^Ha ha...Rushbo, you're awesome!![]()
(Nervous chuckle) Uh...yeah, sure!
Just for the record, I wasn't quoting Rodney King, I was saying exactly what I said and nothing more. I didn't even know who he was until I googled him.![]()
I figured.

^Ha ha...Rushbo, you're awesome!![]()
Just for the record, I wasn't quoting Rodney King, I was saying exactly what I said and nothing more. I didn't even know who he was until I googled him.![]()
Aw, c'mon.Now, now. Let's not rush anything here.
Imagine the field day the TNZ imbeciles would have with that, at my expense!![]()
Sure enough, and I took the comment exactly in the spirit it was given. I just thought if was a funny coincidence with the Stephen King's book.Well, I just use 'IT' cus I'm too lazy to look up the spelling of your username when it's not there, quotable in the text.At the same time, it was a little unsettling being dubbed IT and talked about like a children-eating monster...![]()
And I can say, I am quite proud (and more than a bit thrilledBut I have read enough of your posts over the years to know that when it comes to debate, you keep your eye on the ball and don't let much slide. Doesn't make you a child-eating monster...but put it this way: I know that if I ever wanted to take you on in a debate, before I made the first post I'd make damn sure I knew what I was talking about, had my facts straight, and had evaluated my position for inconsistencies. Because if there is a weakness, you will FIND it.
Yup. Though my personal history is all over the place, I was born and raised in Turin, which has the doubtful but not-quite-unearned honour of being considered the city of well-mannered, buttoned-up, double-crossing liars. "Piemunteis faus e curteis."Just for the record, having traveled all over the world myself and having determined Italy to be my all time favorite country a long time ago (for a myriad of reasons), I wouldn't call you 'cold-blooded'...but by Italian standards, yes - you are actually fairly reserved. Are you from the north or something? I mean, what's up with that?![]()
I'd say you have a very accurate portrait of our cultural identity. We had seen too much glory, and too much shit, to take life too seriously.In fact, one of the best things ABOUT Italy is it's people - unruly, boisterous, and passionate...yes. But it's hard to top a culture that can laugh at itself...and at life. And who can simply enjoy life so much.
Why, thank you.I love Italy (for all of the reasons above...plus the extraordinary abundance of spectacularly BEAUTIFUL men...but I digress
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Cultural landscape is an important part of one's upbringing, but I don't think heritage works like that.I guess from my Hispanic blood, I get a more sleepy demeanor (no siestas here--if I can help it). From my Irish blood, my temper. Native American, my sense of honor and dignity. British, my love of things being "proper" and orderly.
I did that on purpose, you know."Some ARE Cardassians"...
I wish!![]()
I suspect the symbiont is able to provide its own (independent) memories to the host, though, with which it's linked, because of the complex neurochemical relations and brain centers that in both are probably specifically geared to be "neural translators."
^I agree. It's just a memory box that makes people more confident...some of the time. Not really consistent and very confusing.
I think where we missed the opportunity to define the symbionts more clearly was as early as "A Man Alone." The Trill expert witness was asked about the host personalities and the combined personalities, but we never had time to explore the personality and memories of the symbiont. Had they gone that far--had we heard a recounting of a memory from Dax of the Pools of Mak'ala, then we wouldn't be having this debate at all. Personally, I think the symbionts are more than just memory-boxes, but since it is the humanoid hosts who speak and move and interact with society outside the pools, this makes their personalities by default the most "visible" aspect of them, and the one that they speak of the most because it's by far more relatable for a non-joined humanoid.
Which of course brings up the question, why didn't we see Dax embodied in the zhian'tara ritual? I suspect that their brain patterns are too alien for a humanoid brain (one that is not joined with a symbiont) to process, because their form is so different.
In fact...I have a theory that symbiont sentience evolved out of what began as the ability to deliver a simple neural shock to would-be predators in the "water," and then said ability turned into the ability to coordinate between symbionts (the better to avoid predators and plan where to go that they couldn't follow), and that in turn became true sentience and communication. And from there, the same ability that they used to send their prey into seizures became more refined and they discovered they could use it to communicate and eventually bond with humanoids and share their lives.
now i know this is unrelated, but you dont happen to medical training, do you? or are you simply well informed. the reason i ask is that there is a way we analyze things, and i notice that in you posts.I suspect the symbiont is able to provide its own (independent) memories to the host, though, with which it's linked, because of the complex neurochemical relations and brain centers that in both are probably specifically geared to be "neural translators."
As soon as Dax was in the new host he should have felt immediate remorse for what he had done and chosen to go back to Dax. DAX is the one that's going to die...not the other dude. How do you justify that?
Nope...not a medical professional. I just read a lot and then make up stuff that halfway makes sense.I'm guessing from this that you're a doctor?
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