Cesario wrote:PeZook wrote:Cesario wrote:
Actually, the idea in my mind is that life is better than death, and that the lives of the individual people who would die in the transition to a nativist hunter-gatherer culture outweigh the supposed spiritual benefits for the handful of survivors.
It would only result in a massive death toll if we tried tried to do it
on Earth. The point is that a culture that lives happily as hunter-gatherers has as much right to live like they want as we do to fly around the cosmos in our antimatter powered starships.
Yep. Isn't it a shame that the Na'vi spend so much time judging humanity for not doing this
on Earth?
Boo hoo, stone-age tribesmen living four light years away from Earth have no idea what the situation on Earth is like, and probably wouldn't understand its full complexity even if someone tried explaining it to them. HOLY CRAP,that makes them primitive and disgusting and repulsive!
Cesario wrote:PeZook wrote:
Yes. Humans are abused and forcibly mutated into Na'Vi forms. Their world is taken from them and remade into a "superior" shape by people who say they know better because their whiz-bang technological advancement gives them a broader, better perspective on life, the universe and everything.
Presumably any plucky resistance fighters are also heatrayed from orbit until none are left to simplify the process.
How do you get a plucky resistance fighter if you've turned everyone deemed unworthy into fish and squirels?
It's great how you concentrate on nitpicking irrelevant details of this scenario in an obvious attempt to dodge the crux of the issue, which is that Pandoramakers impose their preceonceptions and judgements on us and their way of life.
Cesario wrote:PeZook wrote:
Cesario wrote:Where did I say the Na'vi should have started industrializing and acting western? I said shutting down diplomacy was a dick move.
It's only a dick move if you do it without provocation, which was obviously not the case here (Even in the not-extended edition, Grace comments how "It tends to happen when you use machine guns on them", and the RDA bulldozes holy sites and just shrugs)
Except we don't know whether the machinegunning came before or after the Na'vi started pelting the RDA with arrows. Grace is hardly an impartial observer.
Oh, so now we actually
don't know when it started to happen, but obviously it's the Na'Vi who are dicks here (because they're the 'other' and are warlike and thus must've fired first!)
Of course, in light of the school incident it doesn't really matter if some RDA guys were killed: machinegunning a school full of kids (and shrugging afterwards) was a clear escalation and entirely justifies the Omaticaya going to war, no matter the universe you currently reside in.
Cesario wrote:Also worth noting that everything on Pandora is tougher than humans. Stopping a Na'vi or a direwolf is going to require hardware that would be considered excessive when used on a human.
Yes, Jake even commented that the helicopters carried some unusually heavy ordnance around for routine flights.
Cesario wrote:PeZook wrote:
Cesario wrote:I tend not to spend much time morning the deaths of people I consider pricks. Waste of my admittedly finite ability to give a fuck. As to whether he deserved it, that depends. Did he start mudering the people involved in the development without telling them why their specific development project was something he objected to?
Again you assume the Na'Vi just started arrowing people in the face on Day 1, when the movie implies something completely different - a gradual escalation of violence.
What were the Na'vi's specific list of grievences as stated in the film?
At the start it was obviously environmental destruction and encroachment upon their territorry, but relations were good enough that weird spirit-people could live amongst them and teach them English, bulldozers and giant open-pit mines notwithstanding.
Then it turned out the humans considered vandalism grounds for massacring civilians (you know, you do criticize that exact attitude later in your post...), so the situation escalated into war in all but name.
But look there:
when the humans sent another emissary, they were willing to let him in!
In essence, they gave the humans another chance.
Then the humans bulldozed a holy site and firebombed a major population center, and look - war! This is totally strange and unreasonable
Cesario wrote:Actually, in my movie, Selfridge is a prick obsessed with meeting the board's expectations who also happens to be saving humanity in the process.
Which is based on nothing whatsoever...
Cesario wrote:The bulldozing a holy site happened after the movie started. The murdering RDA personell started before that point.
Actually, how do you know that? Who said they were losing people to the Na'Vi?
The only comment we get from Quarritch is that Na'Vi are hard to kill and they dip their arrows in neurotoxins, none of which require any RDA personnell to have died in the fighting. He spends way more time talking about the wildlife than the locals during his safety brief.
Cesario wrote:All of which can be attributed to the evil imperialist humans in your movie?
Why do
all incidents need to be the RDA's fault for them to be evil pricks?
Cesario wrote:No, you see that "might" means you're reserving the right to reject the principle if you don't like how well I've presented my case for how vital the Unobtainium is.
What the fuck?
I accept that sometimes it is justified to do bad things in the name of the greater good.
Obviously it means you need the establish the justification first!
