Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Agents of SHIELD - Episode 2.20 - "Scars"

Its perfectly reasonable that the inhumans would not want to be indexed. They have a reasonable position about how secrecy is a good thing, and that they don't trust SHIELD.

The problem is that Jiaying didn't even try to negotiate over the matter. She didn't reject the initial proposal and then suggest a counter-proposal, like "We won't let you index us, but we will allow for the exchange of envoys, and the trade of information in the event of a rogue inhuman causing trouble." She didn't make an argument for why SHIELD standard policy shouldn't apply, like "We aren't some random band of superhumans. We are our own society, and we are older than yours. Your going to have to treat us like a foreign country, not citizens of your own." She didn't engage in any negotiation at all. Instead, she... killed Gonzalez under false pretenses.

Basically, the inhumans have a perfectly reasonable position. Jiaying just didn't bother with it.

Correct. She let her own previous bad experiences affect her decision-making and took action when she possibly didn't have to.

I'm not saying she is right in what she did...I'm saying that she had a valid point of view.
 
At least you're stipulating that there is a difference between SHIELD and Hydra. My point has always been that even though they are not perfect, (What organization is?) the principals that they were founded on we're just. Hydra just ruined their rep.

If I walk into a store with a friend and he decides to rob the the store unbeknownst to me. I may look like a criminal to the world, even though I'm not.

SHIELD was FOUNDED on decent principles (a long time ago)...but what Fury was doing was enough for Captain America to want to tear the company down. SHIELD was never ignorant of what Hydra was doing within it, they just assumed that they all had the same motives and goals.

Basically, the analogue would be that you are your friend go to a store. You want to rob the place, but then do good things with the money you get for people in need...but your friend wants to rob the place and kill the employees. Neither one of you are "right" in what you're planning...and while your friend is more "wrong" than you are, your hands aren't clean when the bullets start flying.

EDIT: And as someone excellently pointed out above...SHIELD is a rogue organization with authority over NOTHING. There is no reason to treat them as anything more than a well-funded terrorist organization.
 
I do think that Rains would play a part too.

Also, is it me or there's an interesting parallel between Jia Ying and Magneto?

I think they are incredibly similar. They were both hurt horribly by evil people for what they are (Jiaying for being Inhuman, Magneto for being Jewish). Jiaying has Magneto's gut fear->anger response that led to Magneto wanting to crush humanity, though it is even more pronounced for Jiaying because for Magneto his history is informing his view of all people, while for Jiaying Hydra came for her, then it was revealed that Hydra had been hiding within SHIELD, then SHIELD came to her door, where her people and her daughter are, in gunships. And when she asks her husband if she can trust SHIELD, he tells her that most of them are scum, but Coulson at least is honest; however, it isn't Coulson that comes to her door.

At the end of the day, I think that Jiaying sees herself the same way that Han Solo sees himself at the beginning of A New Hope (the correct version): She shot first, because she had no doubt that Greedo (SHIELD) were about to try the same.

Was she right? No, we know that Coulson was trying to prevent a war, and that there is no Hydra left in SHIELD (probably). But she doesn't know that, and she has no reason to believe that Hydra has really been exorcised from SHIELD. She also knows that her people won't fight back until provoked, and she's scared that if they wait that long, they would be done for (which Gonzales' earlier comment about wiping them off the map seems to support, given our superior information).

My question is, if you have her information (SHIELD are untrustworthy, Coulson is the only one that tells the truth) and her experience (she's only seen SHIELD through the experience of Hydra), what course of action would be more effective to protect her people, assuming you, as she seems to, believe that the ends justify the means.
 
metaphysician said:
Its perfectly reasonable that the inhumans would not want to be indexed. They have a reasonable position about how secrecy is a good thing, and that they don't trust SHIELD.

The problem is that Jiaying didn't even try to negotiate over the matter. She didn't reject the initial proposal and then suggest a counter-proposal, like "We won't let you index us, but we will allow for the exchange of envoys, and the trade of information in the event of a rogue inhuman causing trouble." She didn't make an argument for why SHIELD standard policy shouldn't apply, like "We aren't some random band of superhumans. We are our own society, and we are older than yours. Your going to have to treat us like a foreign country, not citizens of your own." She didn't engage in any negotiation at all. Instead, she... killed Gonzalez under false pretenses.

Basically, the inhumans have a perfectly reasonable position. Jiaying just didn't bother with it.
Yes, she definitely should have negotiated, rather than murder him in order to start a war. Even saying "no" would have been much better. But if she wants to make a case, SHIELD has replies too (I can play SHIELD's advocate, but I refuse to play Gonzales, so let's say it's Coulson, or Hill), at least as long as SHIELD actually has the backing of the governments it had the backing of before, and can prove it (which I will assume; if SHIELD is just a rogue organization, they have no case).

SHIELD's reply:

