Yes, my friend, you should face up to what the episode really was about: the Humans were going to commit a genocide, plain and simple
You mean like the genocide
the Cylons had already committed? And were *still* trying to commit?
There was a war on. Helo could have stopped it, but deliberately chose to give aid and comfort to the enemy. Now tell me, how was Helo *not* treasonous?
Well you're right but the writers being good little bleeding heart libruls were doing their damnedest to get out from under the premise that they started with, namely a genocidal fight to the death, with no rules, no morality, and no point other than bare survival.
If you start with a premise, you kinda sorta need to stick with it, or you end up with a huge morass of nonsense. If the BSG writers didn't have the stomach for a vicious and horrid genocidal tale, and to stick with the story in an honest way and develop it to its natural end, they should have chosen a different story from the outset.
However, in Helo's defense, you could argue that he had switched allegiances to the species represented by the mother of his children, present and future, (and the fact that he could breed with her means that she is, in fact, the same species as him - inter-fertility is how a species is defined.) In that case, he is neither right nor wrong. He is ensuring the future propigation of his DNA, just like all the humans in the fleet were trying to do.
Helo was neither noble nor ignoble in what he did. He was
selfish. And there's nothing wrong with that, because when you get right down to it, and strip away all the bullshit, selfishness drives everything that humans or Cylons do. Neither deserves to live and neither deserves to die. They just do live, or they do die.
In other words, you believe that if one race (ethnic group, etc.) of people has had a genocide committed against them by another group, they should also commit genocide in return?
If that's what it takes to survive, yes of course they should. That is, if I'm in the group that is fighting for survival. If I'm the target of genocide, I'm completely against it.
The problem people run into here is that they try to take a scenario of species survival and apply morality to it. But it's beyond morality. If one species survives and the other dies, it doesn't matter one iota which one was "right" or "wrong." If the right one survived, good. If the wrong one survived, there's nothing you can do about it.
And note that I'm talking about species. The instances of genocide we're familiar with on planet Earth are
intra-species genocide, not
inter-species, like depicted in
BSG. Of course it's stupid to kill off members of your own species. You're committing genocide against your own people, which the Cylons would applaud. How doltish can you get?