File: "FKSPOILR LOG9605" Part 3 TOPICS: Jane Doe Spoiler (2) Jane Doe Spoilers (2) SPOILERS: Jane Doe (ep 19) Take 2 Jane Doe/Uniquely Evil Geniuses SPOILER: Jane Doe, HF, FI (2) SPOILER: JD, HF, Body Count (3) Jane Doe: Nick Flying IN a building??? (2) LC, Nietzsche, and evil.... (5) SPOILERS: Jane Doe; Companionship SPOILER: Jane Doe Sorry! ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 22:43:12 GMT From: Katy Deery <gb61@d.......> Subject: Jane Doe Spoiler Perhaps Lacroix's reaction during Jane Doe was because he has a certain understanding of racial prejudice? After all, vampires are 'The People who dare not speak their names' and who have to hide their true natures from society, very much like the Jews did in occupied countries during the war. I haven't seen the episode yet, so forgive my wild speculations, but I gather from what I've heard that when Lacroix meets Hitler it's before he has become the dictator of Germany and therefore Lacroix has no knowledge of what he will do in the future. He might well recognise the evil in the man, but not its eventual means of expression, but he presumable knows what kind of person this Jordan Manning is. Maybe he sees him as having the same mentally as a hunter? Katy Deery <gb61@d.......> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ "Hey Fraser, don't they have any Canadians with attitude?" "Yes Ray. We call them criminals." vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 18:52:49 -0400 From: Gehirn Karies <SoulDebris@a.......> Subject: Re: Jane Doe Spoilers FoolKiller : >And am I the only one that had trouble reconciling LC's raised eyebrows >over the pycho's poem, with the LC in TG that welcomed another mass >murderer back to a computer chat session? Something may be a bit >inconsistent here. No, no, no, no, no, no....... Rosebud and his friends covet, Manning hates. Big difference, no inconsistency. Brutal Cousin Karies SoulDebris@a....... 'The only way to reform some people is to chloroform them." T.C. Haliburton ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 17:35:17 -0700 From: AKR <r@w.......> Subject: Re: SPOILERS: Jane Doe (ep 19) Take 2 On Wed, 1 May 1996, Phillip Anderson wrote: > Two US servicemen were just court-martialed > and kicked out for refusing to supply DNA samples (I don't know in what > form, but it wasn't even in the course of an investigation). It was because the US military requires DNA samples of all servicepeople, for identification purposes. From the military's pov, it is no different than requiring you to wear dogtags. I assume the Canadian military has a similar policy. I really did think that Reese had lost it, in the warehouse with the psycho. I laughed in relief when he reverted to normal, with Nick, outside. The funny thing is that for the bulk of the episode, I was convinced that the racist author couldn't be the serial killer, just because it was *too easy*, because he'd been there from the beginning. But then, I watched MBIAV not too long before I saw JD, and if nothing else can be said for MBIAV, at least I was surprised by who turned out to be the killer. **** Amy, Lady of the Knight (AKR) r@w....... **** "For how do I hold thee but by thy granting?" --W.S. Sonnet 87 ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 20:45:12 -0400 From: Karen Kasting <KatrynK@a.......> Subject: Jane Doe/Uniquely Evil Geniuses Hitler's grandfather didn't get around to acknowledging his son until late in life. The chief interest in Schickelgruber lies in "Heil Schickelgruber" just not having quite the right ring to it. The whole issue of dwelling upon the sparing of Adolf by our favorite vampires turns upon the assumption of Hitler being a uniquely evil genius who inevitably would have wrought havoc. I believe that it is an error to think of Hitler as a unique monster. His ideas were not his own alone; some had been around for a while. While it is common to think of him as springing fully developed from obscurity, a closer look does not bear out the popular view of the artsy bum full of hate. Hitler was carefully groomed by others. The clothes, the speeches, the Nazi regalia, the carefully staged presentations--did not erupt from Hitler's unaided brain. He had help. He was perhaps the first media-oriented politician with his "Wings over Germany" campaign designed to make him look modern and forward-looking. What Hitler did have going for him was his speaking ability. I don't see it in the films, but then I don't understand German. By all accounts, he was spellbinding, sufficiently so to be *elected by popular vote*. But I wouldn't be too hard on LC or Nicky Boy for passing on a light Austrian snack. Given conditions in Europe, and the emergence of dictatorial regimes elsewhere in Europe, if Adolf had managed to pursue a career in art, someone else, somewhere, would have arisen to create turmoil. Conditions were ripe for European conflict, and sadly, even today after the horrors of WW2 AND the commonplace of tv coverage bringing genocide and political murder into homes, our species goes on killing in the same old ways. We shouldn't hold our favorite vampires responsible for the deaths of millions; unfortunately, such slaughter is our species-tendency. Karen Kasting KatrynK@a....