What I loved about the first season was the emphasis on the physical differences between factions. It really enforced this feeling of humanity changing and being in the future.
Another very cool feature that is often overlooked is the language spoken by Belters. Not the Belter Creole, although that was very well done, but the way the characters would code-switch depending on who they were talking too. Naomi in particular: she would use full Belter vocabulary and accent when talking to Belters, then switch to a completely different accent and standard English when talking to her crewmates and other non-Belters. Drummer does the same thing, although hers is not as pronounced. From what I've read, it was Dominique Tipper (who played Naomi in the series) who clued in the showrunners to this: she grew up in London in a Caribbean community and grew up doing exactly this kind of language shift between those inside and outside of her neighborhood.
@@TechBearSeattleI hadn’t seen her in anything else before, but as soon as Dominique opened her mouth I was like ‘oh yep, definitely a Londoner! Game recognises game.’
i agree, but i do get it. i think they started out by casting a bunch of really tall thin people for the belters, but then soon realized they had to actually cast people who could act. it did confuse the fk out of me initially though bc naomi looked so different from the other belters.
had to cut some things to focus on other story aspects. but the affect of gravity on the different people played a part all the way till the final season. Namoi couldnt survive on the planet (or earth) or Drapers higher resistance to G effects cause of her training.
Low gravity does not affect all people equally and things like genetic disposition as well as access to medicine and ton of other factors play into how much a person is affected.
"No?, you talk to me through a piece of glass. you see my body which can no longer survive on the very planet that bore my great grandmother" This was the piece dialogue that won me over to watch the entire show. SO WELL WRITTEN!
Yes and its well representeded because its actually a real issue. People that return to Earth from few months in space have to be carried arround as they cant walk and need time for their bodies to re-ajust to the gravity. Think what it will be for someone born on Mars where the grav is 2.5 less. Let alone born on an astreroid or in space. Space colonization is going to be really tugh and almost impossible for people born outside of Earth to actully visit it.
@@halseyactual1732 Also Avasarala talking about a mother missing her son and the Belter replying “mother understands we all have our duty.” Which relates to her losing her son in the line of duty, part of the reason why she had that reaction to his comment I think.
You can also see that Liberty Island is significantly below sea level to the point that it needs sea walls. About half the statue’s pedestal is below the water line.
In another video about the show a real astronaut personally vouched for the validity of gravity torture due to having to reacclimate to Earth gravity after an extended period of time on the ISS.
You know, when I was watching the show for the first time, I got the impression that the OPA was some radical terrorist organization that didn't deserve any legitimacy. Obviously things developed to be more nuanced than that, but I find it interesting that that's how Avasarala views things at the start of the show.
In a supplementary video they said that the OPA had two factions kinda like the IRA, with Fred Anderson trying to do things legit like Gerry Adams and Sinn Fein while Anderson Dawes was the bomb-throwing type.
@@blackjac5000 A lot more than two factions, and Dawes was somewhere in the middle of the radicalism scale. Didn't S6 hint at Inaros having him killed offscreen for being too soft?
@@xcfjdyrkdtulkgfilhu - In the books, Dawes is not killed and plays a major role in book 6, Babylon's Ashes. Problem was that, by the time they were filming that series, the actor who appeared in season 1 was no longer available due to scheduling issues. So rather than bring someone else in, they eliminated the character.
This show is easily the best sci-fi show to ever grace my eyes. I love this show and the people who put all of their time and effort into this show, I appreciate them for all they have accomplished. Perhaps a big screen finish. Like Serenity did for Firefly.
These five minutes are the perfect primer for the duality of one of the most well written and complex female figures in science fiction history. Avasarala the great loving mother of those she's sworn to protect. And Avasarala the cold blooded warrior who will protect what she cares for no matter the cost
It would be good if they did. Everyone is grey on the show. No black hats / white hats. Except maybe Shed Garvey. But he doesn’t have a head to wear that hat now poor bugger
@@PHDiaz-vv7yo Nicely put. Poor old Shed, he deserved a longer stint than 3 and a half episodes. We can all blame whoever it was playing with Ty & Co on the role playing game and decided there Shed was to meet his maker. That was then transferred into the books. Well that's how I understand it.
TBH, I never liked the character. I'm not 100% sure if its the performance by the actress or the character as written who wanders about insulting, berating and mocking people with no consequences. The entire setting has this total loyalty and admiration for her that seemed completely unearned while she is busy bullying every underling and random passer-by. It always broke immersion for me because it was so incredibly unbelievable that in a high stakes contest someone wouldn't have buried her already - politically or literally.
