More of an assault, but I’d think of that as a few years anyway.
Yes, they did have there crime issues.
I don’t know. I always felt that [spoiler]this Kosh was different from most Vorlons. I think he genuinely loved and felt kinship with the younger races, rather than just using them as pawns. The other Vorlons certainly never would have sacrificed as much as he did.[/spoiler]
Lyta said as much
Sure, it would be assault if the victim was just a regular schmo, but an ambassador? Particularly one from the race that his planet is at war with? One wonders why the Centaurum didn’t demand his head on a pike, so that they could wave at it, like this:
Ok, I think I’m headed out. Good night!
Good point. I guess it’s like the Whitestar’s max speed: the speed of plot. He’s in jail for as long as the JMS needs him to be.
I’m out too. Night all.
Hmmm. I don’t know. It still bugs me. Obviously this is what G’Kar needs to hear. It touches him on an incredibly deep level. When I first saw it, I thot, “Wow Kosh uses someone close to G’Kar to talk to his heart and share wisdom.” Now I look at it as taking advantage.
In the end though. Kosh does it for G’Kar. What G’Kar does later is of his own doing. Yet I can’t help but wonder that Kosh knows the future and the need for the Narns involvment in the coming war. My head hurts now.
Yeah and she wasn’t manipulated by them at all.:rolleyes:
[spoiler]I really see it the same as appearing in the form of religious figures. That could be used for manipulation — and without doubt had been over the millennia — but it could also be a source of comfort and understanding between them and the younger races. I think Kosh appearing as G’Kar’s father (and John’s, later) was meant to signify a closer bond than a god-thing appearing to a primitive. He viewed them as his children, with all that that entailed.[/spoiler]