So, did Captain Cold and Heat Wave know that Oliver Queen is Green Arrow before everyone else started blurting it out?
And I was drawing attention to how you'd think that a "Time Master" would be sensitive to these alternate histories and the people living in them, but in fact Rip is highly insensitive to them. This timeline and the people in it were no more real to him than they are to you.
I've never seen the value in assuming that something couldn't have happened in the way it clearly did happen. The facts are the facts. We need to adjust our interpretations to fit the facts, not complain that the facts don't fit our beliefs. In-story, the fact is that they haven't taken Savage's body with them so Hawkgirl could kill him. Therefore, there must be a reason why they didn't do so. I'm just trying to offer an answer that will make sense of that. I think it's much more productive to find a solution to a problem than to shoot down solutions and just keep complaining about the problem.
Good thought. You're probably right, since the show has established how dangerous it can be for the team to disrupt their own past. If Stein's wedding ring disappeared when he stopped his younger self from meeting his wife-to-be, then presumably Kendra preventing her own birth by killing Savage would create that "temporal vortex" catastrophe that Rip warned about, due to the irresolvable paradox.
Because he travels in time routinely enough that he's seen countless of these potential time branches and is keenly aware that each one is just one option out of numerous potential paths that stretch forward from a decision point. So he has good reason to see it as less definitive as it would appear to a less experienced time traveler who only sees that one branch. If nothing else, the human mind and heart can only withstand so much caring. There are people suffering and dying around us every day, but as nice as it would be in principle to care about all of them, we'd go crazy with grief if we tried to get emotionally invested in every single tragedy. So we have to focus on those that are most relevant to us or that we have the most ability to intervene in. Someone who constantly perceives countless alternative possible time paths can't care about every one of them equally -- since, after all, they're in competition with each other and the survival of one means the cessation of all the others. On the whole, it makes more sense to focus his concern on the resolved timeline rather than the multitude of competing potential futures.
Wouldn't Rip Hunter be from a "potential future" from the perspective of all the characters from 2016? What if in preventing Savage to take over the world the specific lineage that lead to Rip Hunter never happens?
Wouldn't Rip Hunter be from a "potential future" from the perspective of all the characters from 2016? What if in preventing Savage to take over the world the specific lineage that lead to Rip Hunter never happens?
'Facts' that were never referenced in any way on the show aren't facts.
Is it possible to imagine some undisclosed reason why they might do what they did and have that reason make sense? Sure it is. It doesn't make the writing any less weak, though.
My main question in regards to this conundrum is - what does it even mean to have 'fluid futures' and a 'solid past'? We already know for a fact that the past can be changed, just as well as the future, which logically means it's all one and the same thing and all equally fluid.
I also liked that Mick decided he'd found his perfect home. I'm not sure exactly where they're coming from making Snart so insistent on being a hero - I mean, the arrogance of wanting to be a legend makes sense, but it feels like they're going for more than that. I'm curious to see where that goes from here.
We're talking about a city defended by an entire team of heroes, who also have connections to Argus and the Flash. If this army was big enough to win anyway, why would one assassin and a tech happy goofball with a terrible fighting record possibly have turned the tide?
I'm referring to the fact we do have -- namely, that the team did not take a temporarily dead Savage back with them to the Waverider. That fact is not in dispute, because it's the whole thing we're arguing over. Given that they did not do that, it follows that there's probably a reason why they didn't do it. Saying "They faced no resistance and could've gotten him back easily but were just too stupid or lazy to do it" is just as much a conjecture beyond the facts as saying "They faced a fair amount of resistance and had no choice but to abandon him even though they would've brought him if they could." And I submit that the latter interpretation is more plausible because it does not require the characters to be incompetent.
See above. The show has already repeatedly explained the difference between a time-travel-created change that is still reversible and one that has become irreversible -- wet cement vs. set cement. Fluids can become solid.
You never know who'll make the critical difference. In Ray's case, it could've been his technology (which is far beyond anything in Team Arrow's repertoire) or his ability to inspire and rally the populace. In Sara's case, it could've been her ability to infiltrate Wilson's forces, or her past connections allowing her to bring new allies into the fight; or maybe she was able to prevent Chief Lance's murder, so that the power of the police force and the will of the people weren't broken. Anyone can turn the tide. (I've recently been reading the early Fantastic Four issues, before Sue Storm got her force-field power, and though she often seemed like the most helpless and passive member of the team, she often made the key difference by invisibly grabbing the villain's gun at a critical moment, say.)
Well, the facts that we were shown were that they made no attempt whatsoever to bring him, and, as far as we know, never even considered doing so.
Not quite. The show has repeatedly claimed that there is a difference, but has never actually described what it supposedly is. The fact that the past can be changed at all means that there is no 'resolved' or 'solid' timeline. Everything is fluid.
The wet cement argument really only seems to apply (from a practical perspective) to the effects that changes to the past have on time travelers - it's a narrative excuse for giving the characters time to fix their mistakes, rather than instantly disappearing when they accidentally interfere with their own conception. But for the timeline itself, it doesn't matter whether changes take hold all throughout time instantly or follow some sort of wave effect - either way the entire timeline gets changed.
The entire concept of a timeline having passed the 'point of no return' is completely meaningless. If Valentina's research led to an army of Soviet Firestorms, then someone could simply go back in time and kill Valentina. Or kill Marx and Lenin, for that matter. Which is not to say that all possibilities would be smart things to do, but simply that there is quite clearly no such thing as a fixed timeline.
At the end of the day, the fact is that two people are not the be all and end all of the universe. Maybe they could've made the difference, but there's just as high a probability that they couldn't have.
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