1. Even if your community is old, that does not change the fact that your people are citizens of other countries, and live in the territory of other countries. For example, the Jewish people are also pretty old. And so are the Romani people. But they're not treated like foreign countries. Israel is, but that goes back only a few decades. Plus, not all Jews are Israelis (and not all Israelis are Jews), and as long as they live in other countries, they have to respect the local laws.
2. You keep breaking our laws. Your teleporter enters our countries illegally, without a visa, without going through customs, etc. He - under your orders - engages in the smuggling of a variety of goods (and so do others he teleports in and out), in addition to people smuggling.
3. Even Afterlife is not your territory. It's the territory of China (or some other country; that's unclear, so let's say Chine). Very few people live there. Nearly everyone here actually lives elsewhere. Also, nearly all of your people were born elsewhere, and live or lived in other societies, so this is not analogous to, say, uncontacted tribes in the Amazon (who have their territory even if other countries consider it theirs), either.
You may be a nation, but you're not a country, you don't have a country of your own, and you don't hold your own territory.
4. Additionally, you're not born with those powers, which are in fact Kree weapons of great power, at least in most cases. In other words, the people in your group deliberately incorporate what will probably be a Kree weapon of great power to themselves (they powers are sort of built-in weapon, in most cases, though though some powers are not strictly speaking weapons, and were meant to be used in combination with those that are).
Let me put it in a different way, Ms. Jiaying:
let's say that we encounter an ancient society of people living in our countries, among our civilians. Let's say that they have a complex rite of passage, which is doubtlessly important to them, as part of their identity as a group.
As it happens, this ritual involves their acquiring heavy military-grade weaponry and mastering its usage. Should we allow them to do that? Should we allow them to acquire such weaponry and mastering its usage, and then walk around and live among our civilians, while carrying those weapons around?
I don't see why we would have a moral obligation to allow such behavior. The history of religions has examples of ancient rituals that are now illegal - and properly so -, and even those rituals are not as dangerous as carrying heavy military-grade weaponry.
Moreover, we don't allow the public to acquire, say, heavy machine guns in our territory - or to go elsewhere to buy them, and then bring them to our territory. We have no obligation to make an exception if they come from this ancient community.
But let us say for some odd reason, we do allow this ancient social group to acquire the military-grade weaponry in question. Should we allow them to do that without any checks on who gets the weapons?
My point is that even if we did agree to make an exception - and it would be a really big exception. You haven't provided any good reasons to allow it; as explained an exemplified, the fact that you are an ancient society is not enough -, at the very least we have every right to:

a. Veto. Not everyone with some ancestry should be allowed to have such powerful weapons, obviously. Look at what happened with Katya, and Eva. We have a say in who goes through terrigenesis, much as we have a say in who gets to acquire an anti-tank missile, or a heavy machine gun, or hand grenades, etc.
b. Registration and permanent tracking. For obvious reasons, we have a right not to let heavily armed people walking around among our civilians, without permanent surveilance. Can you imagine if we let, say, the members of a minority religious or national group walk around carrying heavy machine guns, among our civilians? It would be nuts! In fact, even with supervision, it would be nuts!
But at the very least, we would want to have our agents follow them around at all times.

Granted, Ms. Jiaying, not all of your powers are comparable to a heavy machine gun, in terms of destructiveness. Yours isn't, for example. But on the other hand, some of your powers are a lot more destructive than such a weapon. Overall, it seems you do have more combined firepower than one such machine gun per person.

So, our governments have decided (through SHIELD, but you can appeal your case to the governments directly if you so choose) that:

A. This ritual is not allowed within the territories under their jurisdiction, without previous approval. You should not expect approval to be common, as approval for requests to carry military-grade weaponry aren't commonly approved. In other words, this ritual is not approved for all who can meet some conditions (approved but regulated). Rather, it's banned except for those we choose, like elite members of our forces.
B. Any who may undergo such ritual outside those territories in the future will not be allowed in them without previous approval.
C. In both cases A. and B., when there is approval, there will be registration, testing as explained in D, and surveilance as we see fit. Anyone who disagrees is welcome not to undergo the alien weapon-acquiring traditional ritual.
D. People who have already acquired those powers must register, give a blood sample, be photographed, register the fingerprints and other basic biometrics, and explain and show us how their powers work and what they can do. Additionally, there will be surveilance as we see fit, at least in the case of powers comparable to military grade heavy weapons - as would be the case if someone were to go around with other such weapons -, or in the case of previous use of that power to commit violent crimes.
E. Anyone who has committed violent offenses will be brought to justice. We're willing to let the goods and people smuggling pass as long as you do not engage in further offenses, but that has to stop right away.

Even though the above has already been decided and is a reasonable set of measures meant to protect our population, we are open to suggestions as to how to make the process more smooth and minimize incidents, but always keeping in mind that you're talking about a weapons-acquiring ritual, and the fact that some of you may choose not to see your powers as built-in weapons does not change the fact that, at least in nearly all cases, they are.
Still, if you have some good argument in favor of allowing the ritual to keep going as the rule not the exception, please make your case. To be clear, I'm still talking about a heavily regulated process, in which we still have veto, and in which people who want to go through the weapons-acquisition ritual have to meet very strict standards, but still not as exceptional as only allowing it for elite members of our military forces (including SHIELD).
 
Yes, she definitely should have negotiated, rather than murder him in order to start a war. Even saying "no" would have been much better. But if she wants to make a case, SHIELD has replies too (I can play SHIELD's advocate, but I refuse to play Gonzales, so let's say it's Coulson, or Hill), at least as long as SHIELD actually has the backing of the governments it had the backing of before, and can prove it (which I will assume; if SHIELD is just a rogue organization, they have no case).

Speaking from a purely logistical point of view. No organization like SHIELD can even exist without the backing of some entity. Good intentions alone will not fuel a helicarrier. I've said it before, if Coulson was spending the entire annual budget on THETA PROTOCOL he would need to get that cash from somewhere. They're not going on bottle drives. Not saying that they'll ever explain that to us, but that's the fantasy world of super heroes and villains.
 
Yes, she definitely should have negotiated, rather than murder him in order to start a war. Even saying "no" would have been much better. But if she wants to make a case, SHIELD has replies too (I can play SHIELD's advocate, but I refuse to play Gonzales, so let's say it's Coulson, or Hill), at least as long as SHIELD actually has the backing of the governments it had the backing of before, and can prove it (which I will assume; if SHIELD is just a rogue organization, they have no case).

