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And one other thing for your consideration. Not relating this directly to the Jaime/Cersei scene but rather to your comments in general about rape vs. killing. Imagine for a moment, if you will, that you were going to play a character in one episode of a show. Your character gets a lot of development and then either

Basically it was just kind of bad filmmaking. I agree that it isn't exactly rape if she says no at first but is only 'weakly' pounding on his chest and kissing him back, and getting into it. I think we can assume (in the book) that Jaime, the love of her life, can read her and knows that she actually wants it, based

That scene made me want to puke and stop watching the show. I don't really think it has anything to do with white knighting. If anything, people like you make me afraid to actually speak my mind. So don't worry, you win. Shows will keep being made like this, and you can sit back and enjoy them.

I would almost argue the opposite. I think it could actually be the fact that as a female, you are often (and yes, I mean often) faced with situations where men threaten you sexually in public or private, or where you feel pressured into sexual things. I would not say that I have been in too many situations where I

Yes, in this case. The point is that Jaime is supposed to love Cersei. People would be making an even bigger deal if he randomly killed her, of course. But the point is that it made no sense to show Jaime raping a woman he is meant to love. The people who get killed tend to get killed for reasons that make sense in a