Shroom Man 777 wrote:Cesario wrote:Or do you just want to see where in the script they start in on the lectures about the evils and inadequicies of humans not already knowing everything about and embracing the Na'vi way of life or being offended that humans have ideas of their own?
NEYTIRI
Your fault! You are like a baby, making
noise, don't know what to do. You should
not come here, all of you! You only come
and make problems. Only.
Oh my god, turns out this guy
doesn't know how to survive in an alien environment hostile jungle planet that has a mind of its own, and the Na'vi
do know better in the context of the Pandoran environment because... they've lived there their entire lives.
MO'AT
We have tried to teach other Sky People.
It is hard to fill a cup which is already
full.
Turns out the ways of people who live in that environment for, like, ever, and have interacted on some level with the world-spanning consciousness is actually more applicable for their environment than the ways of other guys who... aren't from there... and who haven't even figured out how that place works?
Also, was Mo'at even expressing offense at the humans not being to learn their ways fast enough? She was just stating that they were hard to teach and/or slow learners. That's like saying that a teacher who says that a student has trouble learning and flunks his classes is all personally offended and raaarrrr.
Trouble is, that's her only explaination for why this was the plan:
NEYTIRI
(SUBTITLED)
I was going to kill him, but there was a
sign from Eywa.
Not knowing things that you note are inevidably not going to be known nets a death sentence.
Shroom Man 777 wrote:
MO'AT
(to Jake)
My daughter will teach you our ways.
Learn well, Jakesully. We will see if
your insanity can be cured.
The Na'vi know that Eywa is real and extends throughout the entire biosphere. So for them, yeah, strange guys going in and cutting down trees and massacrating lifeforms and wrecking the biosphere is pretty much insane and offensive. In the context of, you know, living in a living planet, rampant environmental destruction and disregard of nature is insane.
And I'm sure eventually the Na'vi might get around to saying that the poor environmental policies are what they consider insane, instead of what they explicitly spelled out, which was just walking around outside without knowing everything about the environment already.
Shroom Man 777 wrote:
It's like Englishmen getting frustrated because no matter how many times they try to tell em, a bunch of American tourists are always driving on the wrong side of the road. Oh my god, how dare the Englishmen lecture tourists for not following the traffic rules of London, or being offended that the Americans have ideas of their own in which side of the road to drive in and never listen to the locals who explain the rules of the land.
You'd make a stereotypical lousy tourist, Cesario. If you were visiting a mosque and the imam tells you to remove your shoes, or a Japanese house and the sumo wrestler tells you to remove your shoes, you'd throw a shit fit at how the sumo imam is offended that you have ideas of your own. If someone told you to observe the basic courtesies of the strange new land you're visiting, you'd get indignant and bawl about how they are saying that you are inadequate. How reprehensible!
If they tried to kill me over a cultural misunderstanding they'd never bothered to explain to me, yeah, I think I'd consider myself justified in considering them the bad guys.
madd0ct0r wrote:MAX and the lab staff are glumly packing files and equipment,
under the watchful eye of armed SEC-OPS TROOPERS. JAKE,
GRACE, NORM stare bleakly at each other.
GRACE
They bulldozed a sacred site on purpose,
to trigger a response. They're
fabricating this war to get what they
want.
NORM
I can't believe that.
JAKE
Yup. That's how it's done. When people
are sitting on shit you want, you make
them your enemy. Then you're justified in
taking it.
JAKE
The Sky People have sent a message that
they can take whatever they want, and no
one can stop them. But we will send them
a message. Ride out, as fast as the wind
can carry you, tell the other clans to
come. Tell them Toruk Macto calls to
them. Fly now with me brothers and
sisters! Fly! And we will show the Sky
People that this is our land!
Of course, we don't actually have to go with Jake and Grace's blind speculation, when we've got an omniscient narrator who's been letting us in on Quaratch and Selfridge's meetings already. And they've said nothing about manufacturing an incident. Though the fact that Jake only learned the Tree of Voices was a sacred site while he was fucking in it seems to put the lie to the idea that the dozers were deliberately sent to run it over to provoke the Na'vi.
Once again, human beings are not temporally transcendent entities (except for Jake, who has prophetic dreams even without the aid of Na'vi space worms).
