Guess What’s Coming to Dinner?

 

Well, well, well. It looks like some of the Cylons have finally realised that they actually don’t have a plan and so, sick of the inaction, have decided to team up with the humans against the other Cylons. As both sides are so suspicious that they turn regularly turn against their own kind, it seems unlikely that this pact could hold out longer than an episode. Especially if Saul ‘I killed my wife for betraying me’ Tigh has anything to do with it.

I must say, for a machine race, they don’t seem to be able to work together very well. Even when there’s only three Cylons who have decided to work with the humans, they can’t agree on a plan. Surely one of the advantages of an artificial race would be a greater degree of co-operation and efficiency, rather than intractable arguments.

On the Galactica, plans are being made to destroy the resurrection hub with the rebel baseship. As the plan looks sound and as the Hybrid in the newly acquired Baseship was unplugged to take it back to the fleet, Laura Roslin decides that it would be in the best interests of the plot to plug it back in.

The visions seem to exist only to extend the plot too. Starbuck’s vision only made sense after she had found the baseship. The vision in the opera house has only led to bad things so far. What’s the point of a useless inexplicable vision? I feel like visions should be a good thing.

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