back to IVing IV: "What", Doc wondered aloud, "the fuck, is going on here?"
Richard Fiero
rfiero at gmail.com
Wed Dec 2 21:24:38 CST 2009
alice wellintown wrote:
> >Mark Kohut wrote:
> > p. 283 Doc's 'first thought' was for Penny's safety after looking at this
> > folder. Doc is presented as a tender-hearted type---outside of a
> one-on-one with some Badasses--once again. P shows us steady
> thoughts of others, especially his women "friends".
>
>Again, I'm reading a very different Larry. The text doesn't say his
>first thought was FOR her safety. He understands that she might have
>put herself in grave danger by treating the file as any other sealed
>ancient history file when it is in fact a very special file; it's a
>file that people she works with and people she works for, as well as
>other dangerous people, don't want her reading or slipping to people
>like Larry.
If the people who owned the file did not want Penny to have access to
it, she would not have access to it. As she said, "we do this all the time."
> Now, Larry only realizes the super grave nature of this
>file after he starts reading it, but he knew that it was no typical
>sealed ancient history file. He knew she was putting herself at risk.
Perps are released all the time "in the furtherance of justice." The
people who own the file also own Adrian Prussia, not the other way around.
>He only now realizes how much risk. Penny, it seems has no clue. Not a
>fair trade.
They are both professionals and have assessed the risks. If not, they
can go down like our bankers didn't.
It's a fair exchange of information with each getting what was wanted.
I don't go along with either reading.
>He traded a wall paper penny stock for a bundle of blue
>chips. As they say, it's another day and every dog will have one. This
>one belongs to Larry. But let's not confuse one good trade with a
>positive year. Penny is not his friend. No definition of friendship
>allows that one can shop one's friends or put them in serious harm to
>satisfy one's curiosity or get a job done or keep one. No, put it in
>quotes, but it ain't even close to a friend. An enemy is more like it.
>And Larry is a coward. What Penny did is fairly low on the courage
>scale because she didn't know the danger she was in. If she knew how
>dangerous that file was when she took it and gave it to Larry, we
>might call her fairly courageous, but not a hero because she didn't
>take that risk for her friends or brothers and sisters, but in
>exchange for information. What Larry did is cowardice. He downplayed
>the risk and sent her in harms way to satisfy his own needs and
>desires.
No, the organization only severely punishes its own, not outsiders.
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