Editing Themes in Battlestar Galactica (RDM)
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The theme in general is also shown in the prominent dichotomy between Commander Adama and Admiral Cain, who holds a "survival at any cost" philosophy. This resulted in her abandoning her own civilian fleet after stripping them for parts, shooting her own Executive Officer for failure to order an ill-advised attack, torturing enemy prisoners of war, having no regard for the civilian government, and ordering summary executions of crewmen. Cain had survived, but in the process she blurred her distinction from the Cylons ("[[Pegasus (episode)|Pegasus]]" through "[[Resurrection Ship, Part II]]"). | The theme in general is also shown in the prominent dichotomy between Commander Adama and Admiral Cain, who holds a "survival at any cost" philosophy. This resulted in her abandoning her own civilian fleet after stripping them for parts, shooting her own Executive Officer for failure to order an ill-advised attack, torturing enemy prisoners of war, having no regard for the civilian government, and ordering summary executions of crewmen. Cain had survived, but in the process she blurred her distinction from the Cylons ("[[Pegasus (episode)|Pegasus]]" through "[[Resurrection Ship, Part II]]"). | ||
Dr. Gaius Baltar provides another intriguing case study for this theme. [[Caprica-Six]] says that the thing she loves best about Baltar is that he's "a survivor". When Baltar finds out that he had unwittingly betrayed all of humanity, he is more concerned with contacting his attorney for his own legal defense. He is willing to condemn one he ''thought to be'' an innocent man, [[Number Five|Aaron Doral]], to death in order to preserve his own safety {{TRS|Miniseries}}. Baltar delays reporting the results of his own [[Cylon detector]], because he is afraid that if he reveals that it works before he finds all twelve Cylon models, he will be killed {{TRS|Flesh and Bone}}. Shockingly, Baltar does on one occasion do more than simply survive, when he frags | Dr. Gaius Baltar provides another intriguing case study for this theme. [[Caprica-Six]] says that the thing she loves best about Baltar is that he's "a survivor". When Baltar finds out that he had unwittingly betrayed all of humanity, he is more concerned with contacting his attorney for his own legal defense. He is willing to condemn one he ''thought to be'' an innocent man, [[Number Five|Aaron Doral]], to death in order to preserve his own safety {{TRS|Miniseries}}. Baltar delays reporting the results of his own [[Cylon detector]], because he is afraid that if he reveals that it works before he finds all twelve Cylon models, he will be killed {{TRS|Flesh and Bone}}. Shockingly, Baltar does on one occasion do more than simply survive, when he frags [[Crashdown]], whose poor leadership endangers the group as a whole, not only Baltar {{TRS|Fragged}}. Soon after, however, he risks Chief Tyrol's life by injecting him with a toxin to acquire information from ''Galactica''-Sharon {{TRS|Resistance (episode)}}. Finally, Baltar is corrupt enough to disastrously mislead the [[The Fleet (RDM)|Fleet]] into settling on New Caprica because this would allow him to become President {{TRS|Lay Down Your Burdens, Part II}}. Baltar is quite a remarkable survivor, but his Machiavellian manipulations make his "worthiness" for survival questionable. The audience can easily view him as less worthy of life than a Cylon. | ||
Several times, characters directly question mankind's worthiness to survive. Commander Adama does so at ''Galactica''{{'|s}} decommissioning ceremony, stating that humans still kill each other for petty reasons and that they never asked themselves why they deserve to survive {{TRS|Miniseries}}. Later, Sharon Valerii refers to that speech and tells Adama that it might not deserve so. When Adama calls off the planned assassination of Admiral Cain, he says verbatim "It's not enough to survive. One has to be worthy of surviving." {{TRS|Resurrection Ship, Part II}}. At Baltar's trial, [[Doyle Franks]] expresses the sentiment that mankind's flaws are what separate it from the Cylons and might make it a species worth saving {{TRS|Crossroads, Part II}}. | Several times, characters directly question mankind's worthiness to survive. Commander Adama does so at ''Galactica''{{'|s}} decommissioning ceremony, stating that humans still kill each other for petty reasons and that they never asked themselves why they deserve to survive {{TRS|Miniseries}}. Later, Sharon Valerii refers to that speech and tells Adama that it might not deserve so. When Adama calls off the planned assassination of Admiral Cain, he says verbatim "It's not enough to survive. One has to be worthy of surviving." {{TRS|Resurrection Ship, Part II}}. At Baltar's trial, [[Doyle Franks]] expresses the sentiment that mankind's flaws are what separate it from the Cylons and might make it a species worth saving {{TRS|Crossroads, Part II}}. | ||