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I enjoyed this one, particularly the second half. The similarity to Something Blue was notable, but didn't ruin my enjoyment of the episode (compare with Spin the Bottle vs Tabula Rasa). It was also my second favourite Halloween episode (after Halloween) and the "biggest party of the year" idea was a good one. It was satisfying to see Lorne get centre stage after the last few episodes. Plus the bit where the slave ran away was a nice touch. Finally, I liked the fact that the party was said to have gone better than those in previous years...

...which takes me onto the continuity issues. Now, I agree that removing Connor probably rewrites a bit of history, but the team are still in Wolfram and Hart - right ? So they must still have had most of The Beast / Jasmine stuff to have (not) saved the world from - right ? So... how come there are Wolfram and Hart employees around who have seen previous Halloween dos (eg. Knox and the two Lorne speaks to) ? Weren't they all killed by the Beast ? And why do they still talk about all the employees being "evil" ? All that singing in Conviction was supposed to remove the worst of them and leave those tending more towards selfish (or, in D&D terms "neutral").

But, having got those continuity moans out of my system, I still think it was a good episode.

Re:

Date: 2004-02-12 04:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] onebyone.livejournal.com

I think 'Very Selfish' and 'Strong Moral Code' cannot sensibly coexist

That's a lefty liberal speaking. Ayn Rand recommends a position which amounts to a strong moral code (e.g. strict property rights) combined with assumed extreme selfishness on the part of everyone.

Re:

Date: 2004-02-12 04:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] al-fruitbat.livejournal.com
Yes. In the sense of 'being nice to people' is lefty liberal. Not that I want to get nailed to a tree or anything.

There's a reason people seen as extraordinarily good are described as 'selfless' y'know ;-)

Re:

Date: 2004-02-12 06:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] onebyone.livejournal.com

Yes, because being nice to people is something which is generally seen as good, especially by lefties. But there are lots of other things which some or more people see as being good, and it's possible to have a strong moral code in which being nice to people, per se, doesn't really feature very strongly.

Selfishness is really a question of how strongly you rate your own wellbeing compared with that of other people - but that's not all there is to morality. Lefty liberals happen to rate observable individual welfare very highly as a moral good, which makes selfishness bad. A committed free marketeer believes that everyone will benefit if we all stop doing selfless things just because they are of local benefit to some particular group we feel sorry for.

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