SHIELD's reply:

[Long Reply]

Honestly, that makes a lot of sense. I will also ignore the fact that SHIELD lack the necessary authority, since you addressed that in your comment, but I have some further thoughts.

Afterlife is a stop-gap, a rite of passage for Inhumans. The more interesting area is a possible homeland that those who have passed through the mists inhabit (I wasn't imagining the implication that one exists, right?) Since they have been around so long, it could be quite feasible that they already have a homeland that they have inhabited longer than the current 'owners' of the land. The US, for example, was only beginning to be claimed by Europeans (Native American tribes didn't, I think, consider land to be 'ownable') in the 14-1500s. If the Inhumans were there first, then who does that land belong to? At that point, even if SHIELD were still authorised to act on behalf of other governments, would they have any right to stop them from doing whatever they wanted?

Also, on a more philosophical note, what does and does not count as a weapon? I, for example, studied chemistry at university to a degree that if I spent some time reading up on the specifics and could be bothered to do the research (never once doing anything illegal) I could probably create some pretty horrific weapons with over the counter materials. Hell, my biological knowledge may be approaching that necessary to create messed up diseases (it's not, I sucked at Biology, but those in my class that were good might be capable). Another person might learn a martial art to the point that they are close to being a living weapon without having to register with anyone.

I guess that would be my (Inhuman) response to SHIELD, that a well enough educated human could do the same amount of damage as even Lincoln or Skye. If they aren't on a list, why should the Inhumans be? (The sovereign nation part notwithstanding)
 
What business does Shield have in indexing the Inhumans? Afterlife is practically its own country almost.
 
Honestly, that makes a lot of sense. I will also ignore the fact that SHIELD lack the necessary authority, since you addressed that in your comment, but I have some further thoughts.

Afterlife is a stop-gap, a rite of passage for Inhumans. The more interesting area is a possible homeland that those who have passed through the mists inhabit (I wasn't imagining the implication that one exists, right?) Since they have been around so long, it could be quite feasible that they already have a homeland that they have inhabited longer than the current 'owners' of the land. The US, for example, was only beginning to be claimed by Europeans (Native American tribes didn't, I think, consider land to be 'ownable') in the 14-1500s. If the Inhumans were there first, then who does that land belong to? At that point, even if SHIELD were still authorised to act on behalf of other governments, would they have any right to stop them from doing whatever they wanted?

Also, on a more philosophical note, what does and does not count as a weapon? I, for example, studied chemistry at university to a degree that if I spent some time reading up on the specifics and could be bothered to do the research (never once doing anything illegal) I could probably create some pretty horrific weapons with over the counter materials. Hell, my biological knowledge may be approaching that necessary to create messed up diseases (it's not, I sucked at Biology, but those in my class that were good might be capable). Another person might learn a martial art to the point that they are close to being a living weapon without having to register with anyone.

I guess that would be my (Inhuman) response to SHIELD, that a well enough educated human could do the same amount of damage as even Lincoln or Skye. If they aren't on a list, why should the Inhumans be? (The sovereign nation part notwithstanding)

A lot of truth in what you're saying, except that if anyone, educated or not, buys ammonium nitrate in bulk. Or if they don't own a farm and they try to buy it, they will be on a list.
 
Yes, she definitely should have negotiated, rather than murder him in order to start a war. Even saying "no" would have been much better. But if she wants to make a case, SHIELD has replies too (I can play SHIELD's advocate, but I refuse to play Gonzales, so let's say it's Coulson, or Hill), at least as long as SHIELD actually has the backing of the governments it had the backing of before, and can prove it (which I will assume; if SHIELD is just a rogue organization, they have no case).

SHIELD's reply:

1. Even if your community is old, that does not change the fact that your people are citizens of other countries, and live in the territory of other countries. For example, the Jewish people are also pretty old. And so are the Romani people. But they're not treated like foreign countries. Israel is, but that goes back only a few decades. Plus, not all Jews are Israelis (and not all Israelis are Jews), and as long as they live in other countries, they have to respect the local laws.
2. You keep breaking our laws. Your teleporter enters our countries illegally, without a visa, without going through customs, etc. He - under your orders - engages in the smuggling of a variety of goods (and so do others he teleports in and out), in addition to people smuggling.
3. Even Afterlife is not your territory. It's the territory of China (or some other country; that's unclear, so let's say Chine). Very few people live there. Nearly everyone here actually lives elsewhere. Also, nearly all of your people were born elsewhere, and live or lived in other societies, so this is not analogous to, say, uncontacted tribes in the Amazon (who have their territory even if other countries consider it theirs), either.
You may be a nation, but you're not a country, you don't have a country of your own, and you don't hold your own territory.
4. Additionally, you're not born with those powers, which are in fact Kree weapons of great power, at least in most cases. In other words, the people in your group deliberately incorporate what will probably be a Kree weapon of great power to themselves (they powers are sort of built-in weapon, in most cases, though though some powers are not strictly speaking weapons, and were meant to be used in combination with those that are).
Let me put it in a different way, Ms. Jiaying:
let's say that we encounter an ancient society of people living in our countries, among our civilians. Let's say that they have a complex rite of passage, which is doubtlessly important to them, as part of their identity as a group.
As it happens, this ritual involves their acquiring heavy military-grade weaponry and mastering its usage. Should we allow them to do that? Should we allow them to acquire such weaponry and mastering its usage, and then walk around and live among our civilians, while carrying those weapons around?
I don't see why we would have a moral obligation to allow such behavior. The history of religions has examples of ancient rituals that are now illegal - and properly so -, and even those rituals are not as dangerous as carrying heavy military-grade weaponry.
Moreover, we don't allow the public to acquire, say, heavy machine guns in our territory - or to go elsewhere to buy them, and then bring them to our territory. We have no obligation to make an exception if they come from this ancient community.
But let us say for some odd reason, we do allow this ancient social group to acquire the military-grade weaponry in question. Should we allow them to do that without any checks on who gets the weapons?
My point is that even if we did agree to make an exception - and it would be a really big exception. You haven't provided any good reasons to allow it; as explained an exemplified, the fact that you are an ancient society is not enough -, at the very least we have every right to:

