Three Years of Hell to Become the Devil: Outgeeking Bainbridge

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Outgeeking Bainbridge

Now, I'd never take on Professor Bainbridge when it comes to wine: I haven't the taste buds. And on corporate law? More fool me to challenge the guy who authors textbooks. But outgeeking? There we're on more equal ground. And I'm afraid that his accusation that George Lucas has sold the soul of Star Wars to the Democrats just rings hollow.

Basically, the good Professor is upset because:

...Lucas betrayed the basic story arc of the Star Wars mythology in order to score these cheap political points. In the original trilogy, Luke struggled against the absolutism of Obi-Wan and Yoda. It was Luke who insisted that there was still good in Vader, which Yoda and Obi-Wan rejected.

The betrayal in question is in having Obi-Wan say to Anakin, after the latter has muttered some you're-for-me-or-against-me line, "Only a Sith thinks in absolutes."

Now, I've not seen the movie yet, and to the best of my knowledge, neither has Prof. Bainbridge, but to my mind his internal critique doesn't hold up. Bainbridge spends a great deal of time talking about how an older (presumably wiser) Obi-Wan was still doctrinaire and absolutist in his consideration of the Force. But if we consider this Obi-Wan to be less mature than Alec Guinness (and who wouldn't), then the plot still hangs together. Obi-wan may just be full of it. And there's no "betrayal" for "cheap political points" so long as the elder Jedi isn't doing anything more than the lightsaber equivalent of Godwin's Law: you know the conversation's over (and someone's limbs are about to go) when somebody mentions the Sith.

So why are so many assuming that Old Kenobi needs to be taken seriously? It seems that the New York Times found political meaning in the film:

"This is how liberty dies - to thunderous applause," Padm observes as senators, their fears and dreams of glory deftly manipulated by Palpatine, vote to give him sweeping new powers. "Revenge of the Sith" is about how a republic dismantles its own democratic principles, about how politics becomes militarized, about how a Manichaean ideology undermines the rational exercise of power. Mr. Lucas is clearly jabbing his light saber in the direction of some real-world political leaders. At one point, Darth Vader, already deep in the thrall of the dark side and echoing the words of George W. Bush, hisses at Obi-Wan, "If you're not with me, you're my enemy." Obi-Wan's response is likely to surface as a bumper sticker during the next election campaign: "Only a Sith thinks in absolutes." You may applaud this editorializing, or you may find it overwrought, but give Mr. Lucas his due. For decades he has been blamed (unjustly) for helping to lead American movies away from their early-70's engagement with political matters, and he deserves credit for trying to bring them back.

Dear goodness, we can only hope. I mean, if Democrats can't do better than Lucas's tin-ear for dialogue for their political bumper stickers, then I suspect the Republicans will get the geek vote. But now the New York Times has done the impossible: it's made me curious about the final Star Wars film.

Let's face it: Lucas is about as subtle as a chainsaw running through a screen door, at least when it comes to dialogue. I'd expect that even if Chewbacca were mouthing Bush-lite rhetoric, you wouldn't need to be Han Solo to figure out the reference. On the other hand, the New York Times could probably scan Beowulf and find hidden anti-Bush meanings.

So who is it? Is George L. taking on George B.? Or is this all a figment of the Times' fevered fantasies? Sadly, I'll have to see the film to find out, because when it comes to a conflict between the Lucas lack of subtext and the Greying Lady's determination to find same, we reach a level of difficulty almost equal to that of the Great Sci Fi Paradox: What happens when a bunch of clueless red-shirts, guaranteed to survive less than three minutes after a beamdown, meets a platoon of Imperial Stormtroopers, who can't hit a barn from inside it?

Comments

This article on a Cannes press conference might save you the trouble of going to the movie.
http://midwestsummerassociate.blogspot.com/
A wise man once pointed out that "Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar", and I think someone needs to remind Prof. Bainbridge that sometimes a trashy sci-fi B flick is just a trashy sci-fi B flick.....
The "wise man" was Freud, on the sometimes-noninterpretation-of-dreams. Less well known is his debt to Kipling. The original line went something like "Wine is only wine, but a cigar is a smoke."
I've noticed that people who are absolutist often think that they are nuanced. (Often because they know other people on their own side who are even more extreme, or have unexpressed feelings which are much nastier.)
TTP: I know it was Freud; I was under the impression that the quote was familiar enough that nobody (at least nobody well educated enough to be follwoing a first person narrative of American legal education) needed to be told who said it. :-)
Oh, perhaps I've underestimated folks. I was under the impression that a lot of people didn't know the source. Eh. Also I was trolling for the exact phrasing of the Kipling quote.
"Now, I've not seen the movie yet, and to the best of my knowledge, neither has Prof. Bainbridge..." And thus continues the conservative tradition of critiquing movies without having seen them. :)
If you notice, Dave, the above isn't a critique of a movie, but a series of questions about it. And having now seen the movie, if you want to carry water for Lucas's dialogue, I hope your back's pretty strong.

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Tour & Visa | Tibet

4609118255 10d4b4decd Tour & Visa | Tibet

You must visit Tibet as part of a tour. There is no way around it. There are several different types of tours you can consider when entering Tibet from Nepal. Some options include trekking and visits to more remote parts of the country, which take a bit longer to get to. These tours are for around 15 to 30 day trips and are extremely pricey.

As we planned to explore China after Tibet, we were looking for the most economical way to visit Tibet, and then get us on our way to China. The best option for us was an overland group tour across what they call the ‘Friendship Highway’ in Tibet from Kathmandu to Lhasa. The trip would take five days and give you two days in the city of Lhasa. On the eighth day you are forced out.

Another option is to do a private tour. This would work best if you have four people to do it with and can split the costs.

The tour can be organized by a travel agency in Kathmandu. I highly recommend waiting till you get to Kathmandu to organize it. We met other travelers who organized it prior to arriving in Kathmandu, and they paid quite a bit more (even when organizing it from neighboring Pokhara). We organized ours through Tashi Delek agency, located in the Thamel neighborhood of Kathmandu (right next to the Center Point Hotel).

It’s important to realize all overland trips to Kathmandu to Lhasa are the same. They are all organized by the Chinese government so the travel agencies in Kathmandu merely act as a middle man. Don’t spent too much time going back and forth about the trip details, because it doesn’t matter who you go with. The end result will be the same. What does differ is the price you pay. Spend your time negotiating price (which is negotiable, no matter what they say) rather than trip details. The agencies have no control over that. Their sole job is to get your visa, make the payment to the Chinese government and get you to the border. From there the Tibetan (Chinese-trained) tour guides will takeover.

All eight day overland tours from Kathmandu to Lhasa will include:
- Seven nights of accommodation, with breakfast included, in Tibet
-Coordinating your visa and permits
- Transportation from Kathmandu, Nepal to Lhasa, Tibet
- An “English-speaking” Tibetan guide
- Entrance into Tibetan monasteries and monuments along the way

The permit you obtain for Tibet is good for eight days. If your desire is to travel through China following Tibet, you will also have to obtain a Chinese visa. This can be coordinated with the travel agency in Kathmandu. It’s very important to note, the longest visa you can obtain is for 28 days total. That means you’ll have eight days in Tibet and 20 for mainland China. You are unable to extend this visa in China.

An alternative to the overland tour is booking a flight to Lhasa (cost is $330 USD) and making the trip back overland, in reverse order.

For more information on travel in Tibet, see below:

Cost & Value
Accomodation
Transportation
Food

pixel Tour & Visa | Tibet

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