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<!-- TITLE Phoenix Rising -->
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<h2><a name="OV">Overview</a></h2>
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<blockquote><cite>
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The telepath situation becomes critical and Bester attempts to take control,
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triggering a strong reaction by Garibaldi.
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</cite>
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<a href="http://us.imdb.com/Name?Downes,+Robin+Atkin">Robin Atkin Downes</a> as Byron.
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<a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Koenig,+Walter">Walter Koenig</a> as Bester.
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Leigh J. McCloskey as Thomas.
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</blockquote>
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<pre><a href="/lurk/p5/intro.html">P5 Rating</a>: <a href="/lurk/p5/099">8.25</a>
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Production number: 512
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Original air date: April 1, 1998
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00019071C/thelurkersguidet">DVD release date</a>: April 13, 2004
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Written by J. Michael Straczynski
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Directed by David Eagle
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</pre>
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<p>
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<hr size=3>
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<h2><a name="BP">Plot Points</a></h2>
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<ul>
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<li>@@@891500932 Byron grew up in the Corps. He was rated a strong P12,
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so was inducted into the Psi Cops and served as Bester's protege.
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During one mission, Bester ordered Byron to destroy an unarmed ship
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full of mundanes who were helping smuggle telepaths out of Psi Corps'
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reach. Byron followed the order reluctantly, but shortly thereafter
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fled the Corps, convinced that telepaths could build a society based
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on nobler principles than violence.
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<li>@@@891500932 To avoid being taken by the Psi Corps, Byron and the
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militant faction of the telepath colonists have killed themselves.
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The other members of Byron's group have been allowed to go free,
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despite Bester's objections.
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<li>@@@891500932 The Psi Corps headquarters on Earth has been bombed.
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The bombers haven't been found, but they did leave the message,
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"Remember Byron."
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<li>@@@891500932 During Garibaldi's conditioning, Bester implanted a
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modified version of one of Asimov's Laws of Robotics: Garibaldi is
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incapable of harming Bester, or through inaction, allowing Bester
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to come to harm. (See
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<a href="#NO.asimov">Notes.</a>)
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As far as Garibaldi knows, the prohibition doesn't apply to all
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telepaths, just Bester. His inability to exact revenge has driven
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Garibaldi back to drinking (but see
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<a href="#AN.drinking">Analysis.</a>)
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<li>@@@891500932 Lyta's powers include sending her senses far away from her
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body, scouting ahead for danger. Bester is able to project himself
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into someone's mind from a distance, similar to Byron's projection to
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Lochley in
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<a href="089.html">"No Compromises."</a>
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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>@@@891500932 What involvement will Lyta have with the telepaths
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now that Byron is gone? Will she take his place?
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<li>@@@891544383 Do the telepaths still hold all the alien ambassadors'
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secrets? Will they be hunted by the alien races? For that matter,
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will the Corps actively pursue them once they're offstation?
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<li>@@@891500932 Who bombed the Psi Corps headquarters? Garibaldi didn't
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appear surprised by the news; was he involved somehow?
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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>@@@891500932 The militant telepaths made poor use of their talents in
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combat. They appeared to rely on verbal communication. Granted, none
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of them had military training (or at least, it wasn't stated) but for
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a group whose stated purpose was being able to make free, unrestrained
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use of their telepathic abilities, it's odd that they didn't do so
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when it would have been of some tactical advantage.
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<p>
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<li>@@@891544985 Were all the militant telepaths really killed? Sheridan
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had only Byron's statement that the identicards and confessions
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represented all the militants. Byron didn't have any reason to want
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to lie, but was he able to extract confessions from all the parties
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responsible for the violence? All the confessions and cards were
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probably those of violent telepaths, but Sheridan had no way of knowing
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that it was a complete set, despite Byron's promise that Sheridan would
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have everything he needed to be sure.