a. Veto. Not everyone with some ancestry should be allowed to have such powerful weapons, obviously. Look at what happened with Katya, and Eva. We have a say in who goes through terrigenesis, much as we have a say in who gets to acquire an anti-tank missile, or a heavy machine gun, or hand grenades, etc.
b. Registration and permanent tracking. For obvious reasons, we have a right not to let heavily armed people walking around among our civilians, without permanent surveilance. Can you imagine if we let, say, the members of a minority religious or national group walk around carrying heavy machine guns, among our civilians? It would be nuts! In fact, even with supervision, it would be nuts!
But at the very least, we would want to have our agents follow them around at all times.

Granted, Ms. Jiaying, not all of your powers are comparable to a heavy machine gun, in terms of destructiveness. Yours isn't, for example. But on the other hand, some of your powers are a lot more destructive than such a weapon. Overall, it seems you do have more combined firepower than one such machine gun per person.

So, our governments have decided (through SHIELD, but you can appeal your case to the governments directly if you so choose) that:

A. This ritual is not allowed within the territories under their jurisdiction, without previous approval. You should not expect approval to be common, as approval for requests to carry military-grade weaponry aren't commonly approved. In other words, this ritual is not approved for all who can meet some conditions (approved but regulated). Rather, it's banned except for those we choose, like elite members of our forces.
B. Any who may undergo such ritual outside those territories in the future will not be allowed in them without previous approval.
C. In both cases A. and B., when there is approval, there will be registration, testing as explained in D, and surveilance as we see fit. Anyone who disagrees is welcome not to undergo the alien weapon-acquiring traditional ritual.
D. People who have already acquired those powers must register, give a blood sample, be photographed, register the fingerprints and other basic biometrics, and explain and show us how their powers work and what they can do. Additionally, there will be surveilance as we see fit, at least in the case of powers comparable to military grade heavy weapons - as would be the case if someone were to go around with other such weapons -, or in the case of previous use of that power to commit violent crimes.
E. Anyone who has committed violent offenses will be brought to justice. We're willing to let the goods and people smuggling pass as long as you do not engage in further offenses, but that has to stop right away.

Even though the above has already been decided and is a reasonable set of measures meant to protect our population, we are open to suggestions as to how to make the process more smooth and minimize incidents, but always keeping in mind that you're talking about a weapons-acquiring ritual, and the fact that some of you may choose not to see your powers as built-in weapons does not change the fact that, at least in nearly all cases, they are.
Still, if you have some good argument in favor of allowing the ritual to keep going as the rule not the exception, please make your case. To be clear, I'm still talking about a heavily regulated process, in which we still have veto, and in which people who want to go through the weapons-acquisition ritual have to meet very strict standards, but still not as exceptional as only allowing it for elite members of our military forces (including SHIELD).

saying 'let' presumes shield can some how stop them. Gonales had a good argument, sometimes good people get powers sometimes bad people get powers but he over extended his hand with, 'we want to put each one of you on a list as if we could, and police you' where he should have followed up with one of your people teleported on to one of our secure facilities. We feel threatened by this, should we, then try to establish common interests, is there any bad people out there you know of who got powers. shields only card is the inhumans desire for secrecy, we will respect your traditions but..... Coulsons initial assessment of conducting a fact finding mission would have been the smart move, what happen was decision by compromise between two positions, fact finding mission or attack.
 
Funny thing is there wouldn't be a debate if the shield vs shield conflict wasn't dropped and it was nushield that was handling the situation instead of trushield.
But they wanted that twist. :/
 
Funny thing is there wouldn't be a debate if the shield vs shield conflict wasn't dropped and it was nushield that was handling the situation instead of trushield.
But they wanted that twist. :/


if they had a few more episodes they could have kept the split going, maybe fitz engineering the hydra tracking device to work and both shields turning up on the door step of after life. teese out different approaches. yeah think they are going to have to make the seasons longer.
 
WhiteWalker said:
Speaking from a purely logistical point of view. No organization like SHIELD can even exist without the backing of some entity. Good intentions alone will not fuel a helicarrier. I've said it before, if Coulson was spending the entire annual budget on THETA PROTOCOL he would need to get that cash from somewhere. They're not going on bottle drives. Not saying that they'll ever explain that to us, but that's the fantasy world of super heroes and villains.
Hydra would get the cash from various criminal activities, I suppose, but it's clear that SHIELD has government support, and it seems to me it should be clear to Jiaying too.
For example, SHIELD's quinjets took off from the US and went all the way to Afterlife, flying unopposed through (at least) American and Chinese airspace, and without cloaking.
Also, SHIELD launched a bombing raid from their aircraft carrier and took out a Hydra base.
Actions like that require government support.
 
Personally, I think the seasons might still be a bit too long. The Nu-SHIELD storyline was little more than a stall tactic, while the rest of the Marvel Universe will be doing a Civil War next year. I would have preferred it if they had figured out a way to do this season WITHOUT Nu-SHIELD, and then have the big split leading into Civil War (with the difference in teams being that they fall on each side of the movie issue).
 
I could use a little less episodes. I loved that Agent Carter was only 8, and Daredevil being on netflix only need 13.
 
