You can already enslave both of them though?
Reaha is literally a slave. The entire time.
You can already enslave both of them though?
Reaha is literally a slave. The entire time.
I was under the impression that Reaha's indentured servitude contract provided her with at least a modicum of protection, since she mentions wanting to lawyer up against Carver.
This bothers me a little Mysty, it's kind of like telling an autistic to be normal. There's no such fuckin' thing. We are ALL sickos! NONE of us is normal! Morals and ethics are some sort of sieve through which people who can "pretend" to be a part of "normal" society are filtered. It's insane. /endranteventhoughtheresmore
True. Indentured servants are more like unpaid workers (although storywise all of them pay off a debt of some kind) who can't quit. They have less options than normal, but they are still protected by the law like everybody else. What you're probably thinking of is chattel slavery, where people are treated more like property. When somebody talks about slavery here, it's pretty safe to assume the mean the former definition.
Its not really insane. Morality and ethics allow us to live in a functioning society. Also I dont think you can categorize everyone as sickos- its not really 'sick' to have a fetish for anal, wheras enjoying kiddie porn definitly is
Regardless of whether or not they're released, they're sapient individuals. It's a horrible thing to assault them (even if they start it), kidnap them, and then experiment on them, let alone sexually violate them. The whole quest is disgusting and I absolutely refuse to do it under any circumstances. Swap "zil" with "human" and that should highlight just how awful it is.
It's another instance of TiTS glossing over unsavory elements for the sake of staying light-hearted (ish), but it doesn't make it any less wrong.
I'm pretty sure those Zill you kidnap were treated more like chattel slaves than indentured servants by Xenogen. They pretty much had no say or protections in what was done to them and there wasn't any legal justification like debt for their forced compliance to the experimentation.
This is true. It was a... strong introduction to Xenogen. ¬¬
Anything being locked behind something so obviously slanted towards a specific character alignment is bad for business, imo. The biggest problem I have with it is that, right now, Hard is the only personality that really means anything. A whole host of things push you towards Hard, and afaik nothing really pushes you towards Kind. There's no Kind decision that unlocks things, and there's no benefit to being Kind other than easing personal misgivings.
If that's supposed to be a statement about TiTS' dystopian nature and the inherent sacrifices of courteous/selfless behavior... fine, I guess.
But I doubt it.
Its not really insane. Morality and ethics allow us to live in a functioning society.
Regardless of whether or not they're released, they're sapient individuals. It's a horrible thing to assault them (even if they start it), kidnap them, and then experiment on them, let alone sexually violate them. The whole quest is disgusting and I absolutely refuse to do it under any circumstances. Swap "zil" with "human" and that should highlight just how awful it is.
It's another instance of TiTS glossing over unsavory elements for the sake of staying light-hearted (ish), but it doesn't make it any less wrong.
Well, keep in mind that it's meant as your introduction to Xenogen as a faction and how they operate. That their activities are deplorable is intentional.
Unfortunately my favorite fluid type is locked behind that quest. I'll have to consider writing an alternative method.
The problem with that is that someone doing something immoral to you does not give you the right to do something immoral to them. That entire argument is the crux of self defense cases when attempting to justify whether or not an element of a person's self defense was legal. If someone punches you, that doesn't just flip a switch and give you an immediate right to kill them. You only have the right to react in such a way as to secure and confirm your own safety, nothing more. In some circumstances, that necessitates the death of your attacker, yes, but not always.
And at no point, no matter what the zil wants or tries to do, does Steele or anyone else have any right to forcibly capture them and subject them to horribly invasive or violating experiments. Ever. That cannot be justified under any circumstances. You can't do that to murderers in real life. They still have rights. The zil could try to do that exact thing to Steele or others and that still wouldn't give you the right to do it to them. Hammurabi's Code is barbaric, and an absolutely unsuitable system of punishment for civilized peoples.
Do the zil have the right to attempt to dominate and rape others? No, they don't, and anything and everything has a right to defend against it. What the zil do is immoral and unethical, even if it's how their culture works. Cultures can be immoral, as can widespread public beliefs and ideas. But the zil being that way doesn't give anyone the right to victimize them.
Am I rationalizing this from a "human" point of view? Yes, but our ethical and moral deliberations over the past 2,000 years have been heavily based in hypotheticals and potentials, and the primary goal of ethics could be described as turning the subjective into the objective. It is an attempt to determine what is right or wrong in an absolute sense, and though it may never get there, it can get pretty close. Our philosophical conceptions of ethics and morals can apply to anything with an even remotely comparable perception of reality.
The only way something could transcend our notion of "ethical" behavior is if it was a higher existence entirely. Either some deity or supernatural/extradimensional being. Something that existed on a level beyond our comprehension. The zil are not that. They're bee people with innumerable parallels to humans that Xenogen hire you to kidnap for their own benefit. There is no defense of that behavior. It is as objectively immoral and unethical as something can be.
TiTS seems to be a lot darker than it looks like beneath the surface...
New Texas. The dark side of the UGC Nonesuch was speaking about. The Zil kidnapping etc...
I have to say it actually adds a lot more depth to the game, even as morally and ethically wrong these things are.
I honestly never thought much of the zil kidnapping when I was still just a fledgling to this game. Then again I skim read a lot during the first playthrough...Now I´m seriously evaluating the choices I made during the 2nd playthrough.
In the end I do agree that Zil should not be enslaved or tortured or whatever. The point though is that we do NOT have a clear example of that. The context is WAY too muddy to clearly say that there's is wrongdoing or harm present. I mean look at the Zil in Penny's jail. They're more than happy to do pretty much whatever they're told after they get outsexed or outfought. I'll never tell you that you have to like it, but it's not right for anyone to determine what is right or wrong for any other person based on "most things and most times". It would also be quite easy to prove that any action produces harm to someone/something, perhaps even the simple act of existing. Gonna stop before I tread into political territory.
We humans have become something like masters of shifting blame.
Hmmm I know I might be being capt obvious here but I get the tone of this whole thread is taking is leaning towards hostility.
Haswell makes it clear he wants to experiment on the zil because he wants to develop a gene-mod off them. If he had *any* other motive, do you not think he would have stated it to sweeten what he was making you do? A large company like Xenogen can compartmentalise thoughtless, reprehensible actions away just as surely as Enron, Nestle or the former USSR can, but that doesn't make them right.