Love the idea of humanity eventually evolving into different variations. We might eventually have some Belters of our own, let’s hope that they are treated better than this
This belters are basically slaves, in real world their existence is very unlikely, more and more slavery become obsolete, in the future even packing things would be automated, sure we would use drones instead of belters to mining asteroids
I wouldn't call it evolution per say, it's more just body degrading under conditions it was never meant to experience. In low gravity your muscels star to wither away because they aren't under so much strain and even the hearth gets weaker. It's actually one of the reasons that long term stay in space is currently impossible. The longest continuous time in space today is 437 days and the kozmonaut who holds the record was already all manner of fucked up when he returned.
I found this scene very revealing of how fucked up studio ethics are... You see in the book Avasarala is as tough as it get but she expresses it by cussing like there is no tomorrow... but here's the dilemma, you can't have real bad cussing on a prime time show now can you I mean what the parents and the critics think ? So quick replace the cussing by torture because we all know torture is less objectional than cussing right ? It completely distorts how she and her morals are portraid in the book
Certainly Inaros or one linked to him. Dawes was not involved in the asteroid strike, nor was Mao. The composites he transported were used to coat the rocks released at Earth by the Free Navy.
@@brianbaker2884 its never explicitly stated but its an inference. Also the character wasn't in the books - he was introduced by the writers to hint at what was to come. A little bit that we might forget until the pieces being to fall together.
@@briantien7146 On one of the earlier Ty & That Guy episodes, Wes asked Ty Franck about this particular story arc. He ummmed and arrrrr'd for a while and appeared that he couldn't remember or if there was actually a link at all between these stealth composites and Inaros or not. In the end Ty went along with Wes' assumption that this very early scene was a tie in to what would become the Inaros faction and their 4th & 5th season exploits but Ty was not at all convincing. But was Ty correct? He's been wrong about parts of his own books before. I had always believed (perhaps wrongly) that the stealth composites being couriered here were on behalf of Protogen, along with the Bush shipyard drives for their stealth ship fleet. But I'm not certain and good arguments can be made for either scenario and I could well be wrong.
@@speculativefuture9568 It surely is a rather uncertain one in that regard. I've always felt that the first seasons had subtle cues hinting at the Free Navy Conflict though that may just be down to dumb concidence. (Chrisjen fearing "those who throw rocks" for instance). Perhaps we may never know, or maybe it will be retconned to clarify. Imo his connection to OPA factions points towards Inaros. I don't think an OPA operative would transport such materials from one enemy to another, with little to gain and everything to lose.
Torture works when the purpose is exploitation. See "slavery". Torture does not work when the purpose is learning. Neither the victim nor the perpetrator benefits.
A lot of people pointing out issues with this scene. It wasn't in the books. The show runners added it to give some character depth that would've otherwise been explained with a long political drama (that was cut from the books).
Expanse is a scifi show about the "near" future where humans have just colonized the solar system. It based on the actual physics of space travel and how it affects human bodies over time. The skinny man in this clip is a Belter, people who live in the asteroid belt. They become extremely tall and skinny with bones like chalk from living in such low/zero gravity for generations. He's being interrogated for delivering stealth technologies to a terriosrist faction called the OPA. OPA is the space equivalent to IRA or Taliban fighting for freedom for the Belt. Theres much more to this, I would highly suggest to watch this incredible show.
He was born in space belt a low gravity enviroment and he grew up in low gravity enviroment , this is the first time his body meets a strong gravity like earth's , his body is too weak to stand on earth
I watched like 3-4 seasons of this and still dont get it. I find it boring. Probably will watch it again from start to end just to not feel like a fool.
At 500 times earth gravity your basically jelly. Now imagine just a moment, suddenly your body is twice or three times heavier than usual. It would be very hard to sustain that for several hours.
@@kdaltex true pride doesn't makes you muscles stronger and your bones denser. Astronauts have hard times after leaving earth for six month and coming back, and they trained every day to prevent loss of functions. Now imagine a person born in a space environment.
I binged the whole series in a week with heavy amounts of weed. I was so emmersed i was confusing realities and dreaming in Expanse settings. I was depressed for 3 days after finishing.