Personally, I think the seasons might still be a bit too long. The Nu-SHIELD storyline was little more than a stall tactic, while the rest of the Marvel Universe will be doing a Civil War next year. I would have preferred it if they had figured out a way to do this season WITHOUT Nu-SHIELD, and then have the big split leading into Civil War (with the difference in teams being that they fall on each side of the movie issue).

'the cards on the table' scene was a bit of a tone killer for me, though like the idea of nushield, could imagine an organization like that after finding out it had been infiltrated for decades fracturing into different groups on lines of trust and differing methodologies. Gonzales had some interesting lines when he wasn't sounding like a nazi. but if they weren't prepared to keep the nushield trushield split going up to civil war then yeah would question the value of doing it at all, though admittedly i did enjoy some of the points in this story, but not its conclusion .
 
Seb said:
Afterlife is a stop-gap, a rite of passage for Inhumans. The more interesting area is a possible homeland that those who have passed through the mists inhabit (I wasn't imagining the implication that one exists, right?) Since they have been around so long, it could be quite feasible that they already have a homeland that they have inhabited longer than the current 'owners' of the land. The US, for example, was only beginning to be claimed by Europeans (Native American tribes didn't, I think, consider land to be 'ownable') in the 14-1500s. If the Inhumans were there first, then who does that land belong to? At that point, even if SHIELD were still authorised to act on behalf of other governments, would they have any right to stop them from doing whatever they wanted?
Roughly, I would say the land would belong to those born there and also those allowed by those people, according to some rules. That's a rough approximation, though, not a general theory about who owns which land. In practice, would make an assessment on a case-by-case basis depending on the info available (there is the question of "born where?" e.g., what counts as the relevant territory, and a number of other difficult issues).

With regard to lands inhabited by their ancestors but which inhuman communities have not inhabited for a long time, I don't think they have a good claim.
On the other hand, if they do have a homeland like that - i.e., one that their communities have inhabited continuously for a long time ("long" is fuzzy, but roughly speaking), I would say that that is their territory, and SHIELD shouldn't be indexing them as long as they remain there.
But I'm not sure there is support for that on the show, though I concede I may have missed something. On that note, you ask "I wasn't imagining the implication that one exists, right?". I wasn't implying that, but if you're talking about an implication on the show, in that case, I think that would be both interesting and relevant to the matter at hand, but I seem to have missed it. What do you have in mind?

Seb said:
Also, on a more philosophical note, what does and does not count as a weapon? I, for example, studied chemistry at university to a degree that if I spent some time reading up on the specifics and could be bothered to do the research (never once doing anything illegal) I could probably create some pretty horrific weapons with over the counter materials. Hell, my biological knowledge may be approaching that necessary to create messed up diseases (it's not, I sucked at Biology, but those in my class that were good might be capable). Another person might learn a martial art to the point that they are close to being a living weapon without having to register with anyone.
I guess that would be my (Inhuman) response to SHIELD, that a well enough educated human could do the same amount of damage as even Lincoln or Skye. If they aren't on a list, why should the Inhumans be? (The sovereign nation part notwithstanding)
That's an interesting philosophical question (i.e., what's a weapon?), but I don't think they need to address that in this case,
For example, SHIELD might reply:
There are things, like C4, or rockets capable of reaching orbit or any part of the planet, enriched uranium - and a long list - that have both military and civilian usages.
But we - our governments, that is - have the authority to strictly regulate the possession and use of such things, given the danger they pose to the public if they fall into the wrong hands.
For example, if a person wants to buy C4, they need to pass legitimate background tests. And if they buy large quantities - say, for mining operations -, they're still not allowed to take the C4 anywhere they want and whenever they want - let alone unsupervised.
Instead, they must keep it in some secure facilities, that meet certain standards. The personnel with access to it also has to pass a number of tests. And so on.
So, if a person wants to engage in a ritual that may well give her a more destructive power than, say, carrying a suitcase full of C4 with them all the time, they would have to pass a number of background checks - including psychological tests.
After they pass the tests, we would need to study what they can do in order to restrict their movements in our country - if needed, and as needed.
For example, if a person goes through terrigenesis and gets the power you (i.e., Ms. Jiaying) have, then once we have checked that there is no other effect, no further restriction is needed. Still, given that we still don't understand much about these powers (and whether they'll change=, the person would have to meet with our agents regularly, for some basic assessment, but other than that, there would be no restrictions - of course, as long as they meet the general conditions apply to people who want to enter our countries.
On the other hand, if the person has a power that allows them to cause as much destruction as a machine gun, then much more strict rules are applied. At least, we would want to track them at all times - with a tracking device -, regularly meet with them to test that they're psychologically fit to go around with that kind of capability, and definitely they wouldn't be allowed in sensitive places, like the vicinity of strategic government or military facilities.
Moreover, if they have a power that is much more destructive than that - like your daughter's -, we would need them to remain in a place separated from the general population, at least unless we have specific reasons to allow otherwise (e.g., so that she fights against bad people with powers, she's one of our agents, etc.). We would need constant monitoring too. As long as they live in the countryside in open areas, there should be no problem, but we need to monitor that.
Granted, some of your people may feel that this is too much of a restriction. But they don't need to go through terrigenesis - at least, in nearly all cases, that's a choice -, and in any event, we do have the right (and the duty) to impose restrictions to the possession of things capable of much or even mass destruction.

