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01-27-2005, 12:58 PM | #1 | |||
Regal Dwarven Shade
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...and Gandalf suddenly had a brilliant idea of how to win the war.
There is an interesting remark on orcs in Letters that I’d never paid much attention to before but it suddenly struck me that it has odd implications.
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01-27-2005, 01:06 PM | #2 |
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Boy, something about this seems so familiar.
Hmm... something about ends and means. Oh, I'm sure I'll remember later.
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01-27-2005, 02:06 PM | #3 |
Corpus Cacophonous
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The excerpt from Letter #183 which Kuruharan quotes simply says that, had the West bred or hired Orcs to do their dirty work, their Cause would have remained right. It does not follow that their chosen means of pursuing that Cause would have been right.
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01-27-2005, 02:23 PM | #4 | |
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01-27-2005, 02:38 PM | #5 | ||
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You can't read this passage in a vacuum. I think we need to look at the section of the Letter that comes immediately after the Orc comment. It's clear that what Tolkien is doing is answering those critics who had complained about the way he had depicted his characters in LotR. He is stating an extreme position to say, even if the situation had been different his characters would still have been justified in their opposition to evil.
First, he relates it to a contemporary political situation: the elevation of the State-God and the need to oppose that. I believe the reference below concerning "Marshal This or That" is to Stalin who died in 1953; the horror of his crimes was just being fully revealed by 1956 when the first draft of this comment was written. As a result, Stalin was repudiated not only by the US and UK, but also by the successive Russian government. We are also presumably talking Cold War here: the Soviet Union vs. "The West". Tolkien was understandably suspicious of a country that then discouraged open Catholic worship. This section starts immediately after the sentence on breeding and using Orcs.... Quote:
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Perhaps, with the reference to the 'Marshall' and contemporary politics, he's also implicitly acknowledging that in the real world there are times we do use Orcs to fight evil, not a good thing but, regardless, evil still has to be opposed. Still, to see those remarks on paper, even in a theoretical context, did give me pause...
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01-27-2005, 03:03 PM | #6 | |
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01-27-2005, 03:41 PM | #7 |
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...and Saruman cried, "I'm vindicated!!"
Child
I agree with the general direction of your comments that he is largely referring to the situation in the world current at that time. However, I am still a bit puzzled. The statement itself relates directly to Middle earth. Even if it was not in a letter he sent to someone, I believe it reflects some measure of his thought on the matter. I guess the center of my perplexity (and this relates to the astute comments made by Saucepan Man) is that it almost smacks of a justification of the actions of Saruman. Admittedly, Saruman was driven for lust for the Ring into employing and breeding orcs, however, the idea of Gandalf or Aragorn going out and hiring Ugluk and crew to help fight the war seems dangerously close to seizing the great weapon of the enemy and using it against him. There is another aspect of this and it hinges around the word "breeding." I think that if the opponents of Sauron, in an attempt to defeat him, engaged in this breeding are engaging in the same type of perversion of life that Melkor engaged in at the very beginning. In view of the phrase "most hateful to Ilúvatar" I think this might in some way be worse than seizing the Ring.
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01-28-2005, 06:58 AM | #8 | |
Deadnight Chanter
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following SpM here
Matthew 7:22-23:
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In fact, he haven't appoved at all, had he? - otherwise, we would have seen ork hirelings in published LoTR, would not we?
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01-28-2005, 08:01 AM | #9 | ||
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What really is interesting about this is to consider it in relation to Tolkien's own stance on technology and how it can corrupt. Surely this would go against what he held to be right? And what would be done with these Orcs once 'used' to fight the war? They are sentient beings after all, and could not be 'decommissioned'. And is Tolkien here saying that Orcs were not necessarily evil by nature? That they could be 'turned' to good? Worms...
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01-28-2005, 08:26 AM | #10 | |
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Of course things are rarely so clear cut in real life, much as we might want them to be ...
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01-28-2005, 10:30 AM | #11 | ||
Beloved Shadow
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The "cause" was to get rid of the Dark Lord. Using the Ring against him would ensure that there would continue to be a Dark Lord, so using the ring completely defeats the cause. That's why it was wrong. If the ring had no corrupting powers and could be wielded safely there would be no problem with using its power to overthrow Sauron.
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01-28-2005, 12:20 PM | #12 | ||
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To my mind, the situations are very similar. Had one of the Wise set about a policy of breeding Orcs to defeat the existing Dark Lord, then they would be setting themselves up to be the next Dark Lord. At least that's how, in my opinion, it works in Tolkien's world. In real life, things are a bit more complicated.
