgot the first rule of the
fanatic: When you become obsessed with the enemy, you *become* the
enemy." That is what is happening here, with these two and other
parties.

It all comes together....

jms



>>ZHD - Thoughts<<

 Posted on 11/6/1996 by J. Michael Straczynski <71016.1644@compuserve.com> to CIS


Scott Baker <76072.1744@compuserve.com> asks:
> So is it safe to assume that the third age of mankind is wrapped
> up in this somehow? As I write this, I begin to wonder, are we
> seeing to some degree your own thoughts and/or strugles with
> divinity/God/existance, or have you tried to keep those out of
> this?

I don't know if any of it is so much my thoughts on these areas,
as the questions I think we all have to look at. My thoughts on their
own wouldn't light up a cheap flashlight.

jms



>>ZHD - Thoughts<<

 Posted on 11/6/1996 by J. Michael Straczynski <71016.1644@compuserve.com> to CIS


{original post had no questions}

Thank you. I can only hope that you are proven right by time,
and that the Nobel committee hears about it....

As for answers...since I have none to give, I can't shove them
down anyone's throats. And if I did have them, they'd only be *my*
answers, not anybody else's, so again, there's no point.

I'm a big believer in the power of critical thinking; don't
just have an opinion, have an *informed* opinion, and challenge it
yourself, be rigorous. Even if you come back to the same opinion
later, at least you will now be able to defend or explain your view
rationally.

jms



>>ZHD - Thoughts<<

 Posted on 11/7/1996 by J. Michael Straczynski <71016.1644@compuserve.com> to CIS


Scott Baker <76072.1744@compuserve.com> asks:
> So does thatmean you've formed the opinion that you have no
> answers, or is the show part of you trying to find answers?

It means I have some ideas that work for me, but no Answers that
could work for anyone else. I have rules and guidelines based on what
seems basic ethical behavior...but I'm constantly working to revise
them, and question if they work as well as they might.

But it all comes down to what was said in Lost Horizon: "Be kind
to one another."

jms