If they do make an expanse movie. It would be a colossal mistake not to cast Allen Ritchson as some sort of hero in it. His acting is impressive and he is maturing into the leading role type of actor. Good luck Allen.
Eventho Gravity is not technically a force, in your personal frame of reference it is indistinguishable from any other force. In that sense it's just semantics from how most people think of "force". If it quacks like a duck...
@@Galactipod And in the books Bobbie was reduced to a screaming, blubbering hot mess when she accidentally walked outside of a building on Earth where the door locked itself behind her because she wasn't used to being outdoors without a suit; while the security guard who let her back in was very understanding, it didn't take her long to realize that Mars would lose a ground war on Earth.
That's disgusting and you're disgusting! The poor man did nothing wrong and was brutally tortured! The belters we're totally right to fight back against Earth.
There's something terribly wrong with any show that portrays the UN as being benevolent, competent, or as an authority. It's such a ridiculously laughable notion, so absurd, that it breaks any possible chance of taking the show as plausible on any level. It doesn't just break immersion, it precludes any possibility of ever accepting any degree of immersion.
The UN is not portrayed as benevolent here, and in the show it's not always competent either. As for an authority, there is plenty of time in 200 years for the UN to gain more power than it has now.
It's a show on a channel names syfy, ur really thinking about it to hard its just a TV show with almost no basis in fact, sheesh, u must be real fun to watch TV an movies with...NOT.
From playing with her grandkids to torturing belters in the hour, she really does have great time management.
It's all about prioritsing.
I envy her.
Let's look at the ol schedule. Death, death, death, death, death, lunch....
Death, death, death, afternoon tea....
Who am I paraphrasing?
It reminds me of Vice Admiral Margaret Paragonskij.
Office of Naval Intelligence.
Gotta be able to tune in and out of work. Im sure alot of absolute psychopaths at work were just normal fathers and husbands to their family
What I loved about the first season was the emphasis on the physical differences between factions. It really enforced this feeling of humanity changing and being in the future.
Another very cool feature that is often overlooked is the language spoken by Belters. Not the Belter Creole, although that was very well done, but the way the characters would code-switch depending on who they were talking too. Naomi in particular: she would use full Belter vocabulary and accent when talking to Belters, then switch to a completely different accent and standard English when talking to her crewmates and other non-Belters. Drummer does the same thing, although hers is not as pronounced. From what I've read, it was Dominique Tipper (who played Naomi in the series) who clued in the showrunners to this: she grew up in London in a Caribbean community and grew up doing exactly this kind of language shift between those inside and outside of her neighborhood.
So is it a propaganda against humanity's advancement? Should we go back to the caves and black death?
@@TechBearSeattleI hadn’t seen her in anything else before, but as soon as Dominique opened her mouth I was like ‘oh yep, definitely a Londoner! Game recognises game.’
She really went a long way from here to accepting Camina's inaguration as de facto xommander of the Ring Space
A scene that seriously impacted the immersion once you realize the whole 'stretched bodies because lower gravity' thing never used again.
i agree, but i do get it. i think they started out by casting a bunch of really tall thin people for the belters, but then soon realized they had to actually cast people who could act. it did confuse the fk out of me initially though bc naomi looked so different from the other belters.
had to cut some things to focus on other story aspects. but the affect of gravity on the different people played a part all the way till the final season. Namoi couldnt survive on the planet (or earth) or Drapers higher resistance to G effects cause of her training.
Yeah, that was a disappointment. Would have been nice if belters were ALWAYS taller than inners.
It's bc it was too hard finding tall lanky actors to be the belters haha
Low gravity does not affect all people equally and things like genetic disposition as well as access to medicine and ton of other factors play into how much a person is affected.
"gravity torture" is what I call climbing out of bed in the morning
And walking after jumping for a long time on a trampoline
"No?, you talk to me through a piece of glass. you see my body which can no longer survive on the very planet that bore my great grandmother"
This was the piece dialogue that won me over to watch the entire show. SO WELL WRITTEN!
Yes and its well representeded because its actually a real issue. People that return to Earth from few months in space have to be carried arround as they cant walk and need time for their bodies to re-ajust to the gravity.
Think what it will be for someone born on Mars where the grav is 2.5 less. Let alone born on an astreroid or in space. Space colonization is going to be really tugh and almost impossible for people born outside of Earth to actully visit it.