PeZook wrote:Cesario wrote:
Or rather it requires extremely low temperatures to function at all without Unobtainium, which cause engineering problems when you're trying to repurpose it for other uses. Note Tedious explaining how Unobtainium actually did solve problems that made the technology practical for applications other than a giant space laser in-universe.
Oh no! We have a giant generator with stellar power output! But the generator can only work on the Moon!
If only it was connected to some sort of device that could beam the energy around, precise enough to focus the beam on a starship throughout five and a half months!
Yeah, let's point that giant orbital laser at the ground. No problems could possibly come from that.
PeZook wrote:
Cesario wrote:
Since you take issue with that example, let's talk about the gunpowder engine. We have a power source with greater energy density than gasoline, and we can use it to make bombs, guns, and artillery pieces, so obviously that means we can trivially make use of that same energy source to make a wheel spin without solving any other engineering problems whatsoever.
Of course the laser is nothing like gunpowder - it's a ready-made way to transfer your stellar energy output to, say, power satellites in Earth orbit.
That's still an engineering problem that needs to be solved. One they obviously hadn't solved in this universe.
PeZook wrote:
Or, here's a novel idea: instead of building three massive orbiting antimatter reactors (the ships) and a fourth, even more massive one to propel the former out of the system, install all four on the Moon and move the population there.
Each generator like these could give 3.3 billion people 1000x the electricity consumed today by an average American. So four reactors could easily sustain some 12 billion people on the Moon,solving all the problems with habitat-living by throwing energy at them. (They could probably do better than 12 billion, even, since I calculated the output using assumptions that lower it by at least an order of magnitude).
So, evacuate the planet earth? That's a great idea. Now, if only they had enough space ships to do that. Wait, I seem to recall something about an exotic component or two that's required to make their space ships workable at large scales...
PeZook wrote:
You have to face the truth: either the humans have no energy crisis at all, much less one that threatens their food supply (hence why the don't turn the fucking holoads off),or they do have one and just aren't doing anything about it despite the obvious capability to do so (which incidentally is what the EU supports...), in which case they have no right to rape loot and pillage other people's land to sustain their insatiable hunger for energy.
Because a light bulb is equivalent in power usage to a farm tractor?
PeZook wrote:
Cesario wrote:
Pretty much. Either the Space UN are some combination of callous, in our pockets already, stupid, or uninvolved, or they are not. The massacre going down with no consequences proves it was the former.
Because we all know a corrupt government body will let you get away with
literally anything, right? That's why Blackwater murdered hundreds of people in reprisal for their operators being ambused and shot in Iraq, right?
Because Blackwater got completely ingored when they were massacring people, right?
PeZook wrote:
Cesario wrote:
Pretty much, yeah. Or rather, a massively radioactive world is another "environment known to man", and thus, by definition must be less hostile than the one we just burned off.
Oh god, you're not serious, are you?
Pandora is
obviously not "the most hostile environment known to man." All you have to do to know that is
look at it.
You can walk around the place wearing tropical uniforms and a breathing mask, for fuck's sake.
Cesario wrote:
If we could do it in "the most hostile environment known to man" that quickly, there's every reason to believe we could do it more quickly in the less hostile envivornment resulting from us killing everything on Pandora.
Irradiated wasteland you can't traverse without a fully enclosev environmental suit that carries its own atmosphere, and where you can't use internal combustion engines does
not make it easier to exploit than a planet with a temperate climate, plentiful oxygenin the atmosphere and harmless radiation levels.
Not my words. That's from the film. Apparently the humans in this universe got really good at dealing with pressure, cold, and radiation, while not advancing much in the area of "arrow to the face" and "crushed by a giant rhino thing".
PeZook wrote:
And wait, weren't you claiming there's an existential crisis on Earth? At the very least you're looking at 20 years with NO unobtainium while new equipment gets shipped in and mining is restored
And? Inevidable versus urgent. Were you reading at all during this entire conversation?
PeZook wrote:
Cesario wrote:
Actually, the supporters of the film are the ones who seem to think the only alternative is anarchy and tribalism. I'm rather of the view that feeding the population and not letting everyone die horribly for the convenience of the magical blue space elves is perfectly doable.
Look, you retarded dolt, you're making up this false dilemma that either humanity gets all the unobtainium it wants or it has a mass die-off.