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01-28-2005, 01:06 PM | #13 | ||||
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I don't completely agree though. I think the ring was a special case. If a different weapon of the enemy had fallen into the the hands of Gandalf and Elrond, let's say a catapult, then it's no big deal to use it against Sauron, right? (maybe use it to toss the Ring into Mt Doom, for those of you who've clicked on all the links on the Mortor thread ) Of course, that's not to say that breeding orcs is fine and dandy. Quote:
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He was abusing his power of creation. Morgoth created the orcs. He made them in mockery of the children of God. That's what was so evil. If Gandalf and Aragorn had employed orc mercenaries or even bred orc armies, they still would not be guilty of creating the race of orcs. They would merely be making use of something that was already created. That is a major difference.
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01-28-2005, 03:16 PM | #14 | |
Deadnight Chanter
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:)
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01-28-2005, 03:22 PM | #15 | |
Beloved Shadow
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If Melkor really had the ability to make submarines, I think he would've done it and attacked Valinor. Sub creation- heh... honestly, where in the world do you come up with this stuff, H-I?
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01-28-2005, 03:50 PM | #16 | |
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01-28-2005, 03:55 PM | #17 | |
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...and the lightning will give you...LIFE!!!
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At the risk of opening up the ole "what exactly are orcs" can o' worms, by breeding orcs and/or adding new DNA to the pool, one would be perpetuating and expanding upon the maiming of Life that Melkor engaged in.
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01-28-2005, 04:32 PM | #18 | |
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No, it doesn't work - chiefly because its impossible to imagine Gandalf, Aragorn or Elrond, et al, even contemplating such an act, let alone carrying it through. In fact, I think Gandalf, Aragorn or Elrond could easily pull apart Tolkien's argument here. Tolkien seems to be saying that, in the last resort, anything is permissible in order to defeat Evil. So, why not take the Ring & use that - if it was the last hope of defeating Sauron? Or are we to believe that only the Ring itself can totally corrupt an individual? What Tolkien is advocating here is simply wrong, & goes against the whole philosophy of LotR. One cannot use the enemy's means without becoming like the enemy. Abu Ghraib anyone? The Ring is an extreme case, not a unique one. If it was unique then LotR would not have such resonances for us. I can't help feeling Tolkien has fallen into his own trap here. Or more precisely the trap he exposed for his characters. If the West had used Sauron's methods they would have sacrificed their values & moral superiority, & become 'Sauron'. To have refused to use the Ring for fear of becoming a 'monster' like Sauron but to have behaved in every other way as if they had taken & used it, would have been the height of hypocrisy, to say the least. The reason they are in the right is that they didn't ever take the course that Tolkien is attempting to justify here. They would never have considered it. If they had considered it they would have been too vulnerable to the lure of the Ring & so 'their' cause would have had no chance of success. In short, they wouldn't have done such a thing because they didn't think that way. |
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01-28-2005, 04:58 PM | #19 | ||||
Beloved Shadow
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Would everyone agree that it is acceptable to hire (or otherwise compel) a non-western army to fight Sauron? I don't see anything wrong with that, and neither did Tolkien. He saw nothing wrong with fighting evil with evil's own devices. Remember the Paths of the Dead? Legolas said this in ROTK, The Last Debate- Quote:
And Lal, about this- Quote:
If Montreal dropped a nuke on Toronto because they were jealous, that'd be wrong. But if Toronto was Mordor and Sauron was about to release a virus that would end all life on Earth, I think most sane people would excuse Montreal for dropping a nuke. Might the same thing apply to the use of orcs? But then I must ask, is there a difference between breeding orcs to make an army and hiring an army of existing orcs? Or is there a difference between breeding normal orcs and making a new strain of orcs? What are your opinions on this? And I just saw your post, Davem. Quote:
There are two bad guys. They kidnap your daughter (if you don't have one- pick someone very dear to you). They plan on torturing her for a week and then executing her. You somehow capture one of the men. He refuses to tell you where she is being held. How far would you go to get him to talk? What would you do to save the life of the person who is most precious to you? This is an excellent illustration of how behavior does not always stand alone. Circumstances and consequences play a role.
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01-28-2005, 05:21 PM | #20 | |
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In the case of such a thing as the Ring, we can clearly see this in action. The very existence of such a thing puts the whole of Middle Earth on the knife edge of disaster. The fact that so many of the great and the good refuse the Ring shows just how wise they are, in that they not only know how dangerous such an item is, but they can see that to have such an item would put them in the same position as Sauron, in that they would hold a level of power that is not right or good.
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01-28-2005, 06:08 PM | #21 | |
Scent of Simbelmynë
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A momentous statement to make around here...
