And how do you make a decision like that? How do you live knowing that your actions had ramifications like this? Which isn’t to blame the resistance force for what the Shadows and the Centauri did themselves! Obviously, they’re not actually responsible for the attacks. It’s a calculated act, and the math is spelled out to us: either millions of Narns died, or all of them died. Of course, there’s a much bigger issue at hand: the decision to keep the growth of the Shadows a secret, despite how it would affect the Narns. At some point, they had to address the fact that G’Kar and the Narns were left out of the resistance efforts, despite that they deserved to take part in it all. But when it came to this subplot-which honestly felt inevitable at this point-that discomfort is necessary. Lord, this is a viciously uncomfortable episode. Trigger Warning: For discussion of consent, nonconsensual medical procedures. Intrigued? Then it’s time for Mark to watch Babylon 5. In the fourteenth episode of the third season of Babylon 5, Bester comes bearing an olive branch… sort of.
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