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 20:54:25 -0400 From: Lisa Prince <Moonlight@g.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe, HF, FI Go ahead, say it, "Oh no, not her again" :) Well, being a Cousin means being tenacious about certain things. I wrote: >> Nick is not exactly a Saint -- present day or past. Amy responded: >Given, and gladly. But, in the present, 1992-1996, Nick is a good >man. My point is that people are constantly throwing out, rather blithely, that LaCroix is *evil* and Nick is *good*. All relative terms. The world is not a black and white place. It exists continually in varying shades of gray. In present day, you see Nick doing *good*. Well, where in present day do you see LaCroix doing *evil*? (Please remember that in my opinion that killing of the doctor in HF was justified and for the *good* of his people. Mr. Evil Incarnate saved them all. But, of course, he must be regreting the fact that he saved them. Doing good and all that :)) LaCroix is currently a watcher of human life and vampire life. He very rarely appears to interact with them at all -- other than to remind Nick where his allegiance should lie. So, if we can forgive Nick all his past *evil* deeds, why can't we forgive LaCroix? Because he's not torturing himself with a pointless quest for mortality? >Flashbacks usually turn on things he's done wrong in the past. >Isn't that natural? Don't all of us spend much more time reliving >the things we regret than what socks we've worn over the years? :) You're comparing apples with oranges. A more valid question would be: Don't we all spend time reliving the things we regret along with our good deeds? I remember clearly the times I've have helped others with no thought of my own needs. I also remember times when I've done things I'm not proud of. They are equal in my memory. Nick mostly remembers the bad, or the writers are more interested in showing us the bad :) For instance, by the time NiQ rolled around, we had seen LaCroix save Nick's life (the resurrection doctor flashback), and yet in the flashback in NiQ, Nick puts a price on saving LaCroix's life. Would you put a price on saving someone's life even if he/she were someone you didn't particularly like? Now, do you suppose if the tables had been turned that LaCroix would have put a price on saving Nick's life? I don't think so. Contrary to popular opinion, LaCroix does do things for others -- see episodes Close Call, Night in Question, Father's Day, even Be My Valentine -- your favorite episode :) His letting Fleur go was a selfless act -- whether he loved her or not. I wrote: >> Oh, but maybe no one ever told Nick that humans are >> supposed to have compassion for the sickly. Amy wrote: > Fair enough. In that time period, Nick's innate >arrogance, long nurtured by LC, combined with his lack of patience >to allow him to be annoyed by a man with a constant cough. This was all of what . . . 50 years ago? Well within the time frame of his supposed revelation about human life. Amy continued: > But LC is the one who made him leave. Yup, with nary a word from Nickie-boy. Complacency is just as bad. I wrote re. the chained women: >> You can justify that scene!!!!! He had women locked up in his >> basement! In chains! Unconscious because of loss of blood! Amy responded: > I assume you meant, "*can't* justify that scene." Nope, that was a rhetorical statement to Sandra who had just justified that scene. I could not actually believe that someone would even *attempt* to do so. About that scene, Amy wrote: >When he looked up into Andre's eyes, he suddenly became aware of >the horror he was perpetuating. He was made to see his own >depravity, and I think it was an important turning point in his >existence, one of those things which have slowly added up to make >*today's* Nick so different from *yesterday's*. Okay, that scene took place, tops, 50 years after Nick was brought across. If he was really that horrified, you mean to tell me that it took him another 600 or so years to decide that he shouldn't actually kill humans for their blood? "His own depravity" was certainly ssllloooowww in sinking in :) I wrote: >> On that note: If he was in fact raised Catholic, he should know >> that the only thing he needs to do to attain redemption is ask >> for it. Amy responded: >The willingness to accept God's grace is exactly what Nick is >lacking, and yes, it's all he really needs. However, <snip> Nick >would have been raised to believe that the penance is more >important than the reconciliation. Beg to differ with you on this point. There was much in Catholic theology even back then to support the idea that an internal pursuit of God was a valid means of attaining salvation and the glory of