It’s crazy tbh
The foreshadowing here is some of the best in all of television
What was the foreshadowing
@@halseyactual1732Marco Inaros
@@halseyactual1732And also the mention of stealth technology.
@@halseyactual1732 Also Avasarala talking about a mother missing her son and the Belter replying “mother understands we all have our duty.” Which relates to her losing her son in the line of duty, part of the reason why she had that reaction to his comment I think.
Notice the black site is “Hamptons Island, New York”, due to sea level rising.
I never noticed that. What was it before?
@@ebonaparte3853 Part of Long Island.
You can also see that Liberty Island is significantly below sea level to the point that it needs sea walls. About half the statue’s pedestal is below the water line.
The sea levels are exactly where they were in the 1900s. global warming my a ss.
Another one of those climate change propaganda lies
In another video about the show a real astronaut personally vouched for the validity of gravity torture due to having to reacclimate to Earth gravity after an extended period of time on the ISS.
Thats why im here aswell. I just finished that episode of The Joe Rogan Experience
@@coronaman3668I saw a clip from it, but which episode was it?
@@michaelsoland3293w garrett reisman
@@conniemeerman2156 thank you
The irony of Errinwright scolding Avasarala for committing war crimes😆
You know, when I was watching the show for the first time, I got the impression that the OPA was some radical terrorist organization that didn't deserve any legitimacy. Obviously things developed to be more nuanced than that, but I find it interesting that that's how Avasarala views things at the start of the show.
In a supplementary video they said that the OPA had two factions kinda like the IRA, with Fred Anderson trying to do things legit like Gerry Adams and Sinn Fein while Anderson Dawes was the bomb-throwing type.
@@blackjac5000 A lot more than two factions, and Dawes was somewhere in the middle of the radicalism scale. Didn't S6 hint at Inaros having him killed offscreen for being too soft?
@@xcfjdyrkdtulkgfilhu - In the books, Dawes is not killed and plays a major role in book 6, Babylon's Ashes. Problem was that, by the time they were filming that series, the actor who appeared in season 1 was no longer available due to scheduling issues. So rather than bring someone else in, they eliminated the character.
"Radical terrorists" DO NOT appear from thin air.
They disrupted her quality time spending with her grandkids. She gave them more time getting familiar with earth gravity.
This show is easily the best sci-fi show to ever grace my eyes. I love this show and the people who put all of their time and effort into this show, I appreciate them for all they have accomplished. Perhaps a big screen finish. Like Serenity did for Firefly.
I would love that
First season was quite good then it went full Disney
Do people really let their kids throw water balloons in the house? My mom would have smacked the shit out of me.
These five minutes are the perfect primer for the duality of one of the most well written and complex female figures in science fiction history. Avasarala the great loving mother of those she's sworn to protect. And Avasarala the cold blooded warrior who will protect what she cares for no matter the cost
I wish that they addressed this later in the show. She's a war criminal and a psychopath here, and later she's a sympathetic hero.
It would be good if they did. Everyone is grey on the show. No black hats / white hats. Except maybe Shed Garvey. But he doesn’t have a head to wear that hat now poor bugger
@@PHDiaz-vv7yo Nicely put.
Poor old Shed, he deserved a longer stint than 3 and a half episodes. We can all blame whoever it was playing with Ty & Co on the role playing game and decided there Shed was to meet his maker. That was then transferred into the books. Well that's how I understand it.
You got your wish in the final episode. Chrisjen, like many others, has come a long way from this clip.
She was like that because her son was killed by Belters during his service in the UN marine corps.
TBH, I never liked the character. I'm not 100% sure if its the performance by the actress or the character as written who wanders about insulting, berating and mocking people with no consequences. The entire setting has this total loyalty and admiration for her that seemed completely unearned while she is busy bullying every underling and random passer-by. It always broke immersion for me because it was so incredibly unbelievable that in a high stakes contest someone wouldn't have buried her already - politically or literally.
The belter accent is pretty interesting
What happens when you shove people all around the world into stations in space and leave them for a century.
Thanks for continuing to upload! :D love the channel!
Thanks Stephen! As always your comments are much appreciated.
@@speculativefuture9568 Do you know why he is being tortured? I am unfamiliar with this show/movie
This part is one of the best parts ever created. The fact that Shohreh Aghdashloo owned it and brought it to life is sheer genius. She was phenomenal!
Love the idea of humanity eventually evolving into different variations. We might eventually have some Belters of our own, let’s hope that they are treated better than this
Very optimistic. But we both know that's not happening.