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<p>
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<li>@@@891544383 Bester had more than one reason for wanting to take the
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telepaths alive. Had he gained custody over them, he might well have
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been able to extract whatever information they gained from the alien
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ambassadors. He would also have discovered the information Lyta
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broadcast to the group while making love to Byron in
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<a href="095.html">"Secrets of the Soul."</a>
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Of course, he might already know all about the Vorlons' actions by
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other means, such as the Corps' previous association with the Shadows.
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<p>
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<li>@@@891546144 The theme of suicide as redemption for past sins has
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appeared before, most notably in
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<a href="048.html">"Passing Through Gethsemane,"</a>
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in which Brother Edward allowed himself to be killed to atone for his
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murderous past. Byron's self-immolation had a different twist, though:
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after he killed Thomas, he may have come to believe that the noble
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lifestyle he wanted was an impossible dream. Edward, though no
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choice of his own, had given up his past tendencies but
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still came to believe he needed to die to atone for them.
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<p>
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Byron's personality shift after being asked to fire on an innocent
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vessel also echoes David McIntyre's transformation into Arthur in
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<a href="057.html">"A Late Delivery from Avalon."</a>
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<p>
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<li>@@@891545739 Byron's experience with Bester echoed Lyta's experience
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with the Psi Cops: she was made to do something traumatic (in her
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case, helping to plant images in a murderer's mind to drive him
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insane, as she described in
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<a href="083.html">"The Face of the Enemy"</a>)
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and decided that she had to leave the Psi Cops. She left by
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transferring to another division of the Corps rather than running
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away entirely, but the similarity of experience begs the question of
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how many <em>other</em> former employees of the Psi Cops have left
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under similar circumstances.
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<p>
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<li>@@@891544383 Why didn't Lyta already know Byron's secret? If Talia's
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description is to be believed
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(<a href="006.html">"Mind War"</a>)
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lovemaking between telepaths involves dropping all defenses and diving
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deeper and deeper into each other's minds. Given how central Byron's
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experiences in the Corps were to his personality, and that, by his own
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admission, he hadn't hidden his past from other members of the group,
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why wouldn't Lyta have come across his memories while they were
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together?
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<p>
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It's possible that Lyta was so much more powerful than Byron that her
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memories drowned his out; she did warn him that the experience might
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be overwhelming.
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<p>
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<li>@@@891500932 If Lyta does take Byron's place and become a champion
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of rogue telepaths, she may be vulnerable to blackmail by Bester. In
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<a href="073.html">"Epiphanies,"</a>
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he claimed to know secrets about her that she wouldn't want revealed.
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Whatever those secrets are, they may still hold some sway over her.
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<p>
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On the other hand, Lyta implied she'd received secrets from Byron, so
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she may be able to counter-blackmail Bester just as easily.
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<p>
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<li>@@@891544985 Bester claimed that all races dealt with telepaths
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through laws, religion, or extermination. That contradicts Garibaldi's
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assertion in
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<a href="091.html">"The Paragon of Animals"</a>
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that Centauri telepaths "can do whatever they want." The Minbari
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treatment of telepaths
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(<a href="017.html">"Legacies"</a>)
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might arguably be religious, but it's really more cultural: telepaths
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are treated with respect and are expected to devote themselves to
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serving others. It's unclear how other races treat their telepaths,
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though, so Bester might be right in most cases.
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<p>
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<li>@@@891545421 What does the departure of the telepath colony do to
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Garibaldi's plan to use some of its members as Alliance spies
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(<a href="091.html">"The Paragon of Animals?"</a>)
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They only helped Garibaldi at Byron's behest, and with Byron gone,
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it's not clear they'll feel any obligation to make good on the promise.
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If Garibaldi does lose his telepathic spies, the whole exercise was
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largely a waste of his time; the only piece of information he's
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received from the telepaths was the warning about the Drazi fleet in
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<a href="091.html">"Paragon,"</a>
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and that happened before he started spending time training operatives.