Some, all it wants, clearly exactly the same thing. Dolt.
PeZook wrote:
YOU are the one who says the only alternative to rampant consumption is to "shut down all the power", instead of LIMITING ITS USE TO NECESSITIES.
They clearly have enough power generation to meet all their needs and more, they just waste it all on rampant overconsumption.
Nobody in this thread has ever said humanity should revert to a hunter-gahterer lifestyle ; They should just shut down their fucking sky-covering holoads.
What are necessities, exactly? The manufacture of food? We can't cut that off, right? How about getting that food to the people who will starve without it? Obviously that's not something we can get rid of too, so transportation infrastructure has to stay intact. Population will need to be limited if we don't just want the problem to get worse, so we're going to need to deal with birth control and education, so probably shouldn't gut the communication infrastructure. Oh, people still need to breathe, so we've got to keep pumping out those filter masks or an equivalent.
So, you want to switch off the advertisements. That'll save how much power relative to the rest of the infrastructure that's keeping the human race from dying out that has to replace the work of the entire planet's biosphere on top of everything we know will be required from just our modern prospective?
Darth Wong wrote:Cesario wrote:Darth Wong wrote:What the fuck are you talking about, retard? The Na'vi don't give a shit about how humans live their own lives. They're angry at humans because the humans are fucking up their home, not because humans use science and technology. You've made up this entire moronic narrative about Na'vi Ludditism out of thin air.
You sound exactly like FOXNews people pretending that Middle Eastern people are angry at America because of the way Americans live, rather than being angry at Americans for what they're doing in the Middle East. I'll say to you the same goddamned thing I say to them: if I walk up to a Muslim and punch him in the face, and he gets angry, it's a pretty safe bet that he's angry at me because I punched him in the face, not because I'm an atheist. Even if he doesn't like atheists, that's not the obvious impetus for his anger, is it?
Doesn't quite work when he outright says he's mad at you because you're an atheist and doesn't mention getting punched in the nose at any point.
I see you are now resorting to outright lying.
Oh, was there an actual Muslim that you punched in the face that you're refferencing?
Ford Prefect wrote:Darth Wong wrote:I see you are now resorting to outright lying.
Some people dislike this movie
so much that their minds breath into life entire scenes and sequences to better justify their dislike of it. So while in the actual film the Omaticaya's only issue is with the RDA encroaching on their land, people invent this notion of huge blue hands squeezing the life out of Western Civilisation. I don't want to read too far into the absence of dialogue on the matter, but the RDA have a bunch of 100,000 ton fusion powered monsters carving out a four kilometre wide toxic pit somewhere near Hell's Gate and no Na'vi ever mentions it. I think impliedly the Na'vi were fine with the RDA doing its thing in that little corner of Pandora up until it started moving into Omaticaya land.
Some people are just really wrapped up in this movie being some sort of closet Greenpeace funded ecoterrorism manifesto, though
Once again, humans were dying before the Home Tree incident. The Na'vi never mentioned a word about the environmental impact of the mining, just about how the humans weren't living exactly like them and how they stunk.
PeZook wrote:Ford Prefect wrote:
Some people dislike this movie so much that their minds breath into life entire scenes and sequences to better justify their dislike of it. So while in the actual film the Omaticaya's only issue is with the RDA encroaching on their land, people invent this notion of huge blue hands squeezing the life out of Western Civilisation. I don't want to read too far into the absence of dialogue on the matter, but the RDA have a bunch of 100,000 ton fusion powered monsters carving out a four kilometre wide toxic pit somewhere near Hell's Gate and no Na'vi ever mentions it. I think impliedly the Na'vi were fine with the RDA doing its thing in that little corner of Pandora up until it started moving into Omaticaya land.
Some people are just really wrapped up in this move being some sort of closet Greenpeace funded ecoterrorism manifesto, though
Well,
some warriors at least were angry at the environmental devastation - like the group led by Neytiri's sis, Sylvanni (or something
) that burned down a killdozer.
They were hunted down and executed by RDA's security troops, with kids dying in the crossfire, which led to the Omaticaya getting seriously pissed.
HOW DARE THE OMATICAYA BE ANGRY ABOUT THAT?!
