A WW1 vet didn't intend to write Mordor as an allegory for the armies of WW1, but the fact that his idea of ultimate evil was a callous army of nature-destroying thugs equipped with mass-produced weapons of industry and led by smug obsessives misusing divine right,
maybe tells you something
maybe tells you something
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I think Martin’s general take is that power corrupts even those who just seek it, which is why JS, the superhero of the series, only ever reluctantly takes lead. “I’m a good man and something must be done” type, compared to anyone who sets out for power.