Yes, granted, a person trained in martial arts can do a lot of damage too. But it's not on the same scale. For example, a group of, say, a dozen civilians in reasonably good health, or a couple of police officers - with their guns -, would probably be able to stop a martial artist trying to wreak havoc. But even much larger forces would be at serious risk if they had to fight someone with the powers of Lincoln or Skye.
Moreover, someone with that kind of powers can take down a building - or worse - before anyone can react, and - if no one is tracking them -, they'll probably be able to bring down many buildings before the authorities can even figure out who the attacker is, and where the fire is coming from.
So, it's not the same scale of threats.
Granted, some people in your community have powers that, while capable of some destruction, are capable of much less destruction than that. We're not planning to restrict their movements in our countries to the same extent as in the case of those with much greater destructive power.
However, we don't know in advance (i.e., before terrigenesis) who will get what power, so testing is needed in order to find out what level of surveillance and - if needed - restriction of movements while in our countries we need to apply.
With regard to the problem of biological weapons, if we were to concede your point on the basis that a well enough educated human could do the same amount of damage as even Lincoln or Skye, on the same basis we should scrap our laws banning or restricting access to C4, rockets, uranium, and even machine guns or hand grenades - since Lincoln or Skye can do more damage than that.
However, that would clearly result in massive casualties, given all of the bad people who want to, well, cause mass casualties among civilians.
That said, I will grant you that our laws are imperfect and there are loopholes that might allow some people with the right knowledge and resources to make nasty biological weapons. However, let me point out two things:
1. Making and/or having those weapons - and not the just using them - is banned and for good reasons, even if some information that a smart person might be able to use to figure out how to make them is not. If some of those weapons can be made with publicly available things, that's a problem, and we would have to assess which of those things to ban or restrict depending on factors such as threat level. But the fact that our laws are imperfect and have missed some stuff does not make the laws that do ban or strictly regulate many dangerous things, unjustified, as per the examples above.
2. It's actually difficult to get the combination of knowledge and resources make such weapons. Granted, Hydra has managed to do that. But there are a number of terrorist organizations who would very much like to carry out devastating biological attacks against our civilians, but they haven't managed to do so even once. If it were even moderately easy to make those weapons and cause such destruction, we would see that happening often. We don't. If that began to happen or we saw a significant risk, we would need to update our laws, restricting some freedoms to some extent in order to protect the public. Sometimes, it's a difficult call. But bans or strict restrictions on things like enriched uranium, C4, rockets or machine guns aren't among those difficult calls. And given the kind of powers terrigenesis can bestow, terrigenesis and the resulting powers - considering the different degrees, as mentioned above - isn't among those difficult calls, either.
 
Its perfectly reasonable that the inhumans would not want to be indexed. They have a reasonable position about how secrecy is a good thing, and that they don't trust SHIELD.

The problem is that Jiaying didn't even try to negotiate over the matter. She didn't reject the initial proposal and then suggest a counter-proposal, like "We won't let you index us, but we will allow for the exchange of envoys, and the trade of information in the event of a rogue inhuman causing trouble." She didn't make an argument for why SHIELD standard policy shouldn't apply, like "We aren't some random band of superhumans. We are our own society, and we are older than yours. Your going to have to treat us like a foreign country, not citizens of your own." She didn't engage in any negotiation at all. Instead, she... killed Gonzalez under false pretenses.

Basically, the inhumans have a perfectly reasonable position. Jiaying just didn't bother with it.
This what my thoughts were right after the episode. Jiaying went to the extreme (based on her previous experiences) immediately when she could have chosen a more moderate approach.
 
This what my thoughts were right after the episode. Jiaying went to the extreme (based on her previous experiences) immediately when she could have chosen a more moderate approach.



They could either agree to INDEXING or not ,where was the middle ground to be had ?

And SHIELD went in with the policy that they wanted INDEXING as a minimum.
 
Roughly, I would say the land would belong to those born there and also those allowed by those people, according to some rules. That's a rough approximation, though, not a general theory about who owns which land. In practice, would make an assessment on a case-by-case basis depending on the info available (there is the question of "born where?" e.g., what counts as the relevant territory, and a number of other difficult issues).

With regard to lands inhabited by their ancestors but which inhuman communities have not inhabited for a long time, I don't think they have a good claim.
On the other hand, if they do have a homeland like that - i.e., one that their communities have inhabited continuously for a long time ("long" is fuzzy, but roughly speaking), I would say that that is their territory, and SHIELD shouldn't be indexing them as long as they remain there.
But I'm not sure there is support for that on the show, though I concede I may have missed something. On that note, you ask "I wasn't imagining the implication that one exists, right?". I wasn't implying that, but if you're talking about an implication on the show, in that case, I think that would be both interesting and relevant to the matter at hand, but I seem to have missed it. What do you have in mind?


That's an interesting philosophical question (i.e., what's a weapon?), but I don't think they need to address that in this case,
For example, SHIELD might reply:
There are things, like C4, or rockets capable of reaching orbit or any part of the planet, enriched uranium - and a long list - that have both military and civilian usages.
But we - our governments, that is - have the authority to strictly regulate the possession and use of such things, given the danger they pose to the public if they fall into the wrong hands.
For example, if a person wants to buy C4, they need to pass legitimate background tests. And if they buy large quantities - say, for mining operations -, they're still not allowed to take the C4 anywhere they want and whenever they want - let alone unsupervised.
Instead, they must keep it in some secure facilities, that meet certain standards. The personnel with access to it also has to pass a number of tests. And so on.
So, if a person wants to engage in a ritual that may well give her a more destructive power than, say, carrying a suitcase full of C4 with them all the time, they would have to pass a number of background checks - including psychological tests.
After they pass the tests, we would need to study what they can do in order to restrict their movements in our country - if needed, and as needed.
For example, if a person goes through terrigenesis and gets the power you (i.e., Ms. Jiaying) have, then once we have checked that there is no other effect, no further restriction is needed. Still, given that we still don't understand much about these powers (and whether they'll change=, the person would have to meet with our agents regularly, for some basic assessment, but other than that, there would be no restrictions - of course, as long as they meet the general conditions apply to people who want to enter our countries.
On the other hand, if the person has a power that allows them to cause as much destruction as a machine gun, then much more strict rules are applied. At least, we would want to track them at all times - with a tracking device -, regularly meet with them to test that they're psychologically fit to go around with that kind of capability, and definitely they wouldn't be allowed in sensitive places, like the vicinity of strategic government or military facilities.
Moreover, if they have a power that is much more destructive than that - like your daughter's -, we would need them to remain in a place separated from the general population, at least unless we have specific reasons to allow otherwise (e.g., so that she fights against bad people with powers, she's one of our agents, etc.). We would need constant monitoring too. As long as they live in the countryside in open areas, there should be no problem, but we need to monitor that.
Granted, some of your people may feel that this is too much of a restriction. But they don't need to go through terrigenesis - at least, in nearly all cases, that's a choice -, and in any event, we do have the right (and the duty) to impose restrictions to the possession of things capable of much or even mass destruction.

