12 responses to “Smoke and Mirrors”

  1. Anonymous2

    Firefox 1.5.0.11 Windows XP

    Ah, so you’ve noticed the characters are majorly screwed-up as well? I was starting to think that’s a bad thing, but maybe you’re right about the drama element. In any event, I’m sure lots of grim jokes about being executed by “airlocking” have floated around the fleet’s bulletin boards…

    Incidentally, what do you think of Baltar’s (admittedly self-serving) argument? Do Adama, Roslin, and co. constitute a “ruling aristocracy” in the ordinary sense? Indeed, can one even have life aboard a spaceship without something of the sort?

  2. Anonymous2

    Firefox 1.5.0.11 Windows XP

    Actually Zarek seems to be the quintessential revolutionary-corrupted-by-politics. The first time we see him he’s a radical and after getting involved in politics he winds up advocating martial law – so his lack of interest in the union seems somehow appropriate. Similarly Baltar comes from a poor, working class family but in the last months on New Caprica was considering stopping the union’s activities.

    Well, on Galactica it’s ALL the time!

    Indeed! They need some Big Brother-style posters around the ship featuring an open airlock with a caption like “Follow orders; obey the captain”.

  3. Anonymous2

    Firefox 1.5.0.11 Windows XP

    Or “Even cylons need to breathe…”

  4. Once More With Feeling » links for 2007-03-26

    WordPress 2.0.5 XML-RPC

    [...] A role model smokes? I love Karen (and hope she reappears) but it is so true that smoking is the least of one’s worries in considering her a model (tags: tv hypocrisy smoking) Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages. [...]

  5. Anonymous2

    Firefox 1.5.0.11 Windows XP

    Why not? Sure, as long as the fleet is accepting Galactica’s protection they’ve sort of agreed to follow the leadership’s decision about what direction to travel, when to make the next spacejump, etc. But as Spencer argues, agreeing to go along with the leadership on those decisions doesn’t amount to a blanket agreement to go along on every point.

    It is true agreement to follow the Galactica doesn’t mean each individual ship has to obey its every instruction (although witness episodes involving marines sent to seize food stores, etc). However, I actually was alluding to the problems that life aboard a spaceship (or an ordinary ocean-going ship) pose for libertarian rights. These problems are analogous to the problems in Spencer’s scenario where the surface of the earth is all privately owned.

    For example, on a planet there are limits to the extent that a ruling class can control the means of life; even if enclosures, anti-union laws, and forced cartelization limit the opportunities of the mass of men, at the very least men can still breathe without asking permission of a higher authority. Yet on a spaceship (ocean-going ship) even this simple right is denied, since anyone who disagrees with the captain can be thrown out an airlock (thrown over the side of the ship). The captain is a sort of ideal Hoppean-type monarch who is the absolute owner of his private property, namely the boat itself, and if anybody opposes this situation then (as in Spencer’s scenario) they literally haven’t a place to stand to say anything. Any attempt to democratize, or have competing private defense agencies, or whatnot would seem to crumble against this iron dictatorial rule, and since I have never heard of elections on a boat (not even in medieval Iceland!) I doubt there ever can or would be.

  6. Tim

    Firefox 1.5.0.11 Windows XP

    Is tom zareck a neocon?