This belters are basically slaves, in real world their existence is very unlikely, more and more slavery become obsolete, in the future even packing things would be automated, sure we would use drones instead of belters to mining asteroids
I wouldn't call it evolution per say, it's more just body degrading under conditions it was never meant to experience. In low gravity your muscels star to wither away because they aren't under so much strain and even the hearth gets weaker. It's actually one of the reasons that long term stay in space is currently impossible. The longest continuous time in space today is 437 days and the kozmonaut who holds the record was already all manner of fucked up when he returned.
Sadly History repeats itself
We already do, they are called men. The ones who do the labor jobs that run the world.
I found this scene very revealing of how fucked up studio ethics are...
You see in the book Avasarala is as tough as it get but she expresses it by cussing like there is no tomorrow...
but here's the dilemma, you can't have real bad cussing on a prime time show now can you I mean what the parents and the critics think ?
So quick replace the cussing by torture because we all know torture is less objectional than cussing right ?
It completely distorts how she and her morals are portraid in the book
I came here to say this.
Yes! They did her so dirty. Made her a literal war criminal!
@@albertolopez7073 i hate what they did to Amos too.
the last time we see a book accurate belter
As soon as I saw this scene I fell in love with this shows world building and had to read the books
Did that kid just throw a watermelon inside?
Calls for more than tickling, in my experience 💀
Water ballon, but I agree. 😂
What would you say it calls for?
She is my favorite lady on the show from day one
Because she's a torturer?
I still don’t know exactly who this guy was working for, Mao? Anaros? Dawes?
Certainly Inaros or one linked to him.
Dawes was not involved in the asteroid strike, nor was Mao. The composites he transported were used to coat the rocks released at Earth by the Free Navy.
@@briantien7146 that from the books?
@@brianbaker2884 its never explicitly stated but its an inference. Also the character wasn't in the books - he was introduced by the writers to hint at what was to come. A little bit that we might forget until the pieces being to fall together.
@@briantien7146 On one of the earlier Ty & That Guy episodes, Wes asked Ty Franck about this particular story arc.
He ummmed and arrrrr'd for a while and appeared that he couldn't remember or if there was actually a link at all between these stealth composites and Inaros or not. In the end Ty went along with Wes' assumption that this very early scene was a tie in to what would become the Inaros faction and their 4th & 5th season exploits but Ty was not at all convincing.
But was Ty correct? He's been wrong about parts of his own books before.
I had always believed (perhaps wrongly) that the stealth composites being couriered here were on behalf of Protogen, along with the Bush shipyard drives for their stealth ship fleet.
But I'm not certain and good arguments can be made for either scenario and I could well be wrong.
@@speculativefuture9568 It surely is a rather uncertain one in that regard.
I've always felt that the first seasons had subtle cues hinting at the Free Navy Conflict though that may just be down to dumb concidence. (Chrisjen fearing "those who throw rocks" for instance).
Perhaps we may never know, or maybe it will be retconned to clarify.
Imo his connection to OPA factions points towards Inaros. I don't think an OPA operative would transport such materials from one enemy to another, with little to gain and everything to lose.
Torture works when the purpose is exploitation. See "slavery".
Torture does not work when the purpose is learning. Neither the victim nor the perpetrator benefits.
Avasarala is the most based character in the show
A lot of people pointing out issues with this scene. It wasn't in the books. The show runners added it to give some character depth that would've otherwise been explained with a long political drama (that was cut from the books).
funny, that 'UN' building looks like the Toronto symphony hall.
I know nothing about this show. Why is he being tortured?
Expanse is a scifi show about the "near" future where humans have just colonized the solar system. It based on the actual physics of space travel and how it affects human bodies over time.
The skinny man in this clip is a Belter, people who live in the asteroid belt. They become extremely tall and skinny with bones like chalk from living in such low/zero gravity for generations.
He's being interrogated for delivering stealth technologies to a terriosrist faction called the OPA.
OPA is the space equivalent to IRA or Taliban fighting for freedom for the Belt.
Theres much more to this, I would highly suggest to watch this incredible show.
@@chad8519 Oh ok. Ty for the answer 👍
He was born in space belt a low gravity enviroment and he grew up in low gravity enviroment , this is the first time his body meets a strong gravity like earth's , his body is too weak to stand on earth
Dang, sea walls only thing preventing NYC from flooding.