God. I don't have my notes on the particular theologians with me right now, but I would be more than happy to go look up the names if that is necessary to prove this point. Suffice to say that at any given time throughout history there were several interpretation concerning salvation. So, I guess that would mean that he chose the one that would make it hardest on himself. Amy wrote: >Please consider my premise. Nick (like me, and some other people) >believes in absolutes. People who believe in absolutes believe >that, as per the definition, absolutes apply to everyone, >everywhere, everywhen. We'll have to agree to disagree here or we'll end up arguing to the end of time. In my way of thinking, absolutes reduce the world, put it in a neat little box, and tie it up with a pretty pink ribbon. There are no absolute truths. To believe in said truths is to limit one's ability to accept other cultures and beliefs as valuable and *right* in their own context. Amy wrote: >I am not here attempting to argue the nature of absolutes, but >merely that it must be at least as valid to believe in them as not >to. Very true. Everyone is welcome to there own beliefs. She continued: > That is where I believe Nick is coming from when he jumps to >moral conclusions. We share this insane view that objectivity is >possible. :) Ah, but if your above definition is to be applied, your view is one of subjectivity, not objectivity. You and Nick have a set criteria of beliefs for what is right and what is wrong and you both apply it to those around you -- subjectivity. Back to you in the studio, Mercenary Cousin Lisa The Forgotten L -- Third over to the right ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 18:03:21 -0700 From: AKR <r@w.......> Subject: SPOILER: JD, HF, Body Count Obliquely responding to Laurie: First granting that LC's body count in this century is probably not *too* different than Nick's, and acknowledging that they weren't necessarily for "pleasure," I can think of a few people he has killed from 1992 to 1996: -- anonymous person at the end of LYTD (feeding: drained) -- Cal in Fever (for revenge: drained) -- assistant in STF (didn't bother to hypnotize: drained) -- intended to kill Nat in BMV (for revenge: intended to drain) Not very many, really, is it? How about Nick: -- criminal in NiQ (accident: fell from a height) -- nobility guy in QoH (accident: hit by a car) -- intended to kill Ravenette in FtB (feeding: intended to drain) There are still many episodes I haven't seen, and my memory may be blocking out bad-Nick moments in an act of Knightie-self-preservation, but that's all I can come up with. As for Janette: -- two arsonists in HF (revenge, first feeding: drained) -- somebody in AFWTD? (haven't seen this yet...) Overall, I think there may be remarkably little killing going on. > But vampires are NOT human. They are a different species altogether, > Nick's pathetic attempts to prove otherwise notwithstanding. But they *were*, once, human. We were never cows. :) And we don't depend on the art and culture of cows to make our existence worthwhile. :) And we don't adopt cows into our families. :) Just curious, but would the Cousins and Dark Knighties and such really think that Nick had reached a mature epiphany if he quit his job, made up with LC, and went back to feeding on human blood? **** Amy, Lady of the Knight (AKR) r@w....... **** "For how do I hold thee but by thy granting?" --W.S. Sonnet 87 ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 20:49:32 -0500 From: Carol LeBras <clebras@i.......> Subject: Jane Doe: Nick Flying IN a building??? Just a note that seems odd: Have there been other instances of Nick flying inside buildings like he seemed to be doing in the chase scene at the end of the episode? I hate to bring up this "flying" discussion again, but this doesn't seem terribly logical to me! (But when is FK logical? ;) ) Perhaps I am misunderstanding the scene. But can you imagine Nick flying past Manning so quickly that he doesn't see him inside a building to cut him off around the next corner? LOL!! Carol. ****************************************************************************** Carol LeBras, Fine Arts Reference/Technical Associate. Fine Arts Library, Indiana University Bloomington, IN 47405 clebras@i....... ****************************************************************************** ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 18:50:55 -0700 From: AKR <r@w.