Yes, granted, a person trained in martial arts can do a lot of damage too. But it's not on the same scale. For example, a group of, say, a dozen civilians in reasonably good health, or a couple of police officers - with their guns -, would probably be able to stop a martial artist trying to wreak havoc. But even much larger forces would be at serious risk if they had to fight someone with the powers of Lincoln or Skye.
Moreover, someone with that kind of powers can take down a building - or worse - before anyone can react, and - if no one is tracking them -, they'll probably be able to bring down many buildings before the authorities can even figure out who the attacker is, and where the fire is coming from.
So, it's not the same scale of threats.
Granted, some people in your community have powers that, while capable of some destruction, are capable of much less destruction than that. We're not planning to restrict their movements in our countries to the same extent as in the case of those with much greater destructive power.
However, we don't know in advance (i.e., before terrigenesis) who will get what power, so testing is needed in order to find out what level of surveillance and - if needed - restriction of movements while in our countries we need to apply.
With regard to the problem of biological weapons, if we were to concede your point on the basis that a well enough educated human could do the same amount of damage as even Lincoln or Skye, on the same basis we should scrap our laws banning or restricting access to C4, rockets, uranium, and even machine guns or hand grenades - since Lincoln or Skye can do more damage than that.
However, that would clearly result in massive casualties, given all of the bad people who want to, well, cause mass casualties among civilians.
That said, I will grant you that our laws are imperfect and there are loopholes that might allow some people with the right knowledge and resources to make nasty biological weapons. However, let me point out two things:
1. Making and/or having those weapons - and not the just using them - is banned and for good reasons, even if some information that a smart person might be able to use to figure out how to make them is not. If some of those weapons can be made with publicly available things, that's a problem, and we would have to assess which of those things to ban or restrict depending on factors such as threat level. But the fact that our laws are imperfect and have missed some stuff does not make the laws that do ban or strictly regulate many dangerous things, unjustified, as per the examples above.
2. It's actually difficult to get the combination of knowledge and resources make such weapons. Granted, Hydra has managed to do that. But there are a number of terrorist organizations who would very much like to carry out devastating biological attacks against our civilians, but they haven't managed to do so even once. If it were even moderately easy to make those weapons and cause such destruction, we would see that happening often. We don't. If that began to happen or we saw a significant risk, we would need to update our laws, restricting some freedoms to some extent in order to protect the public. Sometimes, it's a difficult call. But bans or strict restrictions on things like enriched uranium, C4, rockets or machine guns aren't among those difficult calls. And given the kind of powers terrigenesis can bestow, terrigenesis and the resulting powers - considering the different degrees, as mentioned above - isn't among those difficult calls, either.

Inhuman Response:

On the final couple of points, it's not just over the counter stuff that can be incredibly destructive, it's any organic material. TNT and RDX* are made of Hydrogen, Carbon, Nitrogen and Oxygen. Access to those is impossible to regulate, unless a government feels like restricting access to air, water and plants; and the the chemical reactions required to make them can be done with classroom chemistry equipment that could be made by a relatively skilled glass blower with pretty limited resources.

As for the biological weapons, levels of radicalism are inversely proportional to intelligence and education, so very few people with the intellect and knowledge to manipulate bacteria and viruses are likely to cooperate with a terrorist organisation. Instead they are recruited by governments and result in atrocities around the world, because apparently your governments, Agent Gonzales, have as little restraint as you believe we Inhumans do.

As for psychological testing, your whole organisation was rife with terrorists and fascists that your people could not discern and have spent decades hunting my people in an effort to torture and kill us in the name of science. What possible reason do we have to trust your judgement as to our sanity or to have faith that your intentions are truly virtuous. Hydra is clearly alive and well, a fact that poor Lincoln's abduction shows, and others of our people have been similarly hurt. And you want us to have trackers placed on us, to make it easier for us to be found and murdered?

You claim to be charged with protecting your people, well I am charged with protecting mine, and I will not allow a glorified police force rife with dirty cops near my people.

*the main component of C4 according to wikipedia

N.B. I don't know how much I'm stretching Jiaying's knowledge of the fall of SHIELD or how much was released by Black Widow or the governments involved. Also, I went back to check the implication that there was somewhere other than Afterlife that the Inhumans lived, and I think I was jumping to conclusions.
 
This what my thoughts were right after the episode. Jiaying went to the extreme (based on her previous experiences) immediately when she could have chosen a more moderate approach.

Essentially, SHIELD are cops, and Jiaying has only ever met corrupt cops. It's the same as in any area with a high rate of police corruption, people learn to behave as though every cop is dirty, because most of the time they are. This makes it very hard for an honest cop to get believed and it means that people start to shoot first, ask questions later.

