On Apr 6, 5:21=A0am, Professor <David.Butler.N...@gmail.com> wrote: > At the end of Midnight Nation and scattered throughout B5, JMS > recounts the beating he took on the street in San Diego in 1978 one > night by a gang that nearly cost him his life. He has said, since this > incident, that he is no longer afraid of death. Given that this event > was a changing point in his life, if he were to meet this gang today > on the street during daylight, what would he do and what would he say? > I have tried to deduce his response from his writings, but I cannot > come up with a single response. Would he, for instance, "damn sure > finish the fight that he did not start?" Would he just ponder, > reflectively, and walk on and weave this second into his current > narratives? Could he somehow acknowledge these thugs and let them know > their place in the universe and what they helped set in motion? Maybe > he would call the police and press charges and let the gang pay for > its crimes? > > David
What I would do would vary greatly depending on whether or not there were witnesses around.
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