maththemath--disqus
maththemath
maththemath--disqus

Would you say that Firecest is wrong?

Just like nature.

…Tenzin wanted that?

We have enough websites for that, luckily.

…have we seen Pabu?

I think you mean book 2, episode 1.

varrick is a winning team.

I'm on Su's side, but she also could have taken the opportunity to work out at least some sort of stability. She could have helped people establish independent city-states. She'd have been really good at that. She's right against Kuvira, but she did miss an opportunity to prevent this.

zhu li and joule look very similar, just pronounce joule as joo-lee and omg

We could have just had her be an imperialist. We didn't have to go full fascist. That's too easy.

I KNOW RIGHT.

She'll probably even use the fact she got spared to stay close to Varrick and make sure he's all right.

There's still a big chance this storyline doesn't work out that way. He's still going to be in jail, no matter what. And "the best thing I ever created" isn't exactly reassuring language.

I hope you're right. But the way that humans are interacting with spirits is already getting to be pretty horrifying.

Kuvira's rationale is exactly the same as Sozin's. She is the pre-Zuko Fire Nation resurrected, harsh imperialism under the guise of expanding prosperity.

She's a cold, heartless war machine.

God. I really am aggravated that they're making Kuvira so much simpler to dismiss than they did with Zaheer last season. This could really use more nuance.

Finally, some motion. Now that’s what I’m talking about.

I think you should be impressed because they've chronicled a similar psychology without it defining her character or even framing those individual events in those terms. The similarity between these three events has never been too obvious, and we're probably a select few who have quite lined them up as such.

I suppose. (Also, you'll note in another topic that I tap into the trauma in a way I hadn't before and am very impressed.) But lately my real interest in this show has been sort of what interests me with Game of Thrones, which is how micro-level actions affect the macro. The international relations, zooming out and