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe, HF, FI (Hi, Lisa!) > Well, being a Cousin means being tenacious about certain things. Cousins are tenacious, Knighties are stubborn... tomato, tomato... :) > My point is that people are constantly throwing out, rather > blithely, that LaCroix is *evil* and Nick is *good*. While I still find those terms useful, you're right. Both men are far too complex to be casually labeled and filed away, as if a single word explained them. > Please remember that in my opinion that killing of > the doctor in HF was justified and for the *good* of his people. Ummmm... well, *I* don't think so, actually. Killing Cal *fortuitously* provided the cure, but LC killed him in an act of pure, useless vengance. The disease had already spread; killing Cal would do no good at all, as far as LC knew when he did it, except perhaps soothe LC's sense of justice/vengance. What -- was he going to go tell all the dying vampires that he'd gotten the guy at fault, and that made it all better? > Why can't we forgive LaCroix? Because he's not torturing himself? Exactly. <g> I'll forgive LC everything he's done the moment he feels bad about it. :) He needn't actually go so far as to seek mortality, or anything, but... "Redeem LC!" is the slogan of the Light Cousins, after all... all three of us. :) (Hi, Idalia! Hi, Paula!) > They are equal in my memory. Well, perhaps I'm just weird. My memory is full of my failings; I don't think I ever *dwell* on successes. So is Nick "just weird" too? :) > For instance, by the time NiQ rolled around, we had seen LaCroix > save Nick's life (the resurrection doctor flashback) If you are referring to The Fix, then I beg to differ. LC was there, yes, but *Janette* saved Nick. > Contrary to popular opinion, LaCroix does do things for others -- see > episodes Close Call, Night in Question, Father's Day, even Be My > Valentine -- your favorite episode :) (Regret providing me with it yet? <g>) Yes, LC does things for others. LC is capable of great goodness. He does not always choose to exercise this capacity, but it most definitely does exist, as Nick's capacity for evil exists, and both have been documented. Balanced enough for ya? :) > His letting Fleur go was a > selfless act -- whether he loved her or not. Yes it was. :) And he did love her. :) Re: Jane Doe: > This was all of what . . . 50 years ago? Well within the time > frame of his supposed revelation about human life. Do you really think being annoyed by the hacking cough of a fellow passenger was more than merely petty selfishness? So Nick was a bit of a jerk and LC was slightly more than a jerk. They were having a tough night... Re: Fallen Idol: > Okay, that scene took place, tops, 50 years after Nick was brought > across. If he was really that horrified, you mean to tell me that > it took him another 600 or so years to decide that he shouldn't > actually kill humans for their blood? No. :) It took 300 years. :) In LYTD, LC says to Nick, "In keeping with your code of the past 300 years..." thus defining just how long they'd been at odds over Nicky's conscience. If the flashbacks of LYTD were 100 years ago, then Nick's "code" goes back 400 years from the present, meaning that he implemented it around about his 400th birthday! :) He didn't actually stop killing humans for their blood until after Sylvaine's death, but for that 300 year period, he tried to just kill the "guilty." So he's only been on bovine juice for a century. :) Ok, so the boy is more than a bit slow. :) But, as Laurie has pointed out on LC's behalf, they need blood to survive. The mental effort required to reject human blood is immense -- and possibly suicidal. I just thought the Pit was a step on the road to redemption. I don't think it was the on-ramp to the express, or anything... :) > So, I guess that would mean > that he chose the one that would make it hardest on himself. Trusting your research, I find that compatible with Nick's personality. He is, on the one hand, very arrogant, completely aware of his power and knowledge and status. On the other hand, he hates himself, and everything he is. So this combination of self-value and self-hate is what has made him set the ransom of his soul so very high. > Ah, but if your above definition is to be applied, your view is one > of subjectivity, not objectivity. Ah, but the very nature of believing in an Absolute convinces you of its objective truth. :) Applying it uniformly is seen by the applier as objectivity. :) But, yeah, let's agree to disagree. I hereby withdraw from the argument, because there's actually nothing to argue about. LC is both good and bad; Nick is both good and bad. :) **** Amy, Lady of the Knight (AKR) r@w....... **** "For how do I hold thee but by thy granting?" --W.S. Sonnet 87 Knightie * Fleur-Booster * Light Cousin * (Im)Mortal Beloved ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 21:55:19 -0400 From: Michelle Mark <Raindance2@a.......