Basically, this isn't SHIELD or Jiaying's fault, it's Hydra's tarnishing of SHIELD's reputation to the point that Jiaying (and others in the past) expect SHIELD to come in guns blazing at some point.

In Jiaying's head, thanks to Hydra, war wasn't something she was causing, war was a forgone conclusion. To her the only choice was who would fire the first shot.
 
I think they are incredibly similar. They were both hurt horribly by evil people for what they are (Jiaying for being Inhuman, Magneto for being Jewish). Jiaying has Magneto's gut fear->anger response that led to Magneto wanting to crush humanity, though it is even more pronounced for Jiaying because for Magneto his history is informing his view of all people, while for Jiaying Hydra came for her, then it was revealed that Hydra had been hiding within SHIELD, then SHIELD came to her door, where her people and her daughter are, in gunships. And when she asks her husband if she can trust SHIELD, he tells her that most of them are scum, but Coulson at least is honest; however, it isn't Coulson that comes to her door.

At the end of the day, I think that Jiaying sees herself the same way that Han Solo sees himself at the beginning of A New Hope (the correct version): She shot first, because she had no doubt that Greedo (SHIELD) were about to try the same.

Was she right? No, we know that Coulson was trying to prevent a war, and that there is no Hydra left in SHIELD (probably). But she doesn't know that, and she has no reason to believe that Hydra has really been exorcised from SHIELD. She also knows that her people won't fight back until provoked, and she's scared that if they wait that long, they would be done for (which Gonzales' earlier comment about wiping them off the map seems to support, given our superior information).

My question is, if you have her information (SHIELD are untrustworthy, Coulson is the only one that tells the truth) and her experience (she's only seen SHIELD through the experience of Hydra), what course of action would be more effective to protect her people, assuming you, as she seems to, believe that the ends justify the means.

Gonzales also sent a team to kill her daughter only a couple of weeks before. For that alone i'd have killed him.
 
Essentially, SHIELD are cops, and Jiaying has only ever met corrupt cops. It's the same as in any area with a high rate of police corruption, people learn to behave as though every cop is dirty, because most of the time they are. This makes it very hard for an honest cop to get believed and it means that people start to shoot first, ask questions later.

Basically, this isn't SHIELD or Jiaying's fault, it's Hydra's tarnishing of SHIELD's reputation to the point that Jiaying (and others in the past) expect SHIELD to come in guns blazing at some point.

In Jiaying's head, thanks to Hydra, war wasn't something she was causing, war was a forgone conclusion. To her the only choice was who would fire the first shot.

This is pretty much what I thought too. Its pretty much because of Hydra actions that Jiaying is so quick to enter war. So from her perspective she does have a point. Of course there was also a few nuSHIELD agents too that wanted to blow up the inhuman's hide out but she doesn't know that.

I also agree with what metaphysician said Jiaying did not even try to settle things. She did not come up with any counter arguments she just went in for the attack. She kind of is manipulating her people and Skye to join a war that they most likely want to be apart of. If she does lose this war its going to be her fault and no one else's. She does have every right to fear Hydra and SHIELD she has only see bad from them, but her actions were based on purely on emotions and not on logic.
 
This is pretty much what I thought too. Its pretty much because of Hydra actions that Jiaying is so quick to enter war. So from her perspective she does have a point. Of course there was also a few nuSHIELD agents too that wanted to blow up the inhuman's hide out but she doesn't know that.

I also agree with what metaphysician said Jiaying did not even try to settle things. She did not come up with any counter arguments she just went in for the attack. She kind of is manipulating her people and Skye to join a war that they most likely want to be apart of. If she does lose this war its going to be her fault and no one else's. She does have every right to fear Hydra and SHIELD she has only see bad from them, but her actions were based on purely on emotions and not on logic.[/QUOTE]


SHIELD are acting out of fear of the unknown as well .Their first reaction was to send bombers.
 
This is pretty much what I thought too. Its pretty much because of Hydra actions that Jiaying is so quick to enter war. So from her perspective she does have a point. Of course there was also a few nuSHIELD agents too that wanted to blow up the inhuman's hide out but she doesn't know that.

I also agree with what metaphysician said Jiaying did not even try to settle things. She did not come up with any counter arguments she just went in for the attack. She kind of is manipulating her people and Skye to join a war that they most likely want to be apart of. If she does lose this war its going to be her fault and no one else's. She does have every right to fear Hydra and SHIELD she has only see bad from them, but her actions were based on purely on emotions and not on logic.[/QUOTE]


SHIELD are acting out of fear of the unknown as well .Their first reaction was to send bombers.

Yeah, I totally agree that was totally wrong too. I think both sides are jumping the gun. On SHIELD's side or at least nuSHIELD the have only seen people with power do bad things while Jiaying has only seen SHIELD and Hydra do bad things so both halves do have every right to fear the other. But from the looks of it Gonzales did look like he was being genuine with being peaceful. Of course I also did not trust him and I thought out of the two he would of been the first to attack but obviously that was not the case.
Look all that I know from this whole mess is that it totally sucks to be Skye right now.:(
 
Inhuman Response:

On the final couple of points, it's not just over the counter stuff that can be incredibly destructive, it's any organic material. TNT and RDX* are made of Hydrogen, Carbon, Nitrogen and Oxygen. Access to those is impossible to regulate, unless a government feels like restricting access to air, water and plants; and the the chemical reactions required to make them can be done with classroom chemistry equipment that could be made by a relatively skilled glass blower with pretty limited resources.

Hydrogen, Carbon, Nitrogen and Oxygen are not organic material.
 

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