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<p>
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It's possible, in fact, that Garibaldi's training sessions will end
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up working against him: if his two trainees were among the telepaths
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who left the station, and they're working on their own now, their
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training makes them more dangerous to everyone involved.
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<p>
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<li>@@@891500932 Does Garibaldi's conditioning prevent him from revealing
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its presence to people who might be in a position to either remove
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it or take revenge on Bester for him? He appeared to be having some
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difficulty asking Franklin about circumventing it. Could he, for
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example, tell Lise about it? If not, how will he explain his return
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to the bottle?
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<p>
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<li>@@@891536018 <a name="AN.drinking">Garibaldi's return to the bottle</a>
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might not be quite what it seems. It's possible that "alcohol" is the
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answer to his question, "Are there any drugs that can suppress a
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telepathic block?" In that case, Garibaldi faces a choice between
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confronting his alcoholism once again and being powerless to take
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revenge on Bester.
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<p>
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Using alcohol to nullify mind control has precedent: Londo used it to
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evade his Keeper in
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<a href="061.html">"War Without End part 2,"</a>
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and the Regent, also Keeper-encumbered, was said to have taken up
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drinking in
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<a href="097.html">"In the Kingdom of the Blind."</a>
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Alcohol only puts the Keepers to sleep, though; it doesn't actually
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stop them from taking control while they're awake. So the precedent
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is an imprecise one at best.
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<p>
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<li>@@@891709896 While he was describing Asimov's Laws to Garibaldi, Bester
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said that "pre-ban cyberneticists" on Earth had built them into their
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machines. That implies that at one time, Earth had intelligent robots
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or machines of some kind, but later decided to put an end to them.
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Why? Was there a problem with the machines? What happened, and when?
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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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<p>
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<li>@@@891500932 The hostage scene was foreshadowed in
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<a href="088.html">"The Deconstruction of Falling Stars,"</a>
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but it wasn't previously clear who was shot.
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<p>
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<li>@@@891501107 Byron's song was the same one sung by the telepaths in
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<a href="094.html">"Strange Relations."</a>
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<p>
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<li>@@@891536018 <a name="NO.asimov">Asimov's Laws of Robotics are:</a>
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<ol>
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<li> A robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction,
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allow a human being to come to harm.
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<li> A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except
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where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
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<li> A robot must protect its own existence as long as such
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protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
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</ol>
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<p>@@@891715464
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Garibaldi's programming only includes the first law, not the first two
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as Bester claimed (though arguably Bester was referring to the two
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rules contained in the first law.)
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<p>
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It's also possible Bester implanted the second law but didn't
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quote it to Garibaldi. In that case Garibaldi would have to follow
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Bester's orders. There's a slight hint of that possibility in Bester's
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mocking request that Garibaldi turn out the lights when he leave (though
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that could just as easily be simple baiting.)
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<p>
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<li>@@@891544383 The phoenix of the title probably refers to the birth
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of a new telepath movement following Byron's death by fire.
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</ul>
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<h2><a name="JS">jms speaks</a></h2>
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<ul>
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<li>@@@902864748 <em>How would the Byron story have been different if
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Claudia Christian hadn't left?</em><br>
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It's no secret that I would've had Ivanova becoming somewhat
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linked to Byron romantically (she would see him as a character like
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Marcus, which is why there are certain similarities, and she would take
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a chance only to find it wrong this time, underlining that she'd missed
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her one major opportunity thus far for a good relationship). This was
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expressed to Claudia toward the last part of S4, so she knew at that
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time that her latent ability would be coming out, and that she'd have a
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big part in S5.
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<p>
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In this scenario, Lyta would have become a devoted follower of
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Byron's, much as she has, but it would have been more love from afar:
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protective, somewhat unrequited but hoping for more...so that when he
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met his fate, Lyta would end up right where she is now, just by a
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different road.
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</ul>
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