> Subject: LC, Nietzsche, and evil.... Amy wrote about the concept of evil: > Ah, the cultural relevancy argument. I don't agree with >that, in a broad sense. Some things are simply wrong The existentialist in me just has to jump in. (in a friendly way...I'm not being confrontational here) What do you mean by "some things are simply wrong"? According to who? By whose standards do we deem someone "good" or "evil"? I think that all things and values can be interpreted from different angles. There is no ultimate system of belief or criterion that can establish the "truth" about anything. There is no one truth but many truths, and no system of belief is neccessarily better than another. Morality, good, evil...all of it is arbitrary. The "good" and the "just" are simply those who believe they possess the ultimate criteria for good and evil. Dosen't make them any better than anyone else. While it is acceptable for an individual to create their own meanings and values, it is also necessary that they understand that those values need not be true or valid for everyone, forever. So, what the hell does this have to do with anything you ask? ;) I think if you look at LC from an existentialist point of view, you will see that he is not, and cannot be evil. He simply has his own moral code which may be different from others, but is nonetheless, what he wills for himself, and what he is ultimately responsible for. Comments? Cousin Michelle~CSS~Truly Depraved~Thong Snapper~Seducer~ SKL: "Faciemus ut Dewus Mountainus e Tuo Nasone Exeat!" ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 18:52:01 -0700 From: [Name removed by request] Subject: Re: SPOILERS: Jane Doe; Companionship Laurie wrote: > What it was in Nick that attracted LaCroix and made him decide to bring > Nick across as an eternity-long companion? <snip>LC's musing in Jane Doe about why he would consider bringing someone >across, and any answers might also refer to that episode -- which Young, blond, good bod. LC has got to have been as tired as i am of dark-browed, night-wandering mortals with black insides and wicked habits - the ones who have the piercing look down and everything. A fun experiment for LC might have been to bring over a virtuous golden boy (or one who tries to be virtuous and good) and see him struggle with, whoopee!, damnation. i mean, look at that face. That's not Enrico with a rose gritted between his teeth, enticing you into his casbah (err, casbah? Ckazbaw? Katzenberg?) with a cocked eyebrow. This is Nicky who'll always look 5 to me. This might not have been what was going on in LC and Janette's minds at the time (see above: "Young, blond, good bod... Wrap the boy up. We'll take him.") but it's a bonus LC probably enjoyed later. ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 21:42:34 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: Jane Doe Spoilers Celeste writes: >Gozer the Gammy-legged Cat & Mad Max have brought home several dead/ >almost dead/not very enthusiastic birds a piece already this spring. >They do not eat them, but have a great time playing with them. And our family once had a cat who used to bring us dead birds, mice, and snakes as "gifts" (she laid them in front of the door). Pets are fed by their owners so maybe don't feel much need to eat what they catch. For a wild animal, what they catch *is* their food. I suppose that sometimes a predator may not eat all of what they catch, but I would think that hunger would be the motivation for wild predators to hunt. FK vampires have been termed predators by some on this list. No one's ever called them pets. :) --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 23:07:21 -0400 From: Apache <lf@c.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe On Wed, 1 May 1996, Sandra Gray wrote: > Well, imo, it's twisted to try to put all the deaths of WWII at > Nick's feet. That is how this whole debate got started (and yes, I > saw Apache post it was a joke, but I'm not the only one who took > what she said as a serious comment). Yeah you are. And since you're flattering me with the appellation 'twisted,' here is the whole text of what I sent. Walks like a joke, quacks like a joke ... by golly it's a... Searing Moral Indictment! Apache Twisty Vachonista **** Date: Tue, 30 Apr 1996 01:56:46 -0400 (EDT) From: Apache <lf@c.......> To: Forever Knight TV show - Spoiler Topic List <FKSPOILR@p.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe On Mon, 29 Apr 1996, Roxanne Piccen wrote: > > Also on Monday, April 29th, Laurie Fenster wrote: > >Btw, in the original script, at the end, after LC muses "I sometimes > >wonder how the world would have been different had I done what I > >intended," Nick follows with "Or had you done what I had asked." That's our boy Nick -- wants this creeplet Hitler gone, but will *he* do the dirty deed? Nooooo, not Mr. Hair Shirt -- he wants Papa to kill for him. Shall we chalk up the 50 million or so total people, military and civilian, who died in WWII to Nick's little moral sulk? Hands? Ap. ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 23:12:41 -0400 From: Michelle Mark <Raindance2@a.......> Subject: Sorry! Sorry for the double post...AOL is a pain in the A**!! Mea Culpa. Cousin Michelle~CSS~Truly Depraved~Thong Snapper~Seducer~ SKL: "Faciemus ut Dewus Mountainus e Tuo Nasone Exeat!" ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 23:56:57 -0400 From: --Serena DuBois <SerenaDB@a.......