It doesn't matter. It's a valid observation in either narrative, whether characters give voice to it or not. SAC merely had the characters give voice to it.
This is a fictional world with a fictional technology, how are we supposed to "observe" that this
might not be possible? I still maintain, you are taking what you've learned from a different version of GitS and applying it to this version. This version does not establish your interpretation, it doesn't even hint at it.
I don't see the movie actually giving you that, I see you writing it into the movie. I don't see her being placed in a position to "decide" anything.
Of course it does. Kuze makes the offer, Major declines. You're treating this situation like she has no choice, when she obviously does. How am I writing this into the movie?
And this is not even about her choice to go back to Section 9. Not joining Kuze and going back to Section 9 are two distinct decisions, she could have chosen neither of these options. So even by allowing for the live action movie implying that Kuze's plan may not be possible, that does not mean that she has to go back to Section 9.
That does not follow. A free mind made that decision, for reasons that make perfect sense. It's just not a decision you agree with. A free mind isn't free to disagree, apparently.
Again, I'm not criticizing an actual person's decision, I'm criticizing a narrative that's presented to me. Major may have had legitimate reasons to go back to Section 9, but they are not presented to me. It just doesn't feel like a decision a character based on the previous narrative would come to naturally, and therefore doesn't appear like the choice of a free will.
You say that her reasons made perfect sense. I'm still unclear what these reasons were, so please, share them with me.
You don't say.
...
I assume there's some purpose behind all this strawmanning.
...
There it is...
Sorry, but you are still arguing as if Major's decision were actually one of free will, which is impossible for a fictional character. I tried spelling it out to you, which you apparently don't like, either, but you're still treating her choice like one a real person made (see quote above).
Not too different from Nakamura. While "had the betrayal be far more systemic" isn't actually a thing that happened in the 1995 film. So the dichotomy you're trying to set up here is pure illusion.
Again, it's been a while, I might be wrong about whether the actual betrayal of Major in the '95 was systemic or not, but I do remember her distrusting everyone but Batou in the end, and the ending definitely wasn't as simple as "kill that one bad guy, then everything is alright again".