jms
(jms...@aol.com)
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I'd noticed this, as well. As far as explanations, I'm inclined
to go with your last one, namely that the warrior and religious
castes both considered the worker caste subservient. The Minbari
are nothing if not tradition-bound. The worker caste had only
been put on an equal footing with the other two a thousand years
earlier by Valen. Not a long time in terms of their society.
Even though they are not mentioned in the first season by name,
members of the worker caste are seen frequently during several
first season episodes. Look carefully for Minbari walking around
in yellow-colored utility clothing with overalls. They certainly
look like worker caste to me.
__!_!__
Gizmo
> Did anyone else notice this? Prior to that pivotal episode where Delenn is
> brought before the council and stripped of her title of Sattai, only two
> castes were ever talked about, the religious and the warrior.
Not only that, the worker caste's mascot was Zathros., or was it he is now
wearing their mascot?
==================================================
Unix is user friendly, its just picky about who its friends are.
Heck. Lennier, in the first season, even forgets that they exist. In the first
season episode "Grail", Lennier tells a guy named Aldous Gajic that there are
two castes; Warrior and Religious.
Take care and stay frosty.
B5Merlen
But in a nice bit of retro-fitting, the unthinking arrogance of the Warrior
and Religious castes in ignoring the Worker caste actually becomes a bit of
a plot point in Moments of Transition.
Iain
--
"Signs, portents, dreams...next thing
we'll be reading tea leaves and chicken entrails."