Cesario wrote:Like I said, my suspension of disbelief is taxed when a corrupt corperate executive is making a stupid decision to the detriment of profit. Making a stupid decision in pursuit of profit I can buy.
Look, he pursued the biggest unobtainium deposit in the area because it means his limited mining equipment can get the most bang for the buck.
You see, starting a mining operation with the sort of limited resources the RDA had has to be difficult and expensive. It's doubly so if you need to move the base, along with all its technical facilities and the gigantic refinery.
By gunning for the largest deposit he could find, Selfridge saves tremendous costs over time (because he won't have to plow another road through the jungle in 5 years to get to another deposit). The Omaticaya are a comparatively minor obstacle in his mind, because he doesn't really consider them a threat, more an annoyance. And once those dozers are one their way, he's comitted: either the Omaticaya move, or he
makes them move.
Why is this decision stupid, when considered from the profit perspective? It's only stupid if you assume PR concerns were actually more important for Selfridge than profit and mining goals and pleasing the Board, rather than a way to get those annoying environmentalists on Earth off his back.
Cesario wrote:And thus the "TEYH UZED CEMIKAL WAPONZ!!!1" as a reason the RDA was evil argument is officially defeated. It's been a pleasure.
Yes, it is defeated. They were evil merely because they firebombed a population center.
Cesario wrote:True of False: Earth in this film is facing a resource crisis.
They built gigantic interstellar starships before they even knew unobtainium existed, purely for exploration, so...probably not.
Cesario wrote:True of False: Earth's biosphere is effectively dead.
It's heavily damaged, but "mean bush" still exists in Venezuela at the least.
Cesario wrote:True or False: The artificial means of food production being used to feed 20 billion people on earth require resources.
They do require resources.
Cesario wrote:I argue more than "somewhat".
That's just semantics.
Cesario wrote:What do you think the "people on earth are grey" referred to, exactly?
Whoa, one symbollic line is all you need to come to sweeping conclusions about the situation on Earth? That's pretty awesome
Cesario wrote:Is the only thing earth had to offer technological whiz-bangs? We do have more than that, recall. We have spiritual texts from a thousand different faiths if the Na'vi are interested in exploring new ideas about one's relationship to the divine. We have centuries of acccumulated litterature, whether they're interested in light entertainment or exploring new worlds through imagination. We have interstellar spacecraft if they want to explore new worlds bodily.
We actually do have wonders to satisfy desires both gross and subtle.
But the Na'vi want none of it, need none of it.
Hell, given the Na'vi's warlike culture, we could offer to sell them weapons to let them dominate their neighbors.
Okay,look, that's exactly the problem. You obviously think of the Na'Vi as just blue humans. Worse, you think of them as
blue XXI century humans, and thus think you can negotiate with them in the same way that you would negotiate with Russia, and if they don't play by these rules, they are unreasonable and thus worthy of nothing but contempt.
That's just projecting your own attitudes and desires upon a people who live on an
alien world. There's both a civilizational and environmental gap between them and us, and assuming they will have the same ideas of fair exchange or the same desires or the same attitudes as a wall street CEO is just...stupid. I can't find a better word to describe this.
You presume they'd want to study our religions, when they don't even have a
concept of religion. You presume they are interested in dominating their neighbors, when their concept of war is possibly quite different than ours. You also assume the RDA was willing to give them literally anything, including rides to other worlds on their hugely expensive starships, which is stupid
both in the above context and our quiant Earthly XXI century one.
And, lastly, you presume
each of these items is fair trade for their ancestral lands, which is a value judgement you made, in your mind, based on your own preconceptions, because it's not
your ancestral home you would have had to give up. How easy do you think it would be to get Poles to abandon Warsaw, forever, with all its landmarks and museums and centers of government, and let it be turned into an open pit mine? Do you think they'd agree to it if they got weapons or philospophical texts from an alien civilization?
Cesario wrote:
I don't generally think people who don't give a shit about others or the environment have crossed the line of deserving to be murdered on sight. Apparently we disagree on this point.
So if someone plowed a bulldozer through your house with all your belongings inside and then declared that plot of land was now his, you wouldn't be angry?
Cesario wrote:Or that the situation is not yet despirate enough that they feel obligated to at least try to do this right.
So what is it, then? Malnutrition and tethering on the edge of mass starvation, or merely a threat of future decline?
Cesario wrote: I only think the RDA should have destroyed Pandora if they're going to be the actual villains of the piece. Since they weren't, it's fine that they didn't destroy Pandora.
Why do you think there are no other considerations for the RDA? Corporations can send their mercenaries to rape, beat up and abuse workers in diamond mines while also presenting a nice and happy outside image to shareholders.
They won't send their mercenaries to outright genocide locals due to PR concerns, but that doesn't make them virtuous.Just liars.