More like how is it possible they're so blase about something like that as to never bring it up? Massacre of children and that's never mentioned while you're busy looking for things to throw at the evil alien invaders as proof that they're demons?
mr friendly guy wrote:Cesario wrote:
No, that's the opposite of what I said. The audience is called upon to villify the RDA by the narrative. It is simply a flaw with the narrative that the RDA has a legitimate point.
Oh my god, the sarcasm flew right over your thick head. Maybe if I put more of
it might be more obvious.
More like I don't see why you would bother? What was witty about your line there? Where were you going with it?
mr friendly guy wrote:
Since it's so obvious to a mental giant like you, why don't you do a "goddamn retard" like me the favor of pointing out even one thing either the Na'vi or the narrative put forward as a positive aspect of human culture capable of improving the Na'vi's lives.
Are you for real? I just fucking gave the school example and you just ignore it like the lying dipshit you are. What, are you saying schools don't improve lives now? Oh wait, you are the sad little turd who wishes to have most of his fellow students machine gun down. Ah, that explains it.
Schools don't improve lives in and of themselves. Schools are a mechanism whereby the things that do improve lives, knowledge and ideas, can be transfered. The only thing we know the Na'vi learned at that school was English. What ideas and knowledge did the Na'vi find of value asside from the linguistic skills to listen in on the communications of the human invaders?
mr friendly guy wrote:
Awe, you're breaking my heart.
I didn't realise a fuckwit who thinks its A Okay to have school students machine gun down has a heart. You sure fooled me.
Not believing something exists isn't the same as consiously rejecting something you know exists.
Like how rejecting tech that isn't useful to you is rejecting all technology in general. Gotcha. I guess thats why the Na'vi absolutely refused to use two way radios when fighting. Wait, you didn't actually address this point except to say its ironic, which doesn't actually refute the point that the Na'vi aren't above using advance technology when its useful to them. Ergo your statement that the Na'vi rejected ALL human culture is blatantly wrong.
And you know, that communication technology, dispite the Na'vi only ever using it in pursuit of killing all humans, is yet another example of something that the humans could have offered the Na'vi in trade. Pity the Na'vi refused diplomatic contact, rejected the very idea of trade, and told the humans that there was nothing they had to offer.
mr friendly guy wrote:
Since the original point flew over your head, I will state it so even a retard like yourself gets it.
Those who argue RDA are in the right, essentially subscribe to a might makes right philosophy, except when the other side is mightier of course. They refuse to acknowledge it so they make all sorts of useful excuse like the Na'vi don't like technology wah wah. Not only is this irrelevant because technological levels have jack shit to do with this, but its not even true because the Na'vi went to school, use two way radios etc. You are literally pulling shit from your arse to come up with pseudo justification.
Again, my main problem was the Na'vi's refusal to talk, not their prefference for a primitivist lifestyle.
Darth Wong wrote:According to Douchebaggio, the Na'vi were angry because humans use technology, not because humans are destroying their habitat. Therefore, if the humans wiped out the Na'vi habitat with huge monsters instead of huge machines, the Na'vi would have been perfectly happy with that.
You weren't paying attention. (What else is new?) Where did I ever say the Na'vi were angry because human use technology? The Na'vi had nothing to say on the subject of habitat devistation. They did have a lot of judgemental dickery about how humans were stupid for not already knowing things they'd spent their whole lives learning and there was a bit about how us aliens stink. Not a word on habitat destruction or massacred children.
Those are things we would expect a human population in the same place as the Na'vi to actually care about, but clearly the Na'vi are psychologically a lot more alien than we've given them credit for.
Steve wrote:Well, now that I got the gist of Cesario's opinions and arguments straight from the source, no more need for the omnipotent judge story device.
Too bad. I was enjoying that.
Steve wrote:
I think there are two big issues to deal with for your views, Cesario.
One is that, quite simply, nothing in the movie actually indicates this is the truth. Some expanded universe info states it, but it was excluded for a reason (I cynically suspect it was because it was feared that it'd make the audience less likely to root for Jake, though it's just as likely from Hollywood's distaste for movies too far past 2 hours).
Actually, that expanded universe material was designed to make the humans look worse. To re-emphasise how horrible their environmental stewardship had been on earth. I don't imagine they realized that this material actually justifies the humans' actions.