> Subject: Re: Jane Doe Spoiler Im on digest so if someone else noted this I apologize. BUT did anyone note that The Corporal talks about "My Battle" in one of the flash back scenes which of course happens to be a pretty good rough translations of "Mein Kampf" that well known book? I think the writers wanted to make it *really* REALLY clear who the Corporal really was and also draw the parallel between him and Manning, racists together. Besides speaking of racists, Hitler didn't just murder 6,000,000 Jews; there were also another few million Gypsies, Chechs, Poles and other assorted lower races that went to death of one kind or another at his hands. And one of the stories out there about him says that he was part Jewish. If he *was* part Jewish and killed 6 million of them or was responsible for it, what would he do to the Vampire race if he was made a vampire? Self-hatred can take very strange forms! There might not be a Forever Knight today! Terrible thought! Maybe THAT was what LC felt and what made him decide that the Corporal was better left human. SerenaDB who Lurks in the Shadows ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 23:29:34 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: Jane Doe: Nick Flying IN a building??? Carol LeBras writes: >Have there been other instances of Nick flying inside buildings Well, I don't know if it's clear whether Nick is flying or just *moving* very fast. He (and Screed and the Inca) flew through the sewers looking for bombs in Black Buddha. Nick used vampire speed to capture the murder suspect in the parking garage in Capitol Offense. Those are the only things I can recall right now and I'm not sure if a parking garage qualifies as a building. Of course in first season, we saw Nick fly at a normal visible speed and attack from the air in Dying to Know You (a warehouse) and Father Figure (his loft). --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 21:39:41 -0700 From: LC Fenster <lucienlc@i.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: JD, HF, Body Count Amy wrote: >Obliquely responding to Laurie: Not so obliquely responding to Amy (hi, Amy <waves>): >First granting that LC's body count in this century is probably not >*too* different than Nick's, and acknowledging that they weren't >necessarily for "pleasure," I can think of a few people he has killed >from 1992 to 1996: > -- anonymous person at the end of LYTD (feeding: drained) I conceded that one in my original post - though I think it was really a mere plot device to show LC's return, and therefore an annoying aberration <g> > -- Cal in Fever (for revenge: drained) I have no problem with revenge either in this case. The man is personally responsible, as far as LC knows at that point, for wiping out his entire race. Kind of like if the survivors of the concentration camps had been given their crack at Hitler or Eichmann. I would not have blamed them for anything that happened, because anything they did would have been too good for the scum involved. And of course, the Israelis did get Eichmann. Kidnapped him, spirited him out of Argentina, put him on trial, and executed him. And I applaud them for it, whether you call it "justice" or "revenge". Granted, Cal's actions were inadvertent. But the vampires were just as dead. And sometimes, we have to bear the consequences of our actions, even the unintended consequences. > -- assistant in STF (didn't bother to hypnotize: drained) LaCroix punishes ("with extreme prejudice" <g>) those whose actions might tend to reveal the existence of the vampire community. He killed the killer in Dark Knight for the same reason. And he killed the guard in DK to protect the vampires' secrets. I never said he had stopped killing entirely. But he does not kill for "pleasure" or for food, in the current era, as far as we know. I gather his "crime" is that he doesn't angst about it either. <g> > -- intended to kill Nat in BMV (for revenge: intended to drain) This I totally dispute. I don't think he ever had any intention of killing Nat, certainly not before Nick's arrival. You look at how swiftly he can kill when he wants to (with Alyce and the killer in Dark Knight), then you look at how slowly he acted with Nat, taking his time, looking around - he can sense Nick and imo he knew exactly when Nick was going to arrive. He was merely setting the stage for Nick's arrival. After that - I'm not sure. I can make the case either way (and frequently do <g>). Given that LC can sense what Nick is thinking (confirmed yet again in Jane Doe), either Nick was lying and LC sensed it, but let him off the hook anyway for Fleur's sake or Nick's sake; or Nick wasn't lying and LC sensed that and therefore let Nat go. But in either case, imo he didn't "intend" to kill Nat; with LC, intention is as good as the deed <g>. >Not very many, really, is it? How about Nick: > -- criminal in NiQ (accident: fell from a height) > -- nobility guy in QoH (accident: hit by a car) > -- intended to kill Ravenette in FtB (feeding: intended to drain) He also deserves a little *discredit* for "turning his back" in Baby, Baby and letting Serena drain