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<h2><a name="OV">Overview</a></h2>
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<blockquote><cite>
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Commander Sinclair is recalled to Earth and discovers a long-kept secret
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that leads to a new assignment.
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</cite></blockquote>
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Issue 1 (January 1995, released December 6, 1994)
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<p>
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Setting: Between
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<a href="/lurk/guide/022.html">"Chrysalis"</a>
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and
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<a href="/lurk/guide/023.html">"Points of Departure"</a>
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<pre> Writer: J. Michael Straczynski
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Penciller: Michael Netzer
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Inker: Rob Leigh
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Colorist: Robbie Busch
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Letterer: Tracy Hampton Munsey</pre>
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<p>
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<hr>
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<p>
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<h2><a name="SY">Synopsis</a></h2>
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<p>
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A few days after being recalled from Babylon 5 (cf. episode
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<a href="/lurk/guide/023.html">"Points of Departure"</a>)
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Commander Sinclair is languishing in Earthdome, Geneva, waiting for someone
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to tell him why he was called back. His nights, as always, are filled with
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horrible dreams, replays of the Battle of the Line. He tries to prevail
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on a senator to tell him what's going on, but is rebuffed, with an additional
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admonition to stop spreading rumors about President Santiago being
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assassinated.
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<p>
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Then, in the middle of the night on January 6, 2259, some heavily-armed
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men escort Sinclair to see President Clark. Clark introduces him to Rathenn,
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of the Minbari Grey Council. Rathenn introduces himself and says he's come
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to take Sinclair back to his home. Not Mars Colony, where his body was born --
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but to his soul's home.
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<p>
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Rathenn uses a triluminary on Sinclair, who is suddenly able to recall in full
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what happened after he was taken aboard the Grey Council's cruiser at the
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Battle of the Line (cf. episode
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<a href="/lurk/guide/008.html">"And the Sky Full of Stars."</a>) He was
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drugged, interrogated about Earth targets, and tortured after he tried to
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escape. He recalls the whispers of the Grey Council as Delenn confirms
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that he has a Minbari soul.
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<p>
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Rathenn explains that every human pilot the Grey Council examined had a Minbari
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soul, or part of a Minbari soul, and that the Minbari population has been
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declining for the past six thousand years. At first the Grey Council blamed
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the soul hunters (cf. episode
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<a href="/lurk/guide/002.html">"Soul Hunter"</a>) but the decline was too
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great to be accounted for that way. That day, they discovered why the
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Minbari race was dying, where all the souls were going. Since no Minbari
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had killed another in thousands of years, the Grey Council surrendered.
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<p>
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Clark says that the Grey Council told the Earth government of their findings,
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and that both the government and the Council agreed the information would
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not be taken well by the public. Earth officials gave the Council permission
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to wipe Sinclair's memory; they were on the verge of defeat and weren't
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about to object to such a small demand by the Minbari. "We were dying,"
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Clark explains later, after Rathenn has left. "It didn't matter that it
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was insane... <em>Everything</em> was insane. If it made them stop
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killing us... well, that was fine by us."
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<p>
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Clark tells Sinclair he's free to resign his commission with full retirement
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pay. Or he can accept a new assignment, his most important one to date:
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accept the Minbari government's invitation to come to their world as
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ambassador. Clark promises to keep Sinclair informed about Garibaldi's
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condition. As for why the Minbari wanted Sinclair, Clark speculates:
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"Maybe they feel guilty about what they did to you. Maybe they're
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comfortable with you. And maybe they <em>need</em> you. We've heard about
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trouble between the Minbari religious caste and the military caste. It's
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possible that... well, the religious caste might just need an experienced
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soldier to talk to."
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<p>
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Sinclair's shuttle arrives at the Grey Council's cruiser. As he waits to
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be greeted, he pulls out a small slip of paper and reads. He's shortly
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greeted by several hooded Councilmembers and a few members of the military
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caste, and explains that he was reading a
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<a href="/lurk/making/ulysses.html">poem</a>
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by a long-departed writer,
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something he wants to share with the Council in the hopes that it will
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help them understand. He is escorted away by the Councilmembers, as one
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of the military looks on, expression twisted in hatred.
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<H2><A NAME="BP">Backplot</A></H2>
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<ul>
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<li> No Minbari has killed another (intentionally, presumably) for several
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thousand years. (See
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<a href="#JS:kill">jms speaks</a>)
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<li> The Grey Council believes Sinclair has a Minbari soul.
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<li> Some within the Earth government have known the reason behind the
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Minbari surrender from the start, and gave the Grey Council
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permission to wipe Sinclair's mind. Clark claims to have not
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learned the secret until he took office as President.
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</ul>
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<H2><A NAME="UQ">Unanswered Questions</A></H2>
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<ul>
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<li> What does the triluminary do to Sinclair such that he can remember
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everything all of a sudden? Is there a single function it performs
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that explains its seeming variety of uses? (cf. episodes
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<a href="/lurk/guide/008.html">"And the Sky Full of Stars,"</a>
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<a href="/lurk/guide/022.html">"Chrysalis"</a>)
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<li> Who in the Earth government knew about the Minbari surrender? Someone
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other than the President, probably, since Santiago was dead when
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Clark took office. It's also possible the Minbari told Clark
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themselves.