Steve wrote:
So for a lot of people, the argument that "Humanity needs it or we'll starve and lose the ability to breathe in our poisoned atmosphere" is nothing more than an invention by specieists and fascists to justify rooting for the destruction of a society's home and, eventually, the plan to destroy the most cherished holy site in an entire civilization to cow them.
Yes, a lot of idiots have been claiming I'm making shit up from whole cloth from the beginning, and have continued to do so long after I provided a source. Even to the point of vandalizing a wiki that they'd suggested I use to find the evidence in.
Suffice it to say, I'm not really getting a sense of intelectual honesty from my opposition here.
Steve wrote:
The second is... if this is true... it makes RDA worse. It makes RDA, or at least Selfridge and Quaritch, into ludicrously irresponsible fools who allowed their greed and prejudices to outweigh their responsibility. Selfridge's obsession with the bottom line and making money becomes especially horrifying if we accept the premise of the "mass starvation and asphyxiation without Unobtainium" idea.
So, yes, the Na'vi weren't negotiating. They didn't want Humans digging around their land for that necessary mineral, period. Humans try and they get shot at with super-arrows. That sucks. But that just means you have to be that much more careful in setting up your mining operations. You minimize the clash with the Na'vi.
Minimize how?
Steve wrote:
You mine what you can get to regardless of quality. You don't go provoking every tribe in the region of your operations by wiping out the home of one of them.
Thing is, that "provoking every trime in the region" thing wasn't anticipated by anyone in the film on eithe side of the conflict. Right or wrong, the expectation of all involved was that the ones who were forced to move would lick their wounds and move on. That was what we saw happening before Jake pulled his stunt.
Steve wrote:
If you absolutely must get to the Unobtainium lode below Home Tree.... mine under them.
There's no actual evidence that was an option. In fact, it's kind of a plot point that resources and mining equipment are incredibly limited due to the fact that they're mining in another star system.
Steve wrote:
But above all else, you do not gamble the survivability of the Human race trying to maximize profits when you've got only a small outpost on a hostile alien world surrounded by thousands of aliens who will want to kill you!
No one, no one, believed that this was in any way a gamble. You can call them stupid for not considering the possibility of a large-scale war followed by divine intervention by a planetwide superconsiousness, but judging their ethics based on things they didn't know at the time is unfair.
Steve wrote:
Ergo, I still consider Selfridge and Quaritch to be the antagonists of the movie,
Of course they were the antagonists of the film. That's a narrative term that simply requires that they occupy a specific place in the narrative. It doesn't require that they be the good guys. The cops in any given heist film are the antagonists, but that doesn't make them the bad guys.
Steve wrote:
and while it would diminish the justifications given by the others, I still think the Na'vi were justified in opposing them at least in terms of not wanting to give up their home.
How do the Na'vi make out in terms of arrowing the humans they were killing before the Home Tree incident?
Steve wrote:
A final thought.
Unobtainium exists nowhere in the universe known to either of the parties involved except for Pandora. Attempts to replicate its properties as a room temperature superconductor by humans and thus eliminate the need to perform interstellar mining operations have not been successful. Pandora is the only source of Unobtainium, so if the legitimate need for Unobtainium is to be met, it must be met by the deposits on Pandora.
Honestly? This feels ridiculous. It feels like something to just further justify the plot, and while I don't remember it from the movie I wouldn't be surprised if I just forgot it. Pandora as the only source of Unobtainium? How did Humanity know to find it there? How did they get there without it being present (even if in minute quantities) in our solar system? I mean, you get the same effect just by saying Pandora is the only planet-sized body that Unobtainium has been found on and that all other sources are found in minor quantities on asteroids and such. So why?
Oh, whatever.
Anyway, that's my view on the points you've asserted.
The unique-to-pandora nature of Unobtainium is just a contrivance to justify the plot. I have complained at a few points in this thread about the number of contrivances that were forcing the humans' hand in this, and likened this to the actions of a twisted god. Set up a native american paralell that everyone would have to be blind not to see, then contrive things further and further to try and make people repeat history. All the while the humans in universe see the paralells, are doing everything they can to avoid repeating the mistakes of history, and only Quaratch snaps and goes on a kiling spree in the face of this obviously evil god.