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Regardless of the real-world complexity that Lalwende and the phantom are doing a good job discussing, things are much simpler in Middle-Earth, for one reason: Sauron is utterly corrupt and indisputably evil. He isn't a misguided leader, or even insane. He longs for the destruction of goodness itself. It goes against the very idea that drives the Council of Elrond to send the Ring to Mordor to say that the defenders of Good can use Sauron's tools against him. That is to say, unless these orcs were radically redeemed and reformed. But that's a topic for another thread... Sophia
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01-29-2005, 12:49 PM | #22 | ||||
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01-29-2005, 03:33 PM | #23 | |
La Belle Dame sans Merci
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shall we play let's make believe?
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My Adv.Biology teacher has this lovely nice big poster on his wall with several quotes, one being "Are you a part of nature, or apart from nature. Either answer has consequences." That one has nothing to do with my point. The important on to my slightly wandering line of thought is "Nature or Nurture?" We already know that orcs are evil by nature, having been created thus. Even if Middle Earth had my afore mentioned super-mommies, they wouldn't have been able to nurture orcs into being decent creatures. It goes against what they are. So let's say the good guys have the facilities to tweak the orcs' genetics and make them nice little Eru-friendly creations that hate Sauron [and all the other evil guys]. After switching a few Ts with Cs, some As with Gs, Middle Earth has new quick-breeding ARMIES of good orcs. As incredibly unlikely as it sounds, say this happened somehow. Is "The West" doing right or wrong with it? Let's go with right; the good guys have taken something wholly evil and made it good. With it, they can defeat the evil. The wrong; they have manipulated Nature, or more accurately, played Eru. Melkor already took advantage of his gift of sub-creation, but now the good guys, in order to make his no-no into a yes-yes, did the same thing. They played with something that Eru's currently got in existence (because let's face it, if Eru wanted the orcs gone, they wouldn't exist), and that's exactly what Morgoth did! Actually, allow me to even incorporate my teacher's other quote. "Are you a part of nature, or apart from nature?" Which heading do orcs fall into? They are alive, so they are a part of nature, yes? But they are a creation of one that is not Eru, so they are apart from nature. But then again, if that is criteria for being apart from nature, than the Naugrim aren't natural either. But ignoring the Stunted People... Orcs were made in mockery of something that belongs in Middle Earth's nature. So they are not natural, although they have qualities of natural beings. Because orcs are already unnatural, does that make it okay to play with their genes, because they are already screwed up? Would "The West" tweaking orcs to fit their needs be like Hitler's fetish with blonde hair and blue eyes, or would it be like an artist saying "Oops. Well, the sculpture is already screwed up, so let's see if I can turn it into something else."? ...
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01-29-2005, 05:25 PM | #24 | ||
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01-30-2005, 04:03 AM | #25 | |||
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I don't think that was their true cause. They were motivated niot by what they were fighting against, but by what they were fighting for. For the West it was never a question of merely defeating Sauron. They were struggling (consciously or unconsciously) against the 'wrongness' they percieved in Arda. They had a vision (or at least a sense) of how the world should be. And that vision or 'sense' did not include orcs at all. To employ orcs to achieve their ends would have been equivalent to them using the Ring itself - just on a smaller scale. Using orcs, like using the Ring, would have made them no different than Sauron. We could even speculate on whether if they had defeated Sauron and destroyed the Ring they wouldn't eventually have gone on & created their own equivalent of it, because they would have adopted a 'Sauronian' mindset. Quote:
But I'm not sure your analogy works in the context of this discussion. The fate of my child is not the fate of the world. Essentially the West is fighting a moral battle against 'Evil' itself. To adopt the methods of 'Evil' is to lose before you start. 'Good' wins out in the end because it is 'Good', not because it is more powerful than 'Evil'. We side with the West because they are in the right. Its not just their cause, but the means they employ in carrying it out that makes them 'heroes'. This is not a war of handsome heroes vs ugly monsters. Its a war of Good vs Evil, Right vs Wrong. As Brian Rosebury has pointed out, in LotR its essential that Evil brings about its own fall through the very means it chooses to employ - cruelty, malice, treachery, lack of trust & wanton destruction are what bring about Mordor's ultimate defeat. Sauron & Saruman destroy themselves through the means they employ to achieve their cause. Let's not forget that Saruman wanted order & peace - just on his own terms. How far had he actually strayed from the mission he was sent to perform? How far (in his own mind at least) had he lost sight of his cause? Actually, what he seems to have done is to use orcs in order to achieve what he had been sent to Middle earth to do. Quote:
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01-30-2005, 09:12 PM | #26 | ||
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Clarifications ...
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01-31-2005, 09:10 AM | #27 | |
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Another thought provoking thread here. I think though, as general and as non-contemporary one can make the argument, it stills falls flat against the philosophy of the works.
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As far as the ring goes, for me the ultimate philosophy taking place here is that the ring is a (albiet negative) devine instrument, created by (albiet fallen) an angel. To use this to govern (for good or bad) the environment/events/souls in the physical plane, is the ultimate affront to Eru. This is why (I think) the author ties the fate of the One to the fate of all other rings of power. No matter how benign the original purpose of creating them, they cannot overcome the Defeat. |
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02-01-2005, 01:24 PM | #28 | |||||||
Beloved Shadow
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This first part is just sort of a side note, so forgive me for being off-topic.