whatever-his-name-was. :-) >There are still many episodes I haven't seen, and my memory may be >blocking out bad-Nick moments in an act of Knightie-self-preservation, >but that's all I can come up with. I suspect there are more, but I'm too tired to go episode by episode right now. > As for Janette: > -- two arsonists in HF (revenge, first feeding: drained) > -- somebody in AFWTD? (haven't seen this yet...) No - the only guy she killed in FWTD was her "master" at the brothel in the twelfth century. She wanted to kill someone else, but was beaten to it <g>. >Overall, I think there may be remarkably little killing going on. It's too dangerous in this day and age. Calls too much attention to the community. >> But vampires are NOT human. They are a different species >>altogether, Nick's pathetic attempts to prove otherwise >>notwithstanding. > But they *were*, once, human. We were never cows. :) True. But we humans have showed remarkably little respect for human life over the centuries. Historically, human life has been cheap. It wasn't until this century that wars of conquest began to be viewed as a "BAD THING". Colonialism, tribalism, genocide, slavery -- all of these still exist today (cf. Rwanda, Somalia, Cambodia, Bosnia, Sudan). So riddle me this: why should vampires, for whom humans are their most nutritious food source, have more respect for humans and humanity than humans themselves do? <g> >Just curious, but would the Cousins and Dark Knighties and such really >think that Nick had reached a mature epiphany if he quit his job, made >up with LC, and went back to feeding on human blood? In a word, yes. :-) At least, I for one would. For me, that's what this show is all about: Nick coming to terms with what he is and realizing that he can have a good, productive life, helping humans, AS a vampire. I don't want or expect him to kill. I don't think he need quit his job, nor do I think LC wants or expects that of him (except when it becomes necessary to protect their secret). LC wants him to get over his self-destructive urges, his self-hatred, and his futile search to become something he cannot. And so do I. :-) Cousin LaurieCF M+B+D+T+K ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 23:51:59 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: LC, Nietzsche, and evil.... Cousin Michelle writes: >Comments? Don't most cultures view murder as wrong? The Nazis might have thought some people were not as worthy to live as them, but I betcha if a Nazi was killed by someone, it would have been considered murder of said Nazi. --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 23:53:50 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: LC, Nietzsche, and evil.... Even if the murderer of a Nazi was another Nazi. --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 23:59:10 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: LC, Nietzsche, and evil.... So what does *LC* term evil? If he has his own moral code, then doesn't it follow that he has decided for himself that some things are "good" and some things are "evil"? --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 22:00:30 -0700 From: LC Fenster <lucienlc@i.......> Subject: Re: LC, Nietzsche, and evil.... Sandra wrote: >Don't most cultures view murder as wrong? The Nazis might have >thought some people were not as worthy to live as them, but I betcha >if a Nazi was killed by someone, it would have been considered murder >of said Nazi. But that's just the point that Michelle was making. It still depends on how you define *murder*. The murder of a Nazi might be viewed as murder by the Nazis, but as an honorable, justifiable act by the Allies or the Resistance. Whereas the murder of Jews, gypsies, the handicapped, etc. was viewed as patriotic and praiseworthy by the Nazis and not as *murder* at all. Laurie ========================================================================= Date: Thu, 2 May 1996 00:25:22 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: JD, HF, Body Count Laurie Fenster writes: >And he killed the guard in DK to protect the vampires' secrets. What vampire secrets? LC was in the museum to steal a Mayan cup. For all the guard knew, LC could have just been a common theif. And really, for an intelligent guy, I thought he really bungled things. With his vampire hearing, he could have waited until the guard was out of range before breaking the case and setting off the alarm. Instead he waits and watches until the guy is in sight of him and *then* breaks the case. Or, for that matter, why not have snuck up on the guard and knocked him out? Or even try to hypnotise him when he'd been seen? Or *fly* away at great vampire speed so the guy would have seen nothing or at most an unidentifiable blur? Nope, just plain sloppy. I think LC just wanted to kill the guy. --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... =========================================================================
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