Another Zarek-related post (I'm making
likeadeuce happy these days, which is important as a bribe), and query/thought:
In Bastille Day, we hear Laura Roslin give us the following bit of backstory about him:
"I watched Adar offer to give him a full pardon if he'd apologize and give up violence as a means of political change, and he refused."
Most people when hearing Dee argue with Billy about whether Zarek is/was a terrorist or not focus on her statement that he blew up a building. Which probably associates Timothy McVeigh and Oklahoma for Americans, and for Europeans sounds more like "terrorist" as well. However: what kind of terrorist gets offered a full pardon if he says he's really sorry and promises not to do it again? Especially if pre-war society in the Colonies is meant to strongly parallel Western or specifically American one?
Of course later events in s2 and so far s3 show Zarek to be both a ruthless customer with a taste for power and have some principles, but I'm wondering about the backstory now, and the implication for Colonial society. Especially as Adar, given the glimpse we get of him in Epiphanies and the various tidbits revealed in dialogue, doesn't seem to have been the naive type - anything but. Or the type to do something which would have made him look really bad in front of his electorate, which pardoning a universally despised terrorist certainly would have.
So either the reason/cause Zarek blew up that building for must have been rather popular in the Colonies as well, and/or something was rather rotten in the state of Caprica even before the Cylons attacked. Thoughts?
In Bastille Day, we hear Laura Roslin give us the following bit of backstory about him:
"I watched Adar offer to give him a full pardon if he'd apologize and give up violence as a means of political change, and he refused."
Most people when hearing Dee argue with Billy about whether Zarek is/was a terrorist or not focus on her statement that he blew up a building. Which probably associates Timothy McVeigh and Oklahoma for Americans, and for Europeans sounds more like "terrorist" as well. However: what kind of terrorist gets offered a full pardon if he says he's really sorry and promises not to do it again? Especially if pre-war society in the Colonies is meant to strongly parallel Western or specifically American one?
Of course later events in s2 and so far s3 show Zarek to be both a ruthless customer with a taste for power and have some principles, but I'm wondering about the backstory now, and the implication for Colonial society. Especially as Adar, given the glimpse we get of him in Epiphanies and the various tidbits revealed in dialogue, doesn't seem to have been the naive type - anything but. Or the type to do something which would have made him look really bad in front of his electorate, which pardoning a universally despised terrorist certainly would have.
So either the reason/cause Zarek blew up that building for must have been rather popular in the Colonies as well, and/or something was rather rotten in the state of Caprica even before the Cylons attacked. Thoughts?
no subject
Date: 2006-10-19 04:38 pm (UTC)Interestingly, one of the reasons that it's hard to figure out Zarek's backstory is that he rarely or never speaks of it himself. One of the things that made me think of Shakespeare's Richard III (in very different circumstances, granted):
"Plead what I will be, not what I have been;
Not my deserts, but what I will deserve:
Urge the necessity and state of times,
And be not peevish-fond in great designs."
no subject
Date: 2006-10-19 09:30 pm (UTC)And now I'm imagining Mal and Tom Zarek meeting and my brain hurts. Because for some reason, I can't imagine them getting along at all. If only because Mal would take a look at Tom and think "that's how I'll end up if I ever make my peace with the Alliance!" and T.Z. would think "and the point of flying around in your boat would be...?"
no subject
Date: 2006-10-19 04:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-19 09:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-19 05:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-10-19 06:08 pm (UTC)And I strongly had the idea that the movement Zarek represented had considerable backing and some moral merit to it. The very fact that straight-arrow Lee had some admiration for the guy tells us that much. It's also possible that Zarek was fairly opportunistic in his embrace of the cause --certainly he can't be assumed to share in its highest ideals.
no subject
Date: 2006-10-19 09:48 pm (UTC)Another reason why Zarek might have been offered a pardon: he seems to be good at organizing people and keeping them organized. The prisoners who after becoming ex-prisoners don't appear to go rampaging around in the fleet (and presumably the majority was not in jail because of a miscarriage of justice), the Quorum (he instigated the Vice President election, and later was basically the spokesman for the others when they dealt with Tigh), the black market post-Dreadful Episode Of That Name - if he has evidenced similar talents as a young man, Adar & Co. might have counted on him being able to convince the entire movement, whatever it was, to follow suit for good.
BTW, fab icon.*g*
no subject
Date: 2006-10-19 08:14 pm (UTC)I suppose that it's possible we're trying to piece together the back-story out of order.
For example: There is a movie coming out soon (forget the name) wherein the plot appears to be about a man who is falsely accused of an illegal act. His wife and family are punished for it, but he is not. The tagline is something like "Let them punish me for something I actually did wrong"--meaning he has taken to drastic measures as a means of revenge for what was done to his family.
Suppose Zarek's story is somewhat similar to that? Maybe the offer of the pardon [which he refused on a matter of principle] came before he blew up that building and something happened afterwards that pushed him to violence [in retaliation?].