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There is no doubt in my mind that if Middle Earth was real life that there would be orc-rights activists making speeches about how humans and dwarves especially had invaded their habitat and the orcs were merely fighting back, and that they are just as valuable a life from as a human. There would be Sauron sympathizers who would say things like "Sauron's not really evil, he's just going about his goals in a different way. He's had different life experiences. Instead of fighting him, we should try to talk with him and work with him." There would be those who would demand that the white tree be torn down because "It represents a tie to the Valar and spirituality and that sort of thing has no place in front of a government building". There would be those who would say it was wrong to call Sauron or anything else "evil". They would ask "Who made you the judge of good and evil?" Anyway, you get the point. Middle Earth would've been like that had it been real, so the real ME is comparable to our world. We just don't see it that way because we're viewing Middle Earth through the eyes of a single historian who paints things clearly from his viewpoint. Heh heh, one reason why Middle Earth is so enjoyable is because Tolkien edited out many of the weirdo quack opinions we'd hear if it was real life. Quote:
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02-01-2005, 02:16 PM | #29 | |||||
Illustrious Ulair
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In short, if I used torture to save my child I would be gaining a 'worldly' victory - I would be 'righted by earth', but I would be acting 'immorally' by going against a 'moral absolute' - ie It is wrong to torture another human being. So, I would be 'displighted from Heaven'. This, for me, is one of the central themes of LotR - we are fallen beings, & so live in an impossible situation. We cannot save ourselves - we are repeatedly put into situations where we are damned if we do & damned of we don't. I couldn't stand by & leave my child to be tortured to death. I would have an obligation to do everything I could to save her - like Taliesin was forced to kill Cradlemas - but I couldn't claim to have acted 'morally' in so doing. Quote:
Let's face it - we all die - even my child would one day die whether I rescued her from the kidnappers or not. Death, 'defeat' (from a worldly perspective), is inevitable. We must, as far as we can, choose the moral path. We may not always be able to, but when we fall to do so we must acknowledge that failure & not pretend it was a 'success'. |
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02-02-2005, 02:38 AM | #30 | |||
Scent of Simbelmynë
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I believe the same thing would go for the use of orcs by the forces of good. Even though one could use them (or attempt to use them) in a way contrary to the original intent, the power of their maker is still resident in them, and his intentions were evil. May I make a comparison to the Oath of Feanor? The Oath was sworn in anger and was unbreakable. Although later the purposes of the Oath were questioned by the Sons of Feanor and even though it drove them to slay their own kin on two separate occasions, the original intent of the Oath was inescapable. As Littlemanpoet commented on this thread: Quote:
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Not sure whether I've strayed too far from the real topic here, but I thought these bits were worth addressing. Sophia
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02-02-2005, 07:40 AM | #31 | ||||
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EDIT: And an afterthought which I forgot to add: Quote:
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02-02-2005, 08:07 AM | #32 | ||
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02-02-2005, 08:21 AM | #33 |
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blessed days
Ah, Lalwendë bringing up that quote does reveal some elvish psychological conditions doesnt it?
Whether or not the author intended the romantic relationship to be a factor for Celebrimbor, I wonder if grief that all elves felt ever and anon, is the underlying theme. Grief of the loss of the blessed days. Grief that is ever present for the firstborn, who by being first, realizes what has been lost, and what is going to be lost, until All is lost. Thats mighty powerfull stuff. Its also incongruent with the reality of ME - but its nature isnt evil at all is it? Only in Valimar does time truly stand still. Enter Annatar into that situation, and suddenly your work of love and grief becomes tied to something very much evil. What a wonderfully simple way to explain certain (ultimately human) complexities. Sophia - I love the tie in to the Oath as well - never considered that. What a legacy! excellent insights here folks! keeps me coming back again and again.... SPM I agree, but on Phantom's line of thought, isnt ME seen through the eyes of one man who is looking through the eyes of a hobbit? AH HAH - my treastice is playing out Mabye the only way we could understand ME's message to us today is through the eyes of it's most meekest of players.... seriously though my personal rebellion would say that, while fortune has allowed the author to show us via literature the ME condition, Im not sure its the only vision. Last edited by drigel; 02-02-2005 at 08:31 AM. |
02-02-2005, 09:50 AM | #34 | |
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02-02-2005, 09:55 AM | #35 | |
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Of course, this would have been against the interests of their current master but not against the original intent of their maker.
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02-02-2005, 10:09 AM | #36 |
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concurrence SPM
The Light back then was much less splintered in this time/place/imagination. |
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