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<li> Why did the Grey Council choose to reveal their secret to Sinclair
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now? Why have they invited him to become ambassador after pushing
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so hard to get him in command of Babylon 5 (cf. episode
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<a href="/lurk/guide/013.html">"Signs and Portents"</a>?)
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</ul>
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<H2><A NAME="AN">Analysis</A></H2>
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<ul>
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<li> Sheridan was wrong about Clark being the only other person who knows
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about the situation with Minbari souls (cf. episode
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<a href="/lurk/guide/023.html">"Points of Departure."</a>)
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How widespread the knowledge is, and how it's being used, may be
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important story points in the future.
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<li> The coverup of Santiago's assassination appears to be very effective,
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unless the senator Sinclair speaks with is in on it as well. Everyone
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seems convinced that it was a simple accident.
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</ul>
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<H2><A NAME="NO">Notes</A></H2>
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<ul>
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<li> Sinclair's d*ck makes an appearance on page 17. Or a swan, anyway.
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<li> Oddly, there are some inconsistencies with the series:
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<ul>
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<li> Clark tells Sinclair that he's giving Ivanova a field
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promotion to commander, <em>before</em> Sheridan arrives
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on Babylon 5 and puts in the paperwork (in episode
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<a href="/lurk/guide/025.html">"The Geometry of Shadows."</a>)
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On the other hand, it's possible Sheridan actually requested
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the promotion as soon as he got his assignment, or that Clark
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was planning on promoting Ivanova anyway.
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<li> Sinclair's recollection of his last words on the Line are
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different. In
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<a href="/lurk/guide/008.html">"And the Sky Full of Stars"</a>
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he says, "If I'm going out I'm taking
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you bastards with me! Target main cruiser, set for full
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velocity ram." Possibly to tone down the language, the
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comic renders this as, "If I'm dying I'm taking you demons
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with me! Target lead Minbari cruiser! Set for full
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velocity ram!"
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</ul>
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<li> Even <em>Clark</em> thinks Sinclair is stiff: "Excuse me, Commander,
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but is that as much at ease as you get?"
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<li> There's a slight gaffe on page 19; Sinclair's uniform is backwards
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in the mirror. (The strap should be on the other side of the buttons,
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as shown on page 22.)
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</ul>
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<H2><A NAME="JMS">jms speaks</A></H2>
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<ul>
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<li> By the "flip side" of stories I was referring to the other side of
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events. I.e., in episode one, Sinclair is reassigned, but we hear about
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this mainly when he's away. In the comic, we'll see where he is, and
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see his reaction to what's going on. In B-squared, we saw the present
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events in the vanishment of B4; in a future episode, we'll actually see
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our characters make the decision to go back in time and yank B4 forward,
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what went wrong, and so on.
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<li> It's not supposed to be a blasted landscape around Geneva, and didn't
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look like that in the pencils.
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<li> The word "bastards" was in the script I turned in to DC. It got
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changed to "demons" by the editor. That change was made at the last
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minute; all the inked and penciled versions I'd seen before had the
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right word in it. I'm considerably less than thrilled about it.
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<li> <a name="JS:kill">Prior to the time of Valen,</a>
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the Minbari's greatest spiritual leader,
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there was killing of Minbari by Minbari. There were three warring
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castes, which he pulled together when he formed the Grey Council
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(three from each caste forming nine, Worker, Warrior, Religious Caste).
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Since that time, and the Minbari have been in space for well over a
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thousand years, they have pretty much hewn to that rule; it is their
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greatest taboo. Once the three sides were integrated, the warrior
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caste mainly contented itself with external threats.
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<li> <cite>Rathenn said the soul migration had been going on for 6000
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years; Lennier in
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<a href="/lurk/guide/023.html">"Points of Departure"</a>
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said one or two thousand. What gives?</cite>
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<br>
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Rathenn spoke incorrectly.
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<li> Rathenn said Sinclair did not *entirely* remember their meeting; he
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then refreshed this memory.
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<li> <em>Squaring the account of Ivanova's promotion with "The Geometry
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of Shadows"</em><br>
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The president spoke truthfully; Sheridan could petition for a
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promotion for her, but it's up to Earthforce to grant it, so the line
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still tracks. (Note also there's no pronoun there; "Giving her a
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field promotion." The imperial We still stands, though.) Also,
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Sheridan says he put through the paperwork the day after he got there;
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which is fairly close to the time frame in the story in which the
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President says they'll be giving Ivanova a promotion. There's no
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discontinuity here.
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<li> <em>In "Points of Departure," Sheridan implied he told Clark about the
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soul migration.</em><br>
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Sheridan did NOT tell President Clark about the
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Minbari soul situation. Clark already knew about it. Sheridan's line
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is, "I spoke with the president. He is the only other person who knows
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why the Minbari surrendered." Also, in the first issue of the comic,
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this prior knowledge on Clark's part is clear as well.
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</ul>
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<pre>
|
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|
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</pre>
|
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