The UN, as of now through the Hague, oversees and acts against war crimes that happen in our times(
We all have our duty.
I love her voice
Dude...what happened to these lanky belter storylines?
How many actors with Marfan Syndrome do you think exist and could’ve been rounded up for the show?
I watched like 3-4 seasons of this and still dont get it. I find it boring. Probably will watch it again from start to end just to not feel like a fool.
Who is this actress and where have I heard her voice before? 🤔
Shoreh Agdashloo. She does have a beautiful and distinctive voice.
When the show was still good. I loved the first season.
Earth must always come first
Ah, pre-character development ^^
Great books decent tv show
Maybe if it was 500 times gravity it may have been a challenge, but one...I don't even feel it.
At 500 times earth gravity your basically jelly.
Now imagine just a moment, suddenly your body is twice or three times heavier than usual. It would be very hard to sustain that for several hours.
@@rolletroll2338 that's because you don't have true pride!
@@kdaltex true pride doesn't makes you muscles stronger and your bones denser. Astronauts have hard times after leaving earth for six month and coming back, and they trained every day to prevent loss of functions. Now imagine a person born in a space environment.
@@rolletroll2338 it does for a true saiyan
@kdaltex I don't think you realise lore wise belters undergo very weak gravity, like this torture is straight up like putting someone under 3-6gs
She is such a heavy smoker.
She never smoked.
Avaserala is the best villain in tv history.
She’s not villain but a hero
She’s not a villain.
You know it is a big
This is why we can't settle Mars or asteroids - the children would never be able to come home. We have a right to Earth.
I wonder if they would consider Earth home if they are born and grow up elsewhere.
Lock her up!
By any chance is she the va for a destiny charecter
Lakshmi-2, yes.
And mass effect she is one of the quarian admirals.
@@Jason_Wilhelm Shala'Raan vas Tonbay to be precise.
Someone do Avüsirela
so thats why she's called Avasarala
I binged the whole series in a week with heavy amounts of weed. I was so emmersed i was confusing realities and dreaming in Expanse settings. I was depressed for 3 days after finishing.
If they do make an expanse movie.
It would be a colossal mistake not to cast Allen Ritchson as some sort of hero in it.
His acting is impressive and he is maturing into the leading role type of actor.
Good luck Allen.
Gravity is an illusion
Its curved space-time thats responsible
Gravity is the interaction between energy/mass and space-time
Eventho Gravity is not technically a force, in your personal frame of reference it is indistinguishable from any other force. In that sense it's just semantics from how most people think of "force". If it quacks like a duck...
Lol, should've spent more time in the gym, lanky boy.
Dude was born and raised in low-to-no gravity.
All the more reason to hit the gym
@@blackjac5000 Martian marines train in 1G.
@@Galactipod And in the books Bobbie was reduced to a screaming, blubbering hot mess when she accidentally walked outside of a building on Earth where the door locked itself behind her because she wasn't used to being outdoors without a suit; while the security guard who let her back in was very understanding, it didn't take her long to realize that Mars would lose a ground war on Earth.
I thinks it's implying that his malnourished due to his treatment
😴💤😴💤💤💤💤
That Belter deserved it. They're savages.
The inners deserved the asteroid bombardment. They're oppressors.
Long live Earth!
That's disgusting and you're disgusting! The poor man did nothing wrong and was brutally tortured! The belters we're totally right to fight back against Earth.
Earth first!
@@nickmarsala3787No , Earth is the homeworld. Fighting against the homeworld is treason.
sea levels rising my ass
There's something terribly wrong with any show that portrays the UN as being benevolent, competent, or as an authority. It's such a ridiculously laughable notion, so absurd, that it breaks any possible chance of taking the show as plausible on any level. It doesn't just break immersion, it precludes any possibility of ever accepting any degree of immersion.
The UN is not portrayed as benevolent here, and in the show it's not always competent either. As for an authority, there is plenty of time in 200 years for the UN to gain more power than it has now.
let me guess, you're from a global south nation with more human rights violations than the state of florida and always gets snubbed by UN decisions?
It's a show on a channel names syfy, ur really thinking about it to hard its just a TV show with almost no basis in fact, sheesh, u must be real fun to watch TV an movies with...NOT.
I take it you drink your coffee with a combination of around 3 cream and 3 sugar? Perhaps 2 and 2?
@@